Setting up a business for a beginner

Setting up a business for a beginner

Author
Discussion

Benjy011

Original Poster:

9 posts

111 months

Monday 23rd February 2015
quotequote all
Good evening.

I'm looking for advice I am close to setting up my own business selling candles. I have been making/experimenting with them over the last few months, I feel that I am now ready to step in to the market of selling the problem is I haven't got a clue how to start.

I've been doing a lot of reading regarding pay tax, VAT etc. I'm currently building a website via shopify.

Is there any helpful tips you could share with me?

Many thanks

Ben

Simpo Two

85,422 posts

265 months

Monday 23rd February 2015
quotequote all
The first most important thing is to be able to sell them and get paid - ie the front line. How much research have you done on your market and how are you going to get a slice of it?

IMHO the next most important thing is to keep fixed overheads to a minimum. That way, if no sales come in, your losses are minimised.

Good luck!

jas xjr

11,309 posts

239 months

Monday 23rd February 2015
quotequote all
Try amazon or eBay to see if there is demand for your product. Good luck smile

Benjy011

Original Poster:

9 posts

111 months

Monday 23rd February 2015
quotequote all
Cheers for your advice.

Definitely looking at the Amazon idea!

Ben

jammy_basturd

29,778 posts

212 months

Monday 23rd February 2015
quotequote all
jas xjr said:
Try amazon or eBay to see if there is demand for your product. Good luck smile
This.

If you can't shift them on eBay or Amazon then you've saved yourself the cost and trouble of trying to market your own website from scratch.

chonok

1,129 posts

235 months

Monday 23rd February 2015
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Isn't Etsy supposed to be good for this sort of thing?

Matttracker

630 posts

147 months

Monday 23rd February 2015
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etsy is very good for that sort of thing. Don't know about the cut they take though

Hoofy

76,358 posts

282 months

Monday 23rd February 2015
quotequote all
Record all costs and sales.

Take it slowly. A website is great but be wary of spending money on stuff you don't really need.

Use social media to promote your wares. There are local groups on Facebook, for instance, where you can post up examples but check with admin so you don't annoy anyone.

Dejay1788

1,311 posts

129 months

Tuesday 24th February 2015
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Just register yourself as a sole trader with HMRC before you start trading, you might not have to pay any tax depending on how much you make anyway.

Shopify is great for small start ups, it's super easy to use and you can create a decent website from it. We use it too so feel free to PM me your website if you would like any feedback on it at all.

Good luck.

Benjy011

Original Poster:

9 posts

111 months

Tuesday 24th February 2015
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Very helpful advice, I'll let you know how I get on!

Thankyou

littlegreenfairy

10,134 posts

221 months

Wednesday 25th February 2015
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You can tack on a shop to your Facebook page. Between that and Etsy you should do ok. Post up some pics smile

Frimley111R

15,661 posts

234 months

Wednesday 25th February 2015
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Just a thought, but consider selling in bulk to hotels, buisinesses etc otherwise you could having lots of small orders. And put a photo in the 'Show us what you make' thread.

Benjy011

Original Poster:

9 posts

111 months

Wednesday 25th February 2015
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Will do gents!

Thanks

T1pper

275 posts

136 months

Thursday 26th February 2015
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jammy_basturd said:
jas xjr said:
Try amazon or eBay to see if there is demand for your product. Good luck smile
This.

If you can't shift them on eBay or Amazon then you've saved yourself the cost and trouble of trying to market your own website from scratch.
+1


littlegreenfairy

10,134 posts

221 months

Friday 27th February 2015
quotequote all
jammy_basturd said:
This.

If you can't shift them on eBay or Amazon then you've saved yourself the cost and trouble of trying to market your own website from scratch.
I think it may depend on the sort of product you're making. Not on the high street or Etsy (with lots of 'social media') may be a better route if it is more high end than sell it cheap.

andy-xr

13,204 posts

204 months

Friday 27th February 2015
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chonok said:
Isn't Etsy supposed to be good for this sort of thing?
It's great if you're featured in some way, but the categories listings, there's no magic going on and someone's got to be on page 33. No-one ever really scrolls past three or four pages in the category they're interested in, so being on there can be a bit the same as just throwing your website onto Google and praying. There might be some trickle sales but it'd be more chance than something engineered

I'd check places like notonthehighstreet or team up with a complimentary person/company to sell both together, like whoever makes/sells candle holders and doesnt put candles in them or something. A simple 'max your meal for an extra £x' can bring more revenues in for whoever is selling them, just make sure you can actually supply the candle and the holder if you're the one selling them

menguin

3,764 posts

221 months

Friday 27th February 2015
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How many candles do you propose to sell?

andy-xr

13,204 posts

204 months

Friday 27th February 2015
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please say four, please say four

Simpo Two

85,422 posts

265 months

Friday 27th February 2015
quotequote all
menguin said:
How many candles do you propose to sell?
And more importantly, how many does he need to sell to make a living? (assuming it's not a hobby).

You need to sell an awful lot of candles to make £20K net profit.