danacara
<font color=purple>Parlez-vous Francais?<br><font
- Joined
- Aug 29, 2000
- Messages
- 3,097
Try and look at it objectively. Design a spreadsheet and run the economics. Start with the amount of money you'd need to make each year to be happy. Set that against the costs of a business: initial deposits, rent, inventory carry costs, shipping, financing, utilities, employees, decor, start-up (sunk) costs, insurance, taxes, annual reinvestment into the business, etc. Don't forget to tack on the cost of health benefits for yourself if you're not on your husband's plan. Try to estimate everything on the high side. Add the amount of money you'd need to be happy to that total, call that the total profit you'd need to bring in through this business, and calculate profit per day, assuming you're open five or six days per week year-round. Then, search the web to figure out average markup (profit margin) on book sales (I would guess maybe 20% for a chain store, 30-40% for a boutique? I might be too low). Whatever the average markup is, set your profit per day equal to that margin, and from that solve for the total revenue you would need to make to survive.
Let me try out an example. I am totally guesstimating on the numbers, by the way:
The amount of money you'd need to make each year to be happy = $30,000 (pre-tax)/year
initial deposits = $5000/year
rent = $1000/month, $12000/year
inventory carry costs = $500/month, $6000/year
shipping = $500/month, $6000/year
financing = $500/month, $6000/year
utilities = $250/month, $3000/year
employees = assume 0 for now, but that means you're working all day, every day
decor = $200/month, $2400/year
insurance = $300/month, $3600/year
taxes = $2000/year (miscellaneous)
annual reinvestment into the business = $5000/year
health benefits = $300/month (COBRA), $3600/year
So you'd need about $86,400/year in profit to break even for yourself and your business. If you're making a 30% margin on the books, you'd need sales of $X per year, such that
X = (86,400/0.3) = $288,000.
You'd need to sell $288K in books per year. If you were open 5 days per week year-round, you'd need to average about $1100 in sales per day to pay yourself and break even. This is of course an estimate with a lot of room for error, so I'd want to build in some safety.
Try replacing those numbers with better estimates for Missouri and then see if you think you could do it.
Let me try out an example. I am totally guesstimating on the numbers, by the way:
The amount of money you'd need to make each year to be happy = $30,000 (pre-tax)/year
initial deposits = $5000/year
rent = $1000/month, $12000/year
inventory carry costs = $500/month, $6000/year
shipping = $500/month, $6000/year
financing = $500/month, $6000/year
utilities = $250/month, $3000/year
employees = assume 0 for now, but that means you're working all day, every day
decor = $200/month, $2400/year
insurance = $300/month, $3600/year
taxes = $2000/year (miscellaneous)
annual reinvestment into the business = $5000/year
health benefits = $300/month (COBRA), $3600/year
So you'd need about $86,400/year in profit to break even for yourself and your business. If you're making a 30% margin on the books, you'd need sales of $X per year, such that
X = (86,400/0.3) = $288,000.
You'd need to sell $288K in books per year. If you were open 5 days per week year-round, you'd need to average about $1100 in sales per day to pay yourself and break even. This is of course an estimate with a lot of room for error, so I'd want to build in some safety.
Try replacing those numbers with better estimates for Missouri and then see if you think you could do it.