Alicia Sisk Morris CPA | Advice from your local CPA About Starting a New Business or Developing a New Product?
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Advice from your local CPA About Starting a New Business or Developing a New Product?

05 Feb Advice from your local CPA About Starting a New Business or Developing a New Product?

As a CPA located in the greater Asheville, NC market, I meet a lot of creative and adventurous people who have visions of the next great product or service. Those visionaries will also need a strategy to bring their idea to market here in Western North Carolina. Of course, along with the dream there comes a host of additional responsibilities. The very first product prototype or service idea is only the first step in a very long journey. Eric Ries, author of The Lean Startup states “The products a startup builds are really experiments; the learning about how to build a sustainable business is the outcome of those experiments. For startups, that information is much more important that dollars, awards, or mentions in the press, because it can influence and reshape the next set of ideas”

The goal of any entrepreneur is to minimize TOTAL time spent going through this product (or service) development loop. The faster you gather feedback from your test market (data) the faster you can learn and take your ideas to the next level.

 

And while you are in development mode it is also important to keep your finances in order. Below are some accounting tips:

  • Decide how your business will be organized (sole-proprietor, partnership, LLC etc)
  • Obtain a separate Employee Identification Number (EIN) specifically assigned to your business
  • Open a separate account in your businesses name with your new Employee Identification Number (EIN) specifically assigned to your business
  • Keep track your expenses specifically to this new product or service. At the bare minimum use a notebook but you can also use Excel spreadsheets or QuickBooks
  • Develop a bookkeeping system with a customized Chart of Accounts that will help you track your income, expenses, assets and liabilities.
  • Hire a Certified Public Accountant to learn about important tax issues relating to your new product or service to include local, state and federal tax obligations
  • If you have employees, you will need to setup or hire a payroll service
  • Calculate your gross margin and cost of goods sold so you can get valuable feedback on how your product or service is doing.

 

Here are a few of my favorite quotes about learning. I hope they inspire you as much as they inspire me:

“Genius is one percent inspiration and ninety nine percent perspiration.” Thomas Edison

“Sometimes when you innovate, you make mistakes. It is best to admit them quickly, and get on with improving your other innovations.” Steve Jobs

You build on failure. You use it as a stepping stone. Close the door on the past. You don’t try to forget mistakes, but you don’t dwell on it. You don’t let it have any of your energy, or any of your time, or any of your space.” Johnny Cash

“Experience is simply the name we give our mistakes.”          Oscar Wilde

 

Upcoming Workshops (some free)

The Women’s Business Center

The Femfessionals Monthly Lunch and Learn

 

Other Blog  Posts you may enjoy:

Free 2014 Tax Organizer

Know your customer

Secret to Success

12 Comments
  • Geoff Blount
    Posted at 00:40h, 08 February Reply

    This all makes great sense. As a prior business owner, making sure to prepare for success is a major lesson that I learned during my experience. We experienced an undercapitalization issue and the issue of growing too fast to handle cash flow on a business that was mostly net 30. I am now 6+years post business and I find myself using the cycle example you used all the time to share with others.

    • asmcpa@yahoo.com
      Posted at 19:46h, 08 February Reply

      Thanks for sharing your story! Glad it made sense.

      Alicia

  • Schree C
    Posted at 04:25h, 09 February Reply

    This blog is a very good tool on how to start a business. I really like the business chart/pin wheel. Often times, new business owners are so caught up in the small details of a startup that they miss the overarching mistakes that are visible to the public eye. I appreciate you focusing on the financials as well. We all know that money is one of the largest obstacles when starting a business.

    • asmcpa@yahoo.com
      Posted at 15:32h, 09 February Reply

      Thank you Schree for your comments. I am glad you find it helpful!

      Alicia

  • Pat Mills
    Posted at 15:40h, 15 February Reply

    This article is full of very useful Ideas and information for starting a business. I like the bit about it being an experiment and in that experiment is a constant growing process. I also really liked the illustration of the product development loop, very common sense approach for constantly refining your deliverable to your customers. Good Job!

    • asmcpa@yahoo.com
      Posted at 18:22h, 15 February Reply

      Thank you!

  • Mitch McDowell
    Posted at 16:26h, 19 February Reply

    Alicia,
    Good article! I tell my clients to take their basic business idea and get additional information from the marketplace before deciding on their exact offering. The supplemental information will allow them to tweak their business model (what they sell and who they sell to).
    Thanks,
    Mitch

    • asmcpa@yahoo.com
      Posted at 17:17h, 19 February Reply

      Thanks for your kind comments!

      Alicia

  • Maria-Elena Surprenant
    Posted at 02:22h, 25 February Reply

    This article is a condensed version of how to start a business, and I love it! The precise steps on what to cover financially are especially practical. The visual serves as a great way to summarize the whole idea of pursuing a feasibility analysis on one’s business idea prior to constructing a business plan, and executing said business plan.

    • asmcpa@yahoo.com
      Posted at 16:20h, 27 February Reply

      Thank you Maria-Elena, I am glad you found it helpful!

      Alicia

  • Nadia Phillips
    Posted at 01:04h, 27 February Reply

    I liked that the author looked at introducing new products as an experiment because I feel that sometime business execs put a lot of pressure that something needs to be successful instantly and I don’t believe that always has to be the case. Some things can be reflected and improved upon.

    • asmcpa@yahoo.com
      Posted at 16:23h, 27 February Reply

      Naida,
      I agree…new products are an experiment…and every evolving experiment.

      Alicia

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