Cost-Cutting Strategies for Your Home Business
Run a lean-and-mean home office with these five money-saving tips.
By Paul and Sarah Edwards
| December 27, 2005
URL:
http://www.entrepreneur.com/homebasedbiz/worklifebalance/advicefrompaulandsarahedwards/article82154.html
With mounting energy bills eating into everyone's income and
increasing the cost of doing business at home, it's a good time
to look into ways to economize your home business. First we'll
take a look at some ways to keep your energy costs in line,
followed by some other ways to cut corners and save.
1. Cut Utility Bills
Now is a good time to compare the choices you have for providing
heat and electricity in your home office. First, you may find
immediate cost savings by switching from a conventional system to
an alternative one like cutting down the energy demands on your
furnace by heating your home with your wood-burning fireplace. In
the summer, reduce air-conditioning costs by scheduling your work
around the hottest hours of the day, using attic fans and skylights
that open to let out the heat. Often you can do this without
decreasing your productivity.
If you use propane or heating oil and have a choice of
suppliers, compare prices. Find out if your home business qualifies
for a business discount or business rate. If you can get a business
rate, make sure it's actually cheaper than your residential
rate. Some state utility commissions tilt in favor of consumers,
but many offer business discounts.
Some utility companies offer free energy evaluations where a
certified inspector will come to your home and assess your home and
office energy-use. The inspector will show you where you can save
resources and money and offer specific suggestions on how to do so.
If a free inspection isn't available, it may be worthwhile to
hire an energy auditor. You can locate an energy expert through the
Residential Energy Services Network
(RESNET).
You can calculate your home's energy use at http://hes.lbl.gov.
Additional information can be found at The American
Council for an Energy-Efficient Economy. For a specific
weatherization assistance program, try www.eere.energy.gov/weatherization. Another
information resource is The American Council for an Energy-Efficient
Economy.
2. Make Your Home
Energy-Efficient
A number of home improvements now qualify for tax incentives
provided in the Energy & Transportation Tax Acts of
2005. Beginning January 1, 2006, you can recover up to 30 percent
of the cost of solar water heaters and photovoltaic equipment in
the form of tax credits. There are also credits for adding
insulation or roof materials that'll reduce heat loss, as well
as putting in geothermal heating and central fan systems. To learn
more, check with your tax professional or get an overview at
http://ria.thomson.com/newlaw/energyact.asp.
To save on lighting, use compact fluorescent and halogen bulbs.
They use less energy, produce more light, and last longer than
ordinary incandescent bulbs. To find out if your existing office
equipment and anything else that uses electricity is being an
energy hog, buy a device that enables you to monitor energy usage.
One such device is called Kill A Watt from P3 International.
When replacing equipment, look for office equipment that
displays the Energy Star logo. Using such equipment can cut your
electric usage by as much as 50 percent over other equipment. Learn
more about EPA's Energy Star program at www.energystar.gov.
Replacing home appliances over 10 years old is also something to
consider.
3. Get a Better Deal on Phone
Services
Increasing numbers of people are saving money by using voice over
internet protocol (VoIP), such as Skype. While quality of service varies, a
friend of ours who lives outside the U.S. reports people hear him
better when he's using using Skype than when he's on his
land line. Other major VoIP providers are iConnectHere,
Net2Phone
and DialPad.
You may also be able to save money on your cell-phone service.
To get customers to switch services, providers are constantly
competing with each other by offering lower prices. You can make a
side-by-side comparison on sites like www.myrateplan.com.
Another money-saving option is to combine your phone and
internet services. Check prices carefully, though. For example, we
get SBC's bundling of local and long-distance service, but
we're required to pay for tacked-on services we don't use.
If you want to combine your phone and internet services, shop
around to make sure you're actually saving on a bundled
package.
4. Save on Office Supplies and
Equipment
If you need to replace old equipment or replenish dwindling
supplies, there are a number ways to cut costs.
- Comparison-shop smartly. When buying office
equipment, use shopping comparison sites, such as www.streetprices.com, www.Nexttag.com, www.Shopzilla.com,
www.Pricegrabber.com and www.froogle.com. To
get the best prices, check out multiple comparison sites for each
purchase. Also check out prices on eBay as well as other auction
sites like Bidville, ePier, and iOffer. Items on less-used auction sites sometimes
fetch lower prices than ones on eBay, or offer alternatives to
bidding.
- Buy in bulk. Chances are you'll save by
buying items you use a great deal of in bulk at warehouse stores
like Costco. For supplies you use in your home business that
aren't available at office superstores or warehouse stores,
consider joining other homebusiness owners to buy items directly
from a manufacturer.
- Buy generic store brands. Office
superstores offer private label items such as mailing labels, ink
cartridges and shipping envelopes at discounts over name brands.
Chances are they're made by the same manufacturers.
- Don't waste paper. Save on the amount
of paper you use in your home office by using:
- Personal information management software instead of making
notes on paper,
- The "print preview" feature in your word-processing
or desktop publishing software to see what your printed page will
look like before printing (this will reduce the number of test
copies you'll need to make),
- Your computer to send and receive faxed messages without having
to produce printed pages,
- Outdated stationery as notepads instead of throwing it away,
and
- Homemade packing material made from junk mail and other paper
you normally discard that has been run through a paper shredder
(also save shipping boxes, plastic foam balls, and other plastic
packaging materials for reuse).
5. Pay Credit Card Bills Soon After
They Arrive
Credit card companies will take as many as three days to log your
payment, so your best bet is to pay soon after receiving your bill
if you have the money in your account and can pay the balance in
full. If you miss the closing date, you'll be charged the
larger of a late fee (often $39) or interest on the old and new
balance.
There are a number of ways you can cut costs and save money in
your homebased business. With minimal effort, these five strategies
will put a little extra money in your pocket now and add up to big
savings for you and your business year after year.
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