Subscribe
About
  • Home
  • /
  • TechForum
  • /
  • Making a fresh start for your small business in 2016

Making a fresh start for your small business in 2016

Daryl Blundell, MD of Sage SSB Accounting South and Southern Africa gives a few tips for the year ahead.


Johannesburg, 22 Feb 2016

The start of a New Year is always a great time to re-evaluate your business plans and operations, and ask yourself if there's anything you could do better, says Daryl Blundell, Managing Director of Sage SSB (Start-up and small businesses) Accounting South & Southern Africa, consisting of Sage One and Sage Pastel Accounting.

Here are a few ideas for getting a good start to 2016:

1. Set your goals for the year ahead

During the first few days of the New Year, take a bit of time to think about your goals for the calendar year ahead. Focus especially on the aspects of your business that you neglect in the busyness of day-to-day survival.

* Do you want to target new customer segments?
* Fix up your ageing IT setup?
* Hire new staff members?
* Write down each goal, along with a deadline and a metric for success.

2. Get in touch with your customers

The first week or so of a New Year is an ideal time to get in touch with people and set up meetings. Send a New Year's greeting to people who have opted in to receive your e-mails or text messages and give your especially important contacts a quick phone call to catch up. This will help put you on the radar for your key clients right from the start of the year.

3. Get ready for the financial year-end

The tax year-end looms on 28 February, so avoid the rush and start preparing now. Start chasing down debtors with longstanding invoices, evaluate your inventory, and consider what your tax bill will look like. Perhaps you could benefit from using extra cash to invest in new computers or delivery vehicles? Or maybe you'd like to put some goods you have in stock on sale so you can move them before the new tax year? Think about how you can optimise your profitability before the last day of February.

4. Freshen up your marketing

A New Year is as good a time as any to give your business a fresh coat of marketing paint. Why not audit your Web site, brochures, business cards and other marketing materials to ensure that they're up-to-date and that the content is professionally presented. If you run social media or a blog account, you could jot down some ideas for content and share during the course of the year.

5. Think about training for yourself and your staff

In a business world that moves as fast as ours, it's important to stay up to date with the latest trends. Think about the gaps in your and your team's skills and knowledge and book some courses and seminars. Some ideas might be an e-marketing course to get up to speed with the latest trends in digital marketing, seminars about the latest developments in tax regulation and labour law, or general financial management and leadership courses to sharpen your business acumen.

Share

Sage

Sage is the market leader for integrated accounting, payroll and payment systems, supporting the ambition of the world's entrepreneurs. Sage began as a small business in the UK 30 years ago and over 13 000 colleagues now support millions of entrepreneurs across 23 countries as they power the global economy. It reinvents and simplifies business accounting through brilliant technology, working with a thriving community of entrepreneurs, business owners, tradespeople, accountants, partners and developers. And as a FTSE 100 business, it is active in supporting local communities and invests in making a real difference through the philanthropy of the Sage Foundation.

Sage - the market leader for integrated accounting, payroll and payment systems, supporting the ambition of the world's entrepreneurs.

Editorial contacts