Is early business growth and expansion a good idea?

in #business7 years ago

Happy Monday Steemians

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I have been in a position where a business has grown rapidly in its first couple of years and faced the question of whether or not to expand to push growth or remain the same but improve service. Recently I was asked about this subject regarding my climbing business.

At just two years old we are still in a period of natural growth as more people find us online and via word of mouth. But already we are so busy on an evening that people leave without climbing because it is so crowded. As such I was asked if I had plans to expand. Obviously this is something that had crossed my mind a number of times but the justification for such a large project so early on was difficult to agree on.

Ideally in any business I would not recommend large scale expansion until the business has sustained steady profits for three consecutive years. Thus I have my first black mark against expansion. Next is the question of the business plan and financial forecasts. Are we own track? has development been taken into account? and can the forecasted profits sustain development outlay without an increase in income? In this instance all data suggests we are way ahead of target but obviously the data set is short, and forecasts are speculative at best.

With the above in mind the only option for me personally is to take a more human approach, listen to my gut and make a decision. There are always unknown elements in business planning and the idea of taking a gamble on something which is currently fine as it is is a scary prospect. In the same breath though I took a risk opening the business in the first place, and as such the gamble is worth taking. Do I think it will succeed? Yes - Data suggests customer numbers are growing fairly consistently, which means added space will undoubtedly allow for continued growth. Will development increase turnover / profits? - Maybe - Initially fixed costs will increase, borrowing will increase and profits will decrease. However, taking a longer term view, if business continues to grow then we will secure our position longer term by not allowing a market gap to appear for someone else to try and capitalise upon.

The long and short of it is that as business owners and entrepreneurs we have to be willing to take risks, albeit educated risks and be ready to adapt to change. A business that stands still will stagnate and gradually become irrelevant. Build data from day 1, learn how to analyse it and then make sure you don't follow the data so strictly that you remove natural instinct.

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As a lifelong climber, I am very happy to find this post about business & climbing!

Take that time to analyze the figures and data and see if growth is the way to go/ It sounds like it from first glance, but hearing that you are so busy that the crowds cannot climb, and actually clearing a profit are two different items.

I'm in the Dallas area and the gyms here always seem to be busy.....and I believe they are profitable. I know they hire climbers and college kids to keep the payroll costs down, they have branched into Yoga and training as well as competitions.

I look forward to more of your posts.

Try checking out "Crushing It" by GaryVee - he has some really great branding insights for social media marketing that might help you get real creative and engage with your climbing community in new ways that might help open doors you cannot see yet on this possible new expansion.

Thanks for your reply. Its good to hear from another climber.

Staffing costs here keep on climbing as we value quality service over cost saving. As such we run an annual payroll bill in excess of £160k however, profit margins remain high and growth is steady with plenty of areas still to develop in terms of daily service.

Ill check "out Crushing" It now

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