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You don’t need a lot of capital to start a business. ‘Ultra-light startups’ are a category of new businesses that let entrepreneurs use the power of the Internet to get started on the cheap.
Ultra-light startups leverage every creative technique and use of the Internet to do everything for free or for very low cost. Everything they do is based on holding down the use of capital, but at same time generating revenue.
It’s not the easiest thing to do, but it is possible! Here’s some advice to get you going.
Read more: From Hooters girl to company president: 5 lessons from Kat Cole
If you need help writing a business plan, the Service Corps of Retired Executives (SCORE) is a group of volunteers who provide free advice and counseling to people who want to start a business, grow an existing business or are in trouble with a business they already have.
Depending on the chapter near you, a SCORE mentor will either meet with you or you can attend a class on how to write a business plan. Visit for SCORE.org to get started.
Thanks to technology, you can hire the best tech, design, marketing, accounting and back office freelance contractors to help you realize your business idea.
Sites like crowdSPRING.com, Guru.com and upWork.com let you post a job and field bids from qualified vendors around the world. These sites are in a category called ‘virtual hiring halls’ because they’re a modern adaptation of the union hall idea where workers would go to await job orders.
If you don’t have a website these days, it’s like you don’t exist to your potential customers. Thankfully, it’s easier than you may have heard to establish a web presence if you don’t want to hire someone like suggested above.
Google has an effort called Let’s Put Our Cities on the Map that will give you a free business website for the first year. Regular rates apply after that. By logging on and selecting your state, you can have access to the following:
If you’re an ultra-light startup visionary, the last place you probably want to get capital is at a big bank. You need somebody who thinks and works like you do. That’s where a site like Kabbage.com—an online lender exclusively dedicated to online businesses—comes in.
The Kabbage application process is streamlined and simple. Among other factors, they’ll look at your transaction history as an Amazon or eBay merchant, user feedback ratings and even your social media participation to make a decision on your loan application. Upon approval, the money is issued through PayPal in just minutes.
Other similar sites include FundBox, BlueVine, PayPal Working Capital and Square Capital.
Let’s say you’re a vendor at an arts and crafts fair, or you have a hot dog pushcart in a busy downtown area, or you’re some other kind of merchant who doesn’t do business at a fixed location. You can accept credit card payments from customers using a little mobile credit card processor that plugs into a smartphone.
Below are some no-contract services where the plug-in device itself that you use to run the card is completely free; you just pay per transaction with no contract.
SquareUp.com for Apple and Android phones charges a simple flat merchant fee of 2.75% on every swiped transaction. Pay Pal Here for Apple and Android phones charges 2.7%, though if you do more debit card transactions than credit card transactions, you can lower your transaction cost down to about 1.7%.
Read more: 7 retailers on bankruptcy watch for 2017
This post was last modified on August 5, 2021 5:45 pm
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