10sacer
New Member
Hello all,
Been a lurker on these forums for awhile and gotten some good advice from a couple of posts and personal emails, so thanks for that.
Here is where I am at - recently saw my position disappear due to the economy so am in that fun space of reinventing a career in early 40's. Joy.
Have a unique opportunity to either invest with existing digital graphics company or open new place of my own. Existing company is very tied to certain NASCAR teams that you all see every weekend on TV. They have a first-class facility, people and equipment and all I would do is purchase a flatbed and add to existing arsenal and bring in my sales rep that is still garnering accounts that we are currently outsourcing.
There's obviously a lot more to this, but it would be an even longer posting... so here's my question - would like to know what early headaches you existing business owner's encountered during startup phase of your shops. Things like bad equipment decisions, marketing directions taken, estimating packages that worked (or didn't), accounting advice and anything useful you can think of that worked or definitely should have been avoided in the early days.
I have about $300K in capital to put towards this. Obviously moving in with existing company GREATLY lowers my exposure because of the wealth of equipment they already have. Paying franchise fees does not appeal to me and I am not looking to buy anybody out. We have a book of business that is waiting for us to land and we just want to avoid landmines along the way.
I used to work for DuPont selling wide format UV equipment - I have a fair command of available equipment and know who makes good stuff and who doesn't. I have been in graphic arts starting from screenprint in college all the way to offset printing prepress, graphic design, dealer channel management and equipment and wide format print sales for over 25 years and am at that stage where its time to take control and stop letting others determine the future.
Any advice would be greatly appreciated.
Thanks,
Sean
Been a lurker on these forums for awhile and gotten some good advice from a couple of posts and personal emails, so thanks for that.
Here is where I am at - recently saw my position disappear due to the economy so am in that fun space of reinventing a career in early 40's. Joy.
Have a unique opportunity to either invest with existing digital graphics company or open new place of my own. Existing company is very tied to certain NASCAR teams that you all see every weekend on TV. They have a first-class facility, people and equipment and all I would do is purchase a flatbed and add to existing arsenal and bring in my sales rep that is still garnering accounts that we are currently outsourcing.
There's obviously a lot more to this, but it would be an even longer posting... so here's my question - would like to know what early headaches you existing business owner's encountered during startup phase of your shops. Things like bad equipment decisions, marketing directions taken, estimating packages that worked (or didn't), accounting advice and anything useful you can think of that worked or definitely should have been avoided in the early days.
I have about $300K in capital to put towards this. Obviously moving in with existing company GREATLY lowers my exposure because of the wealth of equipment they already have. Paying franchise fees does not appeal to me and I am not looking to buy anybody out. We have a book of business that is waiting for us to land and we just want to avoid landmines along the way.
I used to work for DuPont selling wide format UV equipment - I have a fair command of available equipment and know who makes good stuff and who doesn't. I have been in graphic arts starting from screenprint in college all the way to offset printing prepress, graphic design, dealer channel management and equipment and wide format print sales for over 25 years and am at that stage where its time to take control and stop letting others determine the future.
Any advice would be greatly appreciated.
Thanks,
Sean