Posts tagged Emma Jones

Emma Jones on why now is a good time to start a business

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FreelancerThe How to Work from Home – The Inside Guide session with Emma Jones was jam-packed with excellent tips and anecdotes about her business career. One of Emma’s points was that despite all the economic bad news about double-dip recessions, a second credit crunch and the collapsing euro, now is actually a good time to start a business. Why? For three main reasons:

1. It’s cheaper than it’s ever been to set up – you used to need a lot of capital to start in business, but now for the price of a laptop and a mobile phone you can connect with potential customers all over the world. There are good deals to be had in stock, equipment and all kinds of professional services, as employees who have been made redundant go freelance or decide self-employment is actually less risky than relying on one employer.

2. Technology is ever-evolving and becoming cheaper, and the growth of social media enables a small business to quickly make themselves known in the marketplace for little investment other than time. You can engage a VA you may never meet to undertake the parts of your business you dislike and aren’t so good at, with none of the risks and costs inherent in employing somebody.

3. There is so much business support available. Business Link may only exist online these days, but there is help and advice to be found at business events, on countless websites such as Enterprise Nation, through Emma’s own organisation StartUp Britain, and numerous networking organisations.

And I can’t leave out my own favourite reason why small business has never had it so good – the growth of coworking spaces and Jelly. Now there’s no reason to get lonely and demotivated at home – you can go and work in a business-like space with fellow freelancers and business owners who’ll happily help you out with tips and may even be the source of future work.

Obviously bear in mind Emma’s four key tips about what not to do when starting a business, but whether you leap or are pushed, there could be no time like the present to put that idea into practice.

What not to do when starting and running a home business, by Emma Jones

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Emma Jones' StartUp Secrets, How to Work from Home - The Inside GuideA month ago Emma Jones of Enterprise Nation and StartUp Britain shared her startup secrets with attendees of How to Work from Home – The Inside Guide. I’ll be covering her key points at a later date, but just as important is knowing what NOT to do when setting up and growing a home business! Here are 4 things Emma recommends you avoid:

1. Don’t do any research. It’s so easy to assume that because you love what you’re doing, so will plenty of other people, who will also want to pay you money for it. Test before committing yourself that there is a market, that it’s a sustainable market, and there is space for you within it. For example, carry out a simple customer survey, do some research to check the trends and find out how well existing suppliers are currently doing.

2. Don’t spend a lot of money committing yourself to stock, premises, investment, employees etc until you are sure there is a market. Emma coined the term ‘5-9 working’ a few years ago when she identified the new phenomenon of people starting businesses alongside their day job. Keeping the regular income going allows you to test out your idea with little risk. Check out my review of Emma’s book Working 5 to 9.

3. Don’t go for too wide a market and end up appealing to nobody. It’s tempting to think you’ll get most sales by going for the wider market. Instead, focus in on a niche that you understand and can fill really well. For example, if you’re a personal trainer, think of the clients you’ve had the most success with, or the problems you’ve beaten yourself, and tackle that market – the personal trainer who helps clients shed 2 stone, helps new mums get back into shape etc.

4. Don’t assume you must rely entirely on your own resources to get going and then to develop your business. A mentor can provide vital support, but also bear in mind you may need more than one person. You may find a technical expert helps with problem-solving, and a good all-round listener with encouragement, confidence-boosting and an objective viewpoint. My Work from Home Audit helps to quickly gain clarity when you can’t see the wood for the trees!

StartUp Secrets for home workers with Emma Jones

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 @judyheminsley Something I 'threw' together last ni... on TwitpicStartUp Secrets was the title of yesterday’s How to Work from Home -The Inside Guide meet-up at Central, and who better to reveal the factors contributing to business success than Emma Jones of Enterprise Nation and StartUp Britain?

Emma grew up in a family that ran restaurants throughout her childhood and expected that she and her brother would play a full part – to the extent of her brother standing on a box to reach the till! Her self-confessed initial slacking at university was turned around by spending a year in Japan and experiencing at first hand the hard-working Japanese culture.

She worked for Arthur Andersen for only five years after university before leaving to start her first business, which attracted a sale within two years. The inspiration for Enterprise Nation came from reading the biography of Martha Stewart, the American home and lifestyle guru. Emma realised that women no longer simply want to create a nice home, they also want to make an income from home. Nobody was providing information on home business so she stepped in to fill the gap in the market.

After the Enterprise Nation website came books and Working 5 to 9 featured startup Claire’s Handmade Cakes, which was two years old and going strong on Wednesday. As you can see from the photo Claire brought along a batch of biscuits beautifully decorated with her logo, most of which had disappeared before we all left!

We covered lots of ground talking about attendees’ experiences and discussing their current challenges, so I’ll be covering some of Emma’s startup tips in future blogs. Look out for posts covering the importance of being a business information sponge, Emma’s top things to avoid when you’re starting a business, and how to use your weaknesses to your advantage.

StartUp Secrets for home workers

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Emma Jones' StartUp Secrets, How to Work from Home - The Inside GuideI’m very much looking forward to the next How to Work from Home – The Inside Guide meet-up at Central on Thursday 27 October. Our guest this month is Emma Jones, who founded the website Enterprise Nation from her home in Shrewsbury in 2006 to help people starting and growing a business at home. Enterprise Nation rapidly grew a large community and within a few years Emma was being asked to advise government on small business.

This year she has co-founded StartUp Britain, the campaign by successful entrepreneurs to get more businesses started, and has been travelling round the country in a double-decker bus spreading the startup word far and wide! Emma spoke on the main stage at the recent Conservative Party conference and is in demand as a speaker at leading conferences and events (like The BIG Jelly in March this year!)

We’re deliberately restricting the number of places at the event (so book yours here quickly!) to retain the informal, conversational atmosphere we’ve created at the meet-ups, and so that all attendees get a chance to ask Emma their own questions. She is down-to-earth and open as well as being extremely knowledgeable, so I’m anticipating another fun and inspiring evening like the recent ones with Clare Flynn Levy, James Layfield and San Sharma.

Emma will be talking about her amazing success and the factors she believes have contributed to it, and which you can use too to reach your business goals. I wonder whether she’ll mention the role of family as a launchpad for the successful would-be entrepreneur? I worked with her mum, Fay Easton, on the organisation of The BIG Jelly earlier this year and learnt a huge amount from her in doing so. Fay runs Enterprise HQ, a contemporary workhub stylishly carved out of an old industrial building in Coalport, Shropshire, and works tirelessly for her local business community. Surely having an entrepreneurial parent has got to give you a headstart?

The BIG Jelly – we did it!

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BIG JELLY LOGO
What a day! Here are my impressions of last Friday:

Blue sky and sunshine at 7.30 am, what a start, hope it’s an omen. Jelly green banners going up, badges to sort, muffins laid out next to coffee for arrivals, trade stands to explore.

The doors open to the soundtrack of the Shropshire Jelly video filmed last week at Enterprise HQ – ‘It ain’t about the money, money..we just want to make the world dance…’

Jelly beans to munch, Emma Jones in a great pair of boots, down-to-earth and inspirational at the same time.

Louise Findlay-Wilson, aptly named PrPro, that new haircut and colour fooled us completely, we were expecting a longhaired blonde, how shameful not to recognise your own speaker. People scribbling notes with fat green BIG Jelly pens.

‘Move in together. Bit more. A bit to the left. Big smile please.’

12 o’clock and Brown Bags lined up, actually I’m hungry, ploughmans sounds just the job. You’ve got a banana, I’ve got a pear, mm, chocolate roll, nice.

The Jelly session, oh my goodness that’s Caroline from Wales and…Verity from Edinburgh, lovely to meet you at last. And Judy, all the way from Normandy to pick up tips on starting Jelly en France.

And here’s Daniel, our third speaker, here despite train strikes and late taxis, better feed the man and find him a quiet place to work before his talk.

Back to the Main Hall for the Q&A, Gavin chairs it with his usual humour and aplomb. Introducing Daniel, stealing one of his own introductions – ‘He’ll share his knowledge in direct proportion to the applause he receives’ – much clapping.

Daniel has the audience in the palm of his hand. I’ve heard the content of the talk several times before, but I’m still gripped and realise he’s down walking about in front of the tables and I’d never even noticed him leave the stage.

But better close it down now, only 5 minutes after the schedule, although people seem happy to keep asking questions and he to answer them. After Fay’s closing remarks she comes down from the stage and gives us both a hug. We’ve done it and it was great!

Big smile please.’

Happy, excited people clutching Key Person of Influence books and a bag of jelly beans to fuel the journey home. ‘What a fantastic day. When’s the next one?’

Packing of boxes and cloths taken off tables. Poor Rob, the AV man is the first to arrive and the last to leave. A large glass of white wine in the bar – thanks, Jan!

Maybe not the world, but today we made part of Shropshire dance and that’s good enough for me :-)

Please can you lovely home workers help me spread the word about The BIG Jelly?

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UK Jelly - The BIG JellyThe BIG Jelly is now only two months away, on Friday 25 March, and it’s high time I told you what’s happening.

The BIG Jelly was the idea of Jan Minihane, my Jelly friend and the founder of Shropshire Jelly, who was so thrilled at the collaborations that came out of her local Jellys that she wondered what wonderful things might happen if home workers, freelancers and micro business owners from all over the UK met up for the day.

She also wanted to tell more people about Jelly and how simple it is to start, with the ultimate aim of a Jelly within reach of every home worker in the UK.

But obviously nobody would bother to travel to a central point for a national Jelly when they’ve got one much closer, so the day had to be really special. The Jelly team (me, Jan and Fay Easton of Enterprise HQ in Coalport, which hosts Jan’s Jelly) have planned a day for all small businesses that is not only Jelly, a space with free wi fi where you can catch up with work and emails, but also all of the following:

3 inspirational speakers – Louise Findlay-Wilson of PR Pro
Emma Jones of Enterprise Nation & Bitsy
Daniel Priestley of Triumphant Events – all well-known champions of small business

A choice of breakout sessions run by experts:
Home Working Wisdom
The Money Go Round
Demystifying Social Media
Marketing for Micro Businesses
Setting up & Running a Jelly
Website/SEO Clinic

And:
Mini expo
Refreshments provided throughout the day from coffee and Danish on arrival to brown bag lunch and cookies, and tea and coffee all day
Event bag with useful content to take away
Special rates for overnight accommodation at host venue, 4* QHotels Telford
Plenty of time for meeting new people in the uniquely friendly Jelly atmosphere

The BIG Jelly is for all micro and small business owners, freelancers, home workers, coworkers, new start-ups, business advisers, workhub operators, business support agencies, government ministers and anyone interested in the future of small and home business, whether you have heard of Jelly or not!

Some people have asked why The BIG Jelly isn’t free, when one of the main principles of Jelly is that it’s free to attend. Well, we’d have loved to bring you all this for nothing, but with the economy the way it is, it simply isn’t possible to cover the costs of a national event through goodwill and sponsorship alone. Even the big blue chip companies have tightened their belts. The people and organisations supporting us have been extremely generous and that’s how we’ve been able to keep the ticket price to £50 + VAT if you book before 28th February 2010, and £75 + VAT thereafter.

The BIG Jelly is a not-for-profit event and so we don’t have a big marketing and PR budget. You will soon be reading about the day in the press, but it would be a huge help if home workers and small businesses can create a strong word-of-mouth buzz through Twitter, Facebook and your personal contacts.

Wherever you are in the UK or the world, whether you can come to The BIG Jelly or not, we would be so grateful if you can start talking about the day both on and offline. The hashtag is #BIGJelly, and more information and booking is at www.uk-jelly.org.uk

Thank you so much if you can support us in making this day a huge success and helping to spread the many benefits of Jelly throughout the UK. I really hope to see you there!

Best wishes
Judy

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