Financial Freedom for Free

Can No time + No Money = Financial Freedom?

Archive for the ‘Small Business’ Category

Magazines Love the Green

Posted by Andy on March 28, 2007

Following my “Go Green, Get Green” post, I started recognizing a trend in the business press…


 
Fortune
April 2007
Business 2.0
February 2007
Businessweek
January 29th, 2007.

Pretty Interesting stuff. Seems like the environment and social consciousness is finally starting to be looked at as something that will make money instead of costing money!

Posted in Business, Financial Freedom, Go Green, Personal Finance, Product Selection, Small Business | Leave a Comment »

Import, Invent or Distribute?

Posted by Andy on March 27, 2007

In an effort to narrow down my product choices, I’ve been trying to decide whether it is better to Invent, Import or Distribute a product. There pro’s and con’s to inventing, importing and distributing. I’d like to explore each and how the rules factor into the decision.

Import:
Import would mean finding some product from another country to bring to the USA and create a market for.

Pros:

  • It would seem fairly easy to find something that isn’t already available in the USA.
  • No need for R&D.
  • Manufacturing would already be handled by another entity.

Cons:

  • The weak dollar limits the number of countries available for favorable terms. Basically some parts of Asia and Latin America seem to be my main options.
  • If your exclusive supplier is unreliable, the business will operate entirely at the whim of another entity. In order to have any clout, or safety, I’d have to be ordering quite a bit of product at once.
  • Shipping adds costs and delays.


Invent:
Inventing means coming up with a new idea, finding someone to design it, engineer it and manufacture it.

Pros:

  • Your idea means that there may be limited competition for it once the product is ready to come to market
  • If the idea is somewhat radical, my marketing can decide what the most advantageous price point is. In this experiment, I really want to keep the number of transactions to a minimum with high margins on each transaction as that will be easier to manage.

Cons:

  • Could cost $25,000 or more just to patent if Iwanted true protection.
  • Will be difficult to follow the rules while having the product designed and manufactured.
  • Costs for outsourcing design and manufacturing could be very high.

Distribute:
I would define distribution as taking a product that already exists that may or may not be well known and getting a wholesale agreement to resell the product(s). This is what Amazon.com, newegg.com, etc. do.

Pros:

  • No need for R&D.
  • No need for manufacturing – The game basically becomes marketing and logistics.
  • Probably will be easier to find US-based wholesalers to buy from, making it easier to streamline the logistics and save money on shipping.

Cons:

  • If I’m selling a brand-name product that is the same as the one you can get at BestBuy.com, it is easy to become a commodity-type business, which goes against my current desires for a product.
  • It takes time to find and build relationships with wholesalers.

 It would appear that I haven’t really decided either way just yet. There are pro’s and con’s to each approach. As of right now, my product summary doesn’t change. I will continue to think about how to narrow down my product.

Current Product Selection Summary:
My thinking is now being directed towards locating a tangible product for women possessing properties that would allow it to be marketed as expensive, luxurious and/or exclusive. This product should also be constructed of environmentally sound materials, allowing ”go green“ to be an additional focal point of the brand.

Posted in Business, Financial Freedom, Personal Finance, Product Selection, Small Business, entrepreneurship | Leave a Comment »

An Inconvenient Truth: Personal Finance Edition: Additional Thoughts

Posted by Andy on March 24, 2007

In yesterday’s post, An Inconvenient Truth: Personal Finance Edition, I blogged about the notion that by purely saving you may actually be losing money.

After reading deeper into the article that prompted my thinking, the comments people have about it and talking to a few people I know interested in these topics, I have a few after-thoughts:

  • I still don’t understand the hostility most of the commenters have. Of course no one wants to see our economy in trouble. No one wants to see America’s wealth shrink, but isn’t it a possibility at least worth considering? Isn’t it something worth learning about to figure where he may be coming from? You can’t predict the future, nor can you influence the will of the mob. You can prepare yourself for what might happen, whether good or bad, and have contingency plans for those options. Preparation for all likely scenarios is the only way to find consistent returns, in good economic times and bad.
     
  • I can expect some people who have a lot of experience in the stock market and have had better returns than market average take particular offense to this kind of thinking. They, most likely, made a lot of money (and value) in the last 5 years. Unfortunately most people are not active investors. They do as the financial planning industry tells them and diversify their assets between market indexes or bonds or cash or REITS or all the above. They hope that “law of averages” works to their benefit. These are the people who concern Mr. Kiyosaki as they think they are getting closer to their goals, yet an argument can be made that the last five years put them further behind. They may not have the ability to live the life they planned for when it comes time to retire due to a reduction of purchasing power.
     
  • His view is obviously quite unpopular, yet my studies tell me the motion of the stock market tends to favor the unpopular vote. Technical investors look at the put (a bet the market will go down) to call (a bet the market will go up) ratio as an indicator for market turns. When the sentiment is such that everyone is betting the market will keep going down, it actually tends to reverse, and vice-versa. This is a form of “stepping outside of the mob” and doing the opposite, which takes intestinal fortitude! I can’t say I’ve studied crowd psychology and the economic cycles but my guess is that things aren’t much different. I also know that Warren Buffett has made a lot of money by flanking popular vote.

I’m not entirely sure what all this means for me and my financial freedom strategies. My security blanket plan still revolves around the “put my retirement funds in a safe, secure index fund” strategy. However, the purpose of my experiment is to see if it is possible to reach financial freedom much quicker by building a business using mostly passive thought. I also like to think that there is merit to acting contrary to popular belief, as popular belief is what got most Americans (by definition) deeply in debt with little chance of a safe retirement. This is why my rules were inspired by common excuses for not using a business as a vehicle to reach financial freedom.

If all this works, it is a greatly accelerated alternative to the “buy & hold index funds and bond funds strategy”. If it doesn’t, I learned a heck of a lot for not much time or money.

Posted in Business, Financial Freedom, Globalization, Personal Finance, Small Business | Leave a Comment »

An Inconvenient Truth: Personal Finance Edition

Posted by Andy on March 22, 2007

In a recent post I noted how once you are living beneath your current means its more important to increase your income than decrease your expenses while you are on your journey to financial freedom. Really it’s a combination of living beneath your means while also expanding them that I’m going for. In fact. as a somewhat cryptic article by Robert Kiyosaki for Yahoo! Finance states, when you’re purely saving your money you are probably actually losing value even though the price may be going up. Sound crazy? It’s been happening for the last few years.

It’s funny to me to read the comments following his article. I think people find what he’s saying too hard to swallow. After all, it’s far easier to discredit than to adjust behavior, especially when the entire financial planning industry has been telling people that investing for the long term, diversifying and paying down their mortgage is the right thing to do! I think a lot of people missed the point, which is the stock market may look good now but you have to take a bigger picture approach to your personal finance strategies… Especially if you don’t have a lot of time between now and retirement.

Allow me to illustrate Kiyosaki’s point. Let’s assume you are of the young, aggressive saver type. You had some market timing savvy and placed all of your retirement savings in a 401(k) / NASDAQ index fund January 1, 2002 thinking you found the bottom of the dot-com fallout. January 1 2007 shows a pretty nice gain over the past five years. The problem is that the value of your investment actually decreased when compared to gold and other currency markets. Using some figures for the NASDAQ, gold cost / ounce and the Euro, we see the following:

Year NASDAQ in $ NASDAQ in EURO NASDAQ  in Gold Ounces
1/1/2002 $1,979.08 2162.65 EUR ~7.00 Ounces
1/1/2007 $2,434.92 1840.29 EUR ~3.93 Ounces

At face value, the price of the NASDAQ has gone up quite a bit over the 5 year period. In a vacuum you may even be quite happy with your investment choices. On a global scale however, you’ve actually lost quite a bit of wealth in the process. Whether we realize it or not, our purchasing power has gone down even with recent increases in asset prices. With easy access to debt, Americans continue to borrow from a bank. As they make purchases their borrowed money gets deposited in another bank. As that money is deposited, it gets lent out 5-10 time’s over, creating new dollars out of nothing and making existing dollars have less value in the process.

America is an import economy. When our dollar buys us less overseas, eventually that comes back to hurt us. Luckily we’re as willing to go into debt as other countries are willing to finance our over-consumption – to the tune of ~$500,000,000,000 in 2006. This easy access to debt has allowed us to create phantom wealth in our homes and borrow against it to continue buying junk that we couldn’t afford on our actual income.

The complexities of why this happens are far to great for this little blog of mine, the implications are much easier. As the devaluation of the dollar continues to ripple through the US economy, people are going to find that the 401(k)’s that are increasing in price continue to lose purchasing power.

Running to “risk-free investment vehicles with historical returns of 10%” may actually prove to be much riskier than my new business venture. If it works the returns are infinite (no time, no money). I’ve printed money for myself. If it doesn’t work, I may have to pay back some debt which I’ll be sure is manageable. The funny thing is that at this rate I can actually make money by borrowing (a dollar 5 years ago is worth 25-50% of what it was today!)

How can you combat all this? That is the $500 billion question. Some may argue that I am comparing apples to oranges, but the real concern is that historically a country with huge amounts of debt has found themselves with a depression or prolonged recession, which is really worse than poor returns. Another argument can be made that we buy goods and services here with our $US so all that matters is that those dollars are increasing.

Starting a business that will work for you in times of noth recession and expansion is one way of keeping up with the devaluation of our currency. Theoretically as your costs rise, so do the prices people will need to pay for those goods. I’ll do great if the economy continues to expand and I’ll do just fine if the economy tanks. This is why I believe my business will give me a better chance at financial freedom than my retirement accounts alone!

Posted in Business, Financial Freedom, Globalization, Personal Finance, Small Business | 1 Comment »

What to sell… Maybe eBayers have insight?

Posted by Andy on March 21, 2007

I had a little free time this weekend so I decided to check out eBay to look at expired auctions and what is hot. It looks like recently they changed this information to subscription only at a cost of $2.99 for 24 hours. I opted not to pay for purusing at this point.

I then headed over to their forums to look at what the sellers were saying about the state of the ebay market place. I’d heard of the concept of “drop shipping” from various sources and I wanted to see if maybe existing sellers were using the technique with any degree of success.

Ultimately I stumbled upon this discussion:

http://forums.ebay.com/db1/thread.jspa?threadID=1000209529&start=0

Reading through it looks like there are quite a few scams going on, but here are the pros and cons that I can deduce, some are common sense others are from research:

Pros:

  • Low startup costs
  • No need to pre-purchase inventory – pay as you go
  • No need to find someone to handle the logistics of storage or delivery

Cons:

  • Scam factor
  • You are at the whim of the dropshipper’s inventory and communication protocols
  • More middle men to take a slice of the pie.
  • The prices actually don’t seem that great. For example, I found an iPod at one of the sites for $359.50 while the same iPod is $349.99 at my local Best Buy.

It looks like the only way they were making money is by going to garage sales and buying people’s stuff then reselling it on eBay. This is a time-intensive task!

I got a general feeling that in order to sell anything you have to purchase a decent quantity of your product(s) to get a respectable wholesale price. Another concern I would have is that the amount of time it takes to manage the dropshipping vendor will be deceptive. You may be able to automate some of it, but I didn’t get a feeling that the entire supply-chain process is easily automated.

While it is the easy way to start, long term I feel there are too many weaknesses in the drop-shipping model. I will have to find another source for my product.

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Flavors of Personal Finance Blogs and Financial Freedom Goals

Posted by Andy on March 19, 2007

I must confess that prior to starting this blog, I hadn’t spent much time looking at what other personal finance blogs exist in the “blogosphere.” Yesterday I was curious if Google had picked up on my blog yet so I did a Google search for “financial freedom for free blog.” The first result that popped up was 2million – My Journey to Financial Freedom. I read for a while then started clicking on links in the author’s blog roll only to discover the messages are fairly similar to 2million.

Going back to my post on the definition of financial freedom, there are two sure-fire ways to get there at a relatively young age. The Millionare Next Dooris the inspiration for most personal finance blogs I’ve run across. It teaches us that the typical millionaire saves their money and lives quite frugally. They cut coupons, send in rebates and eventually accumulate have a high enough net worth that a modest, low risk return on equity will be enough to cover your monthly expenses without cannibalizing your capital. 

The financial planning industry generally tries to teach the same concepts. They tell us: ”diversify your holdings so you don’t have too much exposure to any one thing.” “Cut up your credit cards so you can’t spend more than you make.” “Pay off your mortgage early so you reduce your fixed expenses.” They also say you should spend your time clipping coupons, buy used cars, shop around for everything, only invest in no-load mutual funds, etc.

The only problem I have with this is that there are only so many things we can think about in a day. What really matters is how much you keep. I’d argue that it’s easier to figure out how to make an extra $10,000 per year than cut $2,000 per year from your budget. Also there is an upper limit on how much you can cut your spending or how much you can save with coupons, the sky’s the limit on the income side. 

If you have credit card debt, get out of debt quickly. I’m on board with this. Common sense tells us paying 15-20% interest in after-tax dollars on $6,000 debt for a big screen TV is not fiscally smart and will stand in the way of your financial freedom. I also agree that you should live beneath your means, maximize your contributions to your 401 (k), insure your home, your income, your body and your wealth. These are the basics of personal finance, and its covered very well in many other places. This gives you the security blanket.

Personally, I spend less than I make, I maximize my retirement account contributions with a no-load index fund, I own my own home, my lifestyle is insured for just about anything that could happen and I have access to cash that will cover 3 or 4 months of living expenses if I became unable to produce income on my own.  At this point I tend to focus more on controlling income than controlling expenses, while also not getting into consumer debt, so the amount of money I keep every year is going up. Could I cut things out of my life to save more? Probably, but with my current security blanket plan. I’ll still be a millionaire (in today’s dollars) by my mid 40’s and a multi-millionaire (in today’s dollars) by the time I can even begin taking distributions from my retirement accounts without penalty. 

So, I already have a plan in place to be financially free later in life. I also have the utmost respect for what 2million is doing, especially how open he is and how tenacious he is about setting and keeping goals, but my stance is that after I design and implement a “safety blanket plan”, I’d like figure out how to be free even sooner without sacrificing the quality of life that I’ve built for myself.

Most financial planners and personal finance guru’s tend focus on achieving the first definition of financial freedom (save money, live frugally and eventually you will have enough to retire). There are far better places to put your money and/or, more importantly, your mental bandwidth than figuring out how to save an extra $15.00 a month. The true purpose of this blog is to find ways to accelerate the process by focusing not on net worth, but on accelerating the rate that my passive income is increasing. It begins with building a business using none of my time and none of my money, but will ultimately end up in other asset classes. Because my current income sources cover my expenses, the profits from this new business venture will simply produce additional opportunities to accelerate my passive income-building activities until that income is greater than my expenses and I am financially free.

The real core of my strategy has been in education, which is something I would have to assume most personal finance bloggers believe very strongly in as well. Where I seem to differ is that I’ve never been as interested in new ways to spend less and save more, but on how to better understand financials, how to build leadership skills, how to allow myself to put faith in other people’s abilities, and how to increase my communication skills. These are the core skills that will ultimately allow one to exponentially increase their income, hopefully most of which is passive!

Posted in Financial Freedom, Goals, Personal Finance, Small Business | 2 Comments »

Go Green, Get Green

Posted by Andy on March 17, 2007

About a year ago I bought new bedroom furniture. Instead of looking at local furniture stores, I went to the Internet and searched for it. One of the first things that came up was a company called Green Culture with their slogan “Products for an Enlightened Planet.” I looked around and found a couple I liked, finally deciding on the furniture shown below:

I like the look and was also sold on the fact that I was also doing good for the world so I paid my $3,000 + shipping for a set. While I’m not a fanatic environmentalist, I think these days given the choice most would choose to help if they knew they were doing it, and it didn’t inconvenience them.

Recently I needed a new dining room table, so this time I went shopping at my local Levitz Superstore. While browsing around, I noticed they had the same bedroom furniture with a slightly different bed frame:

When I looked at the price tag of the Levitz version, it was a bit disconcerting! What seemed to be the same product was on sale for $999.99 for the set! A year ago I paid $3,000.

The strangest part is that I really don’t feel all that ripped off. The “help your planet by buying farmed wood products” messaging must have worked on me. Besides, saving the environment is the cool thing to do these days. It’s probably the only subject that can take someone as bland and boring as Al Gore and turn him into a superstar, Academy Award and all. It’s also allowed Whole Foods to reach stellar success by building a nationwide chain that focuses on what’s good for you and your planet.

Once again, using my common sense approach it would seem prudent to add “going green” to my product selection criteria. It is a growing “hot button” among many Americans and it is something that has historically allowed companies to charge more for their goods and services than their not-green counterparts. Good for the the environment and business? Sounds like a win-win. Go green, get green.

Current Product Selection Summary:
My thinking is now being directed towards locating a tangible product for women possessing properties that would allow it to be marketed as expensive, luxurious and/or exclusive. This product should also be constructed of environmentally sound materials, allowing ”go green“ to be an additional focal point of the brand.

Posted in Business, Financial Freedom, Go Green, Marketing, Personal Finance, Product Selection, Small Business | Leave a Comment »

Men or Women: Which Makes a Better Target Market?

Posted by Andy on March 16, 2007

An interesting article was published in the March 12th issue of BusinessWeek entitled “Gender Gap A Tale of Two Inflations.” The article requires you to sign up with BusinessWeek, so here are a few key points if you don’t want to bother:

  • The price of goods women buy over the past 18 months has grown 3.6% while goods that men typically buy has only grown 0.2%. This represents a significant gap!
  • Single women spend a higher percentage of income than single men do, and women are staying single longer than ever before.
  • Women spend more on themselves than men do.

The unknown that would make a huge difference for profitability of a venture is whether or not the costs for production and marketing are rising faster for women than men. My hunch is no, but sometimes just getting one piece of the puzzle can be very misleading.

Taking my common sense approach to finding my idea, I think I’ll focus on women. Besides the data that says they are willing to spend more on themselves, as a man I don’t know much about things that women regularly spend money on. I know they like shoes and bags and jewelry, etc. But to come up with a good idea, validate it, market it and deliver it in a way that resonates with the female population? That basically means I will either need to start studying real hard, which of course takes time, or I’m forced to follow rule #2 and #3.

Current Product Selection Summary:
My thinking is now being directed towards locating a tangible product for women possessing properties that would allow it to be marketed as expensive, luxurious and/or exclusive.

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Product, Service or Hybrid… Hmm…

Posted by Andy on March 14, 2007

So I’ve reasoned that makes more sense to sell a high-margin product, which probably means a combination of expensive, exclusive and/or luxurious.

In an attempt to narrow down the possibilities further, let’s explore whether or not a product, a service or a hybrid offering (selling a product with services on top) makes the most sense.

A Service?
My initial hunch is that selling services requires someone to either deliver services themselves or manage the delivery of service. Starting out, this isn’t something I can afford to do from a time or money perspective. With service based businesses, your inventory is measured in man-hours available for sale meaning that if you are selling design services, you have to hire someone to deliver the design and manage the project. That someone has an upper limit of around 1700 hours/year per full-time employee.

Maybe I can develop a web site that matches service providers with customers, which is aways a possibility. The downside is that there are plenty of sites out there already doing this quite well.

A Hybrid?
The hybrid concept is not a possibility. My business would have to sell a product then manage the delivery of services. This is done quite a bit in enterprise software. First companies will buy the software, then they’ll buy customization and a maintenance contract. This is harder to do without matching up service providers, unless of course the product was something can be used with an existing industry’s service offering.

A lame example: a new hammer that has a site listing current handy men trained on how to use this special hammer. The issue here is that if it is really that special, someone may have to train new handy men on this whiz-bang new hammer, then the public would have to be educated on why they should demand this new hammer from their handy men. Sounds like a lot of work! Generally this is fine and expected of a new venture, but my rules won’t allow me to effectively pay for and manage such things.

A Product? 
Finding a product to sell seems like the most sense. The various aspects of developing and delivering the product can be outsourced. Selling a product can easily be purely transactional, as long as the product is simple and easy to use and/or appreciate (a pet rock for example!)

Summary:
I think it is safe to say I can start narrowing down my thinking to a tangible product possessing properties that would allow it to be marketed as luxurious and exclusive.

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Market Selection Through Buffettology

Posted by Andy on March 13, 2007

Warren Buffet of Berkshire Hathaway is widely regarded as the world’s most successful investor. He has turned investor’s seed money of $105,000 into over $40 billion during the course of his lifetime by using a method referred to ”value investing.” Mary Buffett, the Warren’s daughter, explained his methods for investing in her book titled “The New Buffettology.”

Mary explains that the core of Buffett’s strategy is based on finding a company that holds a durable competitive advantage and/or ridiculously high inventory turnover. A durable competitive advantage is something like a patent, brand equity, simple product, etc. that allows a company to maintain high profit margins. Such companies have low fixed costs and low R&D costs. They create a product and that product is able to remain the same without much change over many years. Coca-Cola can do this, pharmaceuticals can’t.

Warren Buffet has made more money than any human being, save Bill Gates, by simply looking for and purchasing companies that posses a durable competitive advantage (while on sale during a bear market of course). If he’s lucky, these companies will also offer high inventory turnover, which makes for very, very attractive long-term profits.

If I am to create a successful business by selling a tangible product (not that I need to sell a product, but I may as well entertain the idea) that requires neither my time nor my money I suspect whatever I sell should have a durable competitive advantage of some sort. My product will need to have high margins and the way to do that is through creating an air of exclusivity.

The real difference between a Bic pen and a Mont Blanc is some metal around it. At the core, the two devices are meant to do one thing, offer a tool for transferring thoughts to paper. However, a Bic costs 30 cents. Mont Blanc “Writing Instruments” will cost you into the hundreds. Does it cost that much more to manufacture a Mont Blanc? Probably not. But the brand is designed around exclusivity and luxury.

Bic competes on costs, making it a commodity price-oriented product with very low margins. The problem with competing on price is that gaining a competitive edge means making less money, or another way of looking at it is over time you’ll need to be doing the more work to maintain the same income. Mont Blanc competes on emotion, meaning price has nothing to do with it. That gives Mont Blanc the scent of a durable competitive advantage.

For me, I think its safe to say that I prefer the opportunity to come up with an idea for a luxurious product to a commodity product. I’d even go so far as to say I cannot sell a commodity product if I wanted to becuase I will most likely be charged a per-transaction fee by the vendors who handle the logistics side of orders. This will eat into a commodity product’s already non-existent profit margins, making it much harder to reach my goals.

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