Change of Location
Will a new neighborhood be a good market for your business?
Q: I've moved to a new town and
would like to start the same kind of business that I ran in my
former community. It's a sports-related business. How can I
find out if people here are apt to be as good a market?
A: First, talk with people in the
know on the local sports scene. Get their thoughts about and
reactions to what you want to do. Then conduct a survey with people
whom past experience has taught you would be likely customers for
your business.
You should be able to find experts and contacts for your survey
through sports leagues or clubs. You can find these groups by
talking with school coaches or searching the Web. Even if
there's no site covering local sports, national organizations
often list local affiliates. Most national organizations have Web
sites, or you can look for affiliates in the Encyclopedia of Associations, available in
most libraries.
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Your local newspaper may also prove useful; search its Web site
for archived articles, and if you can, talk with a reporter who
covers local sports. Also check out Sporting Goods
Intelligence, which provides links to associations and research
sources that have industry, business or financial information.
In conducting your survey, whether you do it in person or by
using a written questionnaire, be sure the questions are clear and
mean the same thing to everyone. If you use a written instrument,
make it visually attractive, easy to read and brief.
Multiple-choice and forced-choice questions (such as ranking 1 to
10 or answering with "yes" or "no") work best,
but allow one open-ended question for people to comment freely. If
you mail the survey, provide a stamped,self-addressed envelope. To
encourage people to answer, consider offering a small gift to
people who respond.
Authors and career coaches Paul and Sarah Edwards' new
book is The Best Home Businesses for People 50+.
Send them questions at www.workingfromhome.com or in care of
Entrepreneur.