Spending that cash!

How much money do you spend on your business? If you’re like me, you spend money for things like servers, phones, and development. We all run different business, so we each have our own lists of monthly expenses.

Back in the day when I built my first site, I was spending money like a mad man; probably unnecessarily, too. I guess we sometimes feel that the more money we spend on our business, the greater chance of success for the business — but I’m not too sure if that really makes sense.

Sure, spending money on the necessary things like: phone, fax, servers, always makes sense to me. But when you’re talking about developmental spending, well, that’s a whole different story and you have to take into account your return on investment.

Forget about spending money for things to make your business “cooler.” Because the “cool” features and services will be remembered for a day while the “smart and efficient” features that were well thought-out, will remain as a powerful addition to your business, always.

I spent over $12,000 on my first business. At the time I was like “wow, I just spent all this money so the site will definitely work!” Too bad that’s not always the case. I went absolutely crazy adding “cool” features while forgetting about the features that would add real value to the company.

Always think, think, think before you spend, spend, spend. In the end, you’ll thank yourself and so will your clients because they benefit as well.

Bottom line: spend the money that you plan to grow your business wisely. Don’t spend cash just because you have it. Don’t add services and features just because your can. It’s not about how much money you spend, it’s about how smart you spend it.

I took me a few years to understand that. And I would be lying if I said that I am not spending a lot of cash on my latest ventures, but this time a lot of thought is behind every cent spent.

So spend smart and make sure that you’re always thinking about the return on each dollar. It’s all too easy to blow away cash nowadays, so be wise and spend it right!

So the question is: How do you spend your cash?

6 Responses to “Spending that cash!”

1

I most certainly agree with that. A start-up should always focus on getting it’s core features and getting the product to market before worrying about the cool add-ons. It should also try it’s hardest to lower it’s cost of acquisition as it grows. Great words of advice, as always, Dave!

2

Wow, I look at $12,000 and can’t even imagine doing that for any venture I’ve had in mind. I definitely spend as little as I can. Heck, I’ll piggy-back on my own personal webhost until I truly need some serious servers. ;-)

3

Dave, I read your whole story on your CashCampus and I agree with you that your biggest downfall was adding all of these features that diverted attention from the main feature of the site. So focus is definitly key in a start-up.

4

I’m a diehard bootstrapper. I built ProfileAds with under $1,000, all previous estimates were that we would need well over $30,000. I question every single expense and try to think of ways I can either get it for free or cheaper. While in my more recent ventures I spend more money, it is because it will get the venture going faster or we just have to do it. Money helps, but you can always do more with less if you are creative and have the bootstrapping mindset.

Although, I’ve never been afraid to use excess cash for items that had both business and personal benefits.

5

I spent waaaaay too much on SportsLizard at times, for iPrioritize I’ve spent less than $500 to this point and I don’t plan on any paid marketing so I think it’s definitely possible to run for under $1,000/year (as I think most internet businesses are when they first start out).

I agree with Dan - the less you spend the more creative you have to be and the more gratifying it is in the end. What would we do with all the $ anyway? Buy TV ads? The best marketing is word of mouth, which last time I checked was free.

6

Thank you all for such wonderful insight!! Yeah, I truly learned my lesson from the time of starting my first business and I feel that I have come a long way, and still have a ways to go.

I now have a different midset thanks to all of the mistakes that I have made — and that’s great! That’s what I love about being an entrepreneur…we learn from our mistakes… unfortunately, for many people who work full time jobs, they are scoled for their mistakes and fired for the mistakes they make — that is the single fundamental difference from the entrepreneur to the non-entrepreneur.

We are all learning and it’s great that we’re all here to help one another!! Good stuff, guys!!

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