The Coming Home Business Boom
There is a coming home-business boom. You may not read much
about it, since home business activity takes place quietly, but
it's coming nonetheless. All of the elements are there to
support this quiet boom. Layoffs are increasing. Home-equity
gains of the past few years provide the modest capital needed
for a home-based launch. And people are getting tired of
reporting to offices where salaries are frozen and advancement
opportunity is narrowing as people hold tight to their current
jobs.
The biggest recent factor to fuel this boom came on September
11. There are certain to be millions across the nation now who
shudder as they commute to a tall office building. The attack
has also dramatically increased our desire to stay close to
family. Parents of young children are probably growing
disenchanted with the life of daycare and office buildings in
the new world that abruptly appeared on September 11. Since job
alternatives are scarce during this downturn, you can expect
people to start visiting business opportunity fairs seeking
home-based enterprise opportunities.
Two or three years ago I spent a few months working with a
leading business opportunity and franchise show, living the
gypsy life while giving seminars on how to shop for franchises.
This was during the late-1990s boom years of early ecommerce and
high employment. It was a great time to start a business. Yet
attendance at these shows was down across the country. Who needs
the risk and trouble of a business launch when you can raise
your earnings simply by jumping from good-paying job to
better-paying job. And with the stock market sky-rocketing, you
could accumulate wealth simply by shifting your nest egg from
one fast-flying stock to another.
With fewer choices in the job market and no opportunity in the
stock market, people will naturally start to consider a business
launch. Just 15 years ago, that meant rending office space or a
storefront. Not any more. A home-based business is perfectly
respectable now. It's even coveted. The home business is
accurately perceived as offering more personal freedom than the
out-of-home launch that comes with the strings of large capital
investment and staff management.
We can thank the last major down cycle for taking the stigma out
of home enterprises. The early-to-mid 1980s saw corporations
laying off while collar workers for the first time. In earlier
down cycles, while collar workers were immune to layoffs as
companies trimmed blue-collar manufacturing jobs. The laid-off
white collar workers became consultants and worked from home.
Suddenly the home enterprise was legitimate. Running a company
from your spare bedroom no longer meant you spent your day
holding Mary Kay and Tupperware parties.
The Internet increased the allure of the home-based start-up.
Most shoestring e-biz companies begin in the home, whether the
company trades in products or services. For a small Net-based
business, there is little reason to rent offices. Besides,
statistics from the Small Business Administration (SBA) strongly
suggest your odds for success are greater if you launch from
home.
The SBA has found that 52 to 55 percent of all businesses are no
longer active after five years. For those companies launched and
grown in the home, the failure rate is 45 to 48 percent after
five years. Placing your business in your home gives you a
slightly better than even chance for survival. The improved odds
most likely have to do with the lower overhead of a home-based
business.
With a soft economy and a growing number of laid-off workers who
will naturally consider a business start-up when they discover
their job prospects are dim, this is not the best time to launch
a new enterprise. But I can tell you from personal experience,
the decision to launch a business is not usually rational or
logical. A home business start-up boom is likely in process
right now. It's not because of opportunity; it's because of
desire.