Here’s the traditional approach that society teaches:
1- Make a list of everything you need to start your business
2- Write your estimated cost next to each item, then add everything up
3- Double it
4- That’s the amount of money you need to borrow
5- Put this in a business plan (Once you’ve spent weeks writing one)
6- Present to the bank
7- Get money (If you’re lucky)
8- Go into debt
9- Spend money
10- Maybe make money in year 2 (if you’ve not already closed by then)
Can you wait two years to make a profit? Do you want to go into debt?
You don’t need to spend that money at all; you can easily start a business with no money.
When you’re starting out, good enough is good enough. It doesn’t have to be perfect.
Perfection will kill your business before you start.
Perfection costs money, and you don’t need to spend money to get going. We meet so many people who have wasted thousands on starting their business.
Nine times out of ten, here’s what happens:
Most people, after six months, realise they got stuff wrong.
The business name, what they’re selling, and how they’re selling it. Imagine you’ve just spent 10k on setting up, only to realise you got everything wrong!
The bootstrapped business is the one most likely to survive. Why? Because you’ve built your entrepreneurial muscle through figuring out how to start for free, and you’ve engaged yourself in your own business. This process is critical; don’t skip it.
This is the secret to falling in love with your business and not being seduced by it.
Idea generation is just dating your business.
Real love comes when you start creating your future together and dealing with some challenges along the way.
1. Get stuff for free
Google this: How do I get (enter what you’re looking for) for free?
You’ll be amazed at the results that come up.
People advertise free stuff on sites like Facebook Marketplace and Freecycle. You can get business cards for free (usually + shipping), flyers for free plus lots more!
One of our favourite free resources is web builders like Canva. You can build a website for free and start selling straight away. We built a free website when we started and took tens of thousands of pounds through it without spending a penny on web development.
2. Borrow
Borrow space, borrow equipment, borrow a restaurant, borrow a kitchen, borrow people, borrow whatever you can.
We had a songwriter attend a workshop in Nottingham, UK, who was about to spend two thousand on recording equipment until we pointed out that her local university had several BRAND NEW recording studios at 40% occupancy that she could borrow – not only that, the university would even throw in a team of sound engineers, producers, and a technician! Why? Because the students usually need real-world experience to pass their course!
There are resources lying all around you that are underutilised. Get creative and borrow what you need.
Want to find out how to borrow a restaurant? Find out how in our live course
3. Barter
It’s how we got some branding and marketing done for free in the early days of his first business. We trained the staff of a marketing agency, and they helped us with marketing in exchange.
Co-founder Simon secured some accountancy services for free for three years in exchange for building a website.
What skills, time, products or services could you swap so you can get what you need for free?
Find someone who has what you need and swap what you have for it. You have incredible skills that other people need. Swap them for what you need to get going.
4. Sell stuff you don’t need
Joanna runs a mobile beautician business, and when we first met her, she needed a portable treatment table but couldn’t afford the £120 cost. The money for this had to come out of her bills fund, and the risks felt too great for her!
“If I buy this table and don’t get enough customers in the same month, I won’t have enough cash to cover my bills!“
With a nudge from us, she sold the running machine that was gathering dust in her spare room (like many home exercise machines, it was being used as a clothes horse) and was able to get the treatment table to get started.
This is why this really makes sense. We are psychologically tied to the money we need to survive – and rightly so. Selling some of your unwanted stuff creates a ‘start-up fund.’By the way, this is smarter than blowing your savings AND MUCH SMARTER than starting a business in debt! We all have unused stuff lying around in our houses.
Sell it and use the cash to get going.
5. Sell your value before you create it
This is the most important of all and a foundational principle of the Rebel Business School. This is about getting paid in advance for your product or service so you can use your customer’s cash to get started.
At this point, we know a lot of you are thinking: “Yes, but that wouldn’t work with my business.”You can make this work with ANY kind of business, you just have to think differently about how you make it happen, and your customers have to TRUST that you’ll deliver on your promises. Helen spent nearly 18 months writing a training course only to discover that no one wanted to buy it.
Pitch the ideas for the course first, then you can shape the course based on the feedback you get from the market. Then ask your customers to pay upfront (you might have to incentivise them with a discount).
We pitched the first Rebel Business School free start-up event in March, got paid in April, wrote it in September, and delivered it in October.
You could also try Kickstarter and create a business funding page – your customers pledge money in exchange for your products, and you get the cash when you hit your target. This is also a great way to test the market and your idea.
When does Amazon want payment for their products? Imagine going to the supermarket, loading your basket with food, and going straight home to eat it all, only returning the following week to pay! Can you imagine Walmart or Tesco standing for that? Of course not!
Small businesses are saddled with a debilitating notion that we have to deliver before we get paid. The pop-up restaurant that got their customers to pay for their meals in advance and used their customers’ money to buy the ingredients got this spot-on!
The very first person to make a profit at the Rebel Business School was Dennis. He took orders for the lunch break of one of our courses and convinced everyone to pay in advance for their lasagne. When he left the room with £88 in his pocket, we weren’t sure if we’d see him again, but luckily, he returned with trays of pasta and salad.
Figure out a way to sell your product or service before you build it.
The only real way to know if your business is going to be successful or not is to make a sale.
Now is the time to attack your list. Strengthen your entrepreneurial muscle. What can you bootstrap?
Go through your list of what you need to start your business and see what you can get for free, borrow, barter, sell or show your value before you create.
You absolutely can start a business with no money by following these principles.
Go on… be a Rebel.