I would recommend the SBA (small business administration) and checking with your local community college to see if there are community classes. You can also check with your local Senior Center to see if they have any mentors available.
A successful business starts with two things...knowledge of your industry and a business plan. For a business plan, I actually recommend the
US Jaycees Chairman's Planning Guide; pay particular attention to Items 2 and 5 and of course...6 (budget). Note that in #2, it say that your goals must be SPECIFIC, MEASURABLE and ATTAINABLE.
Marketing is also important. A great product can fail with bad marketing and a crappy product can succeed with great marketing.
I downloaded the last book and will look it over. FYI - Numbers are my jam...I'm an accountant.
Thanks for your detailed reply!
The SBA team I’m working with is amazing - I live in Chicago, and there’s at least 3 SBA-affiliated groups here, but I am working with the one closest to me. I think I lucked out, because the director is friendly, responsive, concise, and he truly cares about businesses getting off the ground.
I also really like the document (Jaycee’s) you shared regarding business plans. I do have a business plan draft, but I think this guide will help me distill my business plan as I’m chatting with other people.
I didn’t think about reaching out to senior centers though. There’s a few very close to me (and, oddly enough, I lived in a senior center in college
). I will reach out to some places and report back!
Does it need to be in book form? If you are open to online courses which include videos, downloadable e-books, sample forms, etc., there are two soapmaking-specific courses that are pretty comprehensive:
this one from Kenna at Modern Soapmaking, and
this one from Lovin' Soap. Both of those website have a lot of free information about soapy business, too.
It doesn’t need to be in book form - but books are part of my brand (and I am getting screen fatigue!), so I’m eager for more book ideas. And I’ve followed both Lovin Soap and Modern Soapmaking for a while! I think Modern Soapmaking has given me a special appreciation for the importance of solid business operations like proper insurance and effective product photography. I may take a leap and dive into one of their classes. Looks like Lovin Soap is running one of their classes very soon… sounds like perfect timing for me!
Edit: maybe it’s not a class Lovin Soap is running, but she does have sale through EOD tomorrow!
Just remember, to make money, you can sell soap and other bath & body products without becoming a business.
For example, when I first joined an online soaping forum in 2004, I had mentors who generously shared their knowledge. Also, there was about a dozen soapmakers here in the Denver area that got together regularly to share their knowledge and experience. Most of them were Master Soapers who got their degree from
HSCG.
They mostly started out with doing Farmers Markets and Holiday Events that only required a License to Sell so they could collect sales tax that went to the State along with filing their State and Fed Income Tax each year.
After about 4 years or so of that, as they became more successful, they went into wholesaling, and/or teaching, and/or selling online. That's the point where they established themselves as "a business."
I've always said you can't make a living selling soap. The profit margin just isn't there. But you can make enough money to support a hobby you love.
I never wanted to make my hobby a business. Been there; done that. Too much stress! I make soap to maintain my sanity and it's cheaper than therapy.
I was able to pick up a few wholesale customers along the way that I made soap and other products for on a Contract Labor basis. They were "the business"; I was "the help".
It allowed me to soap as much or as little as I wanted and to try new things. I swore if it ever became W-O-R-K I would stop. After 10 + years, it did and I did. LOL
I made around $3,000 profit annually -- enough to enjoy doing what I love and to explore creative endeavors in the area of treating arthritis and other ailments for the benefit of me, my friends and family.
Just something to think about...
Thanks for the insight - it sound like you found a great soapmaking community and you made a pretty penny! Achieving any kind of profit is no small feat.
I would love to sell soap, but legally I can’t do that in where I live (Chicago) unless I have a license. I’ve retained an attorney whose focus is Chicago business, and she confirmed that I can’t sell *anything* unless I have a Chicago business license. The zoning laws here are too strict. I even asked if I could go the IRS hobby route, but under City laws, it’s not permitted.
It’s rough, because I’ve seen so many soap makers achieve home-based business success - that’s what I wanted! - but the risk of penalties from the city is too great. It does seem like there are some unlicensed home-based soap makers in Chicago, but I don’t want to risk daily $250 fines for staying in business. I’m not risk averse, but messing with the government is one thing I don’t want to do.
Thanks friend! I probably won’t “launch” until August, but you know I’m going to report back if/when I get started selling soap!!!
Watch Jerika Zimmerman on youtube. As to the rest, no book will cover all of it. Customer service is generally instinctive and you will find some things work or don't work depending on the people, the location, and the business. Business practices are things you will refine as you go. Things like storage solutions are entirely up to you.
The one thing you can and probably should learn from a book is accounting. Although I am TERRIBLE at accounting and loath it with a passion. I've been trying to be better about bookkeeping but full blown accounting? I get frustrated just with basic bookkeeping. We have an accountant because of it.
As to website design, social media posting, etc, I'm still working on getting the hang of it. When I start making enough money, I'm going to hire people to do that stuff for me. But you won't find any of it in "business" books.
Let me put it this way... I have 18 years in the hotel industry. Eighteen years is a long time. Things I think are simple and common sense aren't so obvious to people that don't have that experience. And it's hard to explain what you should know when there are so many years behind what I do know. I learned them all by experience. Some people go to school to get an HRT (Hotel and Restaurant) degree. I've always hated when those people come in. They tend to think they know way more than what they do and it drives me crazy. There are things that you just get a feel for and what's taught in the books and classes doesn't really work in the real world.
For example... I had someone wait at the front desk for 5 minutes because someone was in front of them first and pitch a fit at my clerk because of it. I was just coming into my office when I saw it after being out on the property. I walked into the front desk and asked how I can help. She said to me "I was waiting here for 5 minutes, I can't believe I have been waiting this long (at a three star hotel mind you with one clerk on when we had a total of 8 checkins that night). Don't you know who I am?" I said "I'm very sorry for the wait, she had another guest in front of you. I'm sorry, I don't know who you are" and got the whole thing of "I can't believe this, I expect to be treated better. I'm an important person to this hotel and the city and I know the owner". She still hadn't told me who she was or why she was important. If she was important to the owner, the owner would have told us to make sure things were specifically set up for her. "I demand an apology and a free stay". "I'm sorry ma'am, but you have already received an apology. I won't be giving a free stay for a 5 minute wait.". At which time I invited her to not stay with us again and informed my clerk to cancel her reservation and she stormed out. Btw, the whole time, my clerk was ducked down behind the desk hiding her giggles.
This is the kind of situation that only experience can teach you what to do. Do you give her what she's demanding? Do you call the owner? What to do you do? Giving her what she's demanding would have resulted in an $800 loss for the company and made it so that you didn't have a room to sell that night that could have been sold to someone else. Either way, you'd lose the money, but telling her no meant that you could resell the room and make money off it rather than losing money. Keep it mind, every hotel room costs about $30 a night even if no one stays in it (and that was five years ago) due to costs like housekeeping, electricity, water, cable, etc.
So do you cut your losses and take a chance, or do you put up with the abuse? I decided to cut my losses. The HRT classes tell the students to just give her what she wants and save face. But hotels are in the business of making money.
Books can only teach you so much. But experience means everything.
Thank you so much for sharing this!!!! Yes, books aren’t going to teach me everything - if I’m lucky, they’ll teach me 10% of what I need to know. But a lot of the people I’m working with (my attorney, the SBA, the women’s business development center near me, Allies for Community Business, etc) all operate during standard business hours, and I can only take so much time off from my day job per work per week. I’m eager for “asynchronous” learning - stuff that doesn’t need to be consumed live - so I can work on my business after I’m done with my job during the day.
I’m curious about your experiences with your accountant … I would love to learn how to do everything myself, but I think the amount of time it would take me to learn everything would mean I would have to wait to launch my business in years! Did you stick with the same accountant throughout the life of your business, or did you have to switch accountants? Re: accounting. what should I get done BEFORE I launch my business?
I will definitely check out Jerika Zimmerman on YouTube (and any other soapy business videos online).
I both dread and look forward to the types of tough decisions you’ve had to face in your hospitality roles. It’s very easy for me to say things like “refunds for everyone!” or “Sure I’ll do custom orders, why not?” but when push comes to shove, I will probably be singing a different tune. I know that if this business happens, I’m going to be humbled… it’s just a matter of figuring out what is going to humble me the most!