Low-Risk, High-Payoff Self-Employment
Ideas
by
Marty Nemko © 2006

So many men would like to be
self-employed, except for one thing: the risk.
Fortunately, some businesses
entail much less risk than others. They avoid the six major sources
of risk:
New idea risk.
Many aspiring entrepreneurs think they must come up with a novel
idea. That’s foolish. Why be a guinea pig for an untested idea when
there are plenty of proven ideas that you could implement in a
different location? Most new ideas fail, and you probably don’t
have deep enough pockets to endure even one failure. If you want to
be innovative, don’t worry. Even the most tried-and-true business
provides plenty of opportunity to innovate, for example, in
advertising, décor, motivating staff, and theft control.
Trend risk.
Today’s hot
idea is often tomorrow’s has been. Cigar shops were smokin’ in the
1990s and burned out by 2000. You want a business that has stood the
test of time.
Large investment
required.
Last I checked, you weren’t rolling in dough. If
you’re not and your business requires a large investment, it means
you’ll have to mortgage yourself to your eyeballs. If your business
gives you unexpected problems (and they usually do), even for a
short time, you could find yourself out of money and into
overwhelming debt. Fortunately, many good businesses don’t require a
large investment: especially home-based businesses, service
businesses, internet businesses, and cart businesses. (See below.)
Long time to profitability.
Tivo is one of the late 20th
century’s greatest inventions. Unfortunately, it took the public
until well into the 21st century to realize it. As a
result, Tivo lost $600 million in its first five years. Do you have
that kind of staying power?
Competition risk.
You want to go into a business
with little competition unless you know you can quickly decimate the
competition. For example, for decades, Blondie’s Pizza was the only
pizza-by-the-slice place within a block of the
University of
California, Berkeley’s main entrance.
The pizza was just okay. Enter Fat Slice, virtually across the
street. The slices are not just bigger but better, and the place is
brighter. Today, there’s always a line in front of Fat Slice and
Blondie’s is moribund.
Five High-Payoff, Low-Risk
Businesses
Of course, before starting any
business, it’s wise to consult a professional to help you assess
whether a business is right for you, but I believe each of these
businesses to be low risk in all of the above areas yet offering
solid potential to generate a good income.
A small chain of espresso
carts. These are like Starbucks without
the rent. In fact, placing your cart opposite a Starbucks and
calling it “The Uncorporate Café” might work well. Certainly pick a
location with great foot traffic: next to a bus or train station, in
a large office building or hospital lobby, in front of a busy
supermarket, big box store, or a stadium on game days, etc. Why
espresso? Coffee drinks have a higher profit margin than cocaine.
And carts cost so much less than a storefront. Plus, in the right
location and run well, a cart business can generate real money from
Day One. And, there’s no trend risk. People have been craving their
caffeine fix for centuries with no sign of withdrawal. Other items
that can be sold from carts: gift soaps, jewelry, soup. (I like
names such as Auntie Barbara’s Soup and The Soup Nazi.) Worried
about status? No one’s asking you to man the cart yourself. You ‘re
the president and CEO of the Continental Cart Corp., with five
branches to serve you.
Consultant to college-bound
students and their families. The hysteria
around getting into the “right” college seems only to be
accelerating. It’s become almost de rigueur for upper-middle-class
parents to spend thousands of dollars on a consultant to help pick
out the colleges apply to, with applications, and with obtaining
financial aid. This business requires little money to start, but be
sure you’re willing to market, market, market. That could mean, for
example, doing free workshops at suburban public and private high
schools, as well as at places of worship in upscale areas.
Mission-critical repair.
Newspaper
and magazine printers can’t afford for their machines to go down
during a print run. Yet these massive machines have many moving
parts and are trouble-prone. That’s the sort of repair business that
can be lucrative. Other examples: machines used in hospitals,
especially in operating rooms, commercial airplane engine and
avionics repair, parking meter repair.
Government contractor.
The government is an excellent customer.
The government pays its bills and often is less price-conscious than
private sector customers. An excellent introduction to becoming a
government contractor is at
www.captureplanning.com/articles/26973.cfm.
Online Dating Consultant.
For many people, nothing is more important
than meeting Mr. or Ms. Right. And to do that, ever more people are
turning to online dating. But they often struggle in writing their
profiles and taking and selecting photos to post. That’s where you
come in. Advertise on singles sites.
Advice I’d Give My Child
Ignore the conventional wisdom
dispensed by MBA schools. They encourage people to tackle
intellectually interesting innovations because they’re fun to
discuss and because the professors aren’t risking any money. But in
the real world, key to a business’s success is risk reduction. And
above all, that means don’t innovate; replicate.

The San Francisco Bay Guardian named Marty Nemko “The Bay
Area’s Best Career Coach.” His columns and an archive of his
National Public Radio San Francisco show plus excerpts from his
book, Cool Careers for Dummies,
which, in the Reader’s Choice Poll was rated the #1 most useful
career guide, are free on www.martynemko.com.

Copyright 2005 Marty Nemko, all rights reserved