Here's how to get your business idea off the drawing board and into real world.
It's natural to pour over your spanking new business plan, thinking of ways to make it look and sound good. But
unless you get to work and actually start testing your ideas in the real world, your plans would stay "good on paper" indefinitely.
Instead of obsessing over the potential revenues of your hypothetical business, find ways to get it out there, and gather feedback from your target market-this process is called prototyping.
The test-best-before-you-tweak approach can do wonders for a starting business and developing your brand-you can test the materials you're using for your product, refine your offering according to desired customer experience, and know whether your revise model is scalable and whether it meets your business goals. You never know when an investor would take interest in your creation and help you commercialize it.
But until that day comes you can only do so much testing and prototyping. The key is putting just about enough work and resources on sample products or services so you don't put much strain on your finances or manpower.
So in other words put the test of your product or services and try to improve it as soon as possible before someone else copying your idea.
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