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March 20, 2010
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Posted by: Michael Masterson
July 28, 2009
Issue #724

The Perfect Business for Today

At my favorite restaurant yesterday afternoon a debate broke out. It was not about the usual topics: the best cigars, the best Scotches, the best Italian crooners. It was about “who has the best job?”

After a flush of nominations, we agreed on three finalists:

  1. Kenny, a professional speaker for one of the world’s largest investment companies
  2. Amy, a restaurant critic for the local newspaper
  3. And Edward, the proprietor of my favorite bar.

Each job had something to say for it. Kenny made thirty speeches a year, got very well paid for it and had loads of time to perfect his golf game. Amy made a living by writing about food – which is one of her passions. And Ed made his money doing exactly what he would be doing if he were retired. He’s just on the other side of the cash register.

They were all very good businesses. That’s for sure. But each also had its own drawbacks. Kenny’s job was great as long as the economy was strong. But when the market started falling apart he began to wonder whether he might be expendable. Amy loved her work for the first ten years she did it. But now it was getting old and the money wasn’t good enough to retire on. Ed’s job seemed like the best to me, but he was tied to his store seven days a week.

The next morning I got an e-mail from the Managing Editor of Early to Rise.

“You know Richard Russell,” she said. (Richard Russell writes the Dow Theory Letters.) “I just came across an essay of his about the ideal business. It was very popular with his readers. His criteria mesh well with your advice, but I bet you’d have something to add - especially when it comes to starting a business in a down economy.”

I read Russell’s essay and found that, as Suzanne suggested, he and I share many of the same beliefs. Which is another way of saying I liked it.

Russell said that he once asked a friend, a prominent New York corporate lawyer, to name the single best business he’d ever come across. Without hesitation, he cited a client with a business that made a chemical used in making synthetic rubber. The chemical was absolutely essential to the process. He had, in effect, a small monopoly that made him a millionaire many times over.

That hardly sounds like the perfect business to me, but I understand the value of having a de facto monopoly.

To me, the perfect business would have to meet a number of criteria. First and foremost, it would have to be a real business. By that, I mean one that had the capacity to provide me with equity - not just pay me a salary.

I’ve made this point several times in Early to Rise. Most small companies are not really businesses at all. They give the entrepreneur a modest income - $60,000 or $100,000 - but without the prospect of earning much more or cashing out for big dollars when he wants to retire.

Owning a single retail store, for example, is usually not a business. It’s more often a self-employment enterprise, with the owner working 60 or more hours a week and struggling to keep his employees, vendors, and customers satisfied. The same is true of owning a restaurant, bar, travel agency, art gallery, or bookstore.

I know this is true because I have been in all those businesses. (I still own an art gallery and a travel agency.) They all seemed attractive before I actually got involved in them. Then I quickly found out that they were commercial balls and chains, tied around my financial neck.

No, the perfect business certainly would not be retail. If you are contemplating retail, you should get a copy of Automatic Wealth for Grads … and Anyone Else Just Starting Out and read Chapter 3. It will save you a lot of money and emotional distress.

Richard Russell’s father warned him against retail. He said, “The hours are too long, and you’re dealing with every darn variable under the sun.”

Russell’s dad also advised him to stay out of real estate. (He was a real estate executive during the Great Depression.) “When hard times arrive,” he told his son, “real estate comes to a dead stop and then it collapses. Furthermore, real estate is illiquid. When the collapse comes, you can’t unload.”

I don’t like real estate development as a business. (I know at least a dozen developers who have gone from being multimillionaires to near broke in the past two years. Many more will follow this year before the market hits bottom and begins to turn around again.) But I do like it as an investment, for reasons I explained in detail in Chapter 5 of Automatic Wealth: The Six Steps to Financial Independence. I don’t have time to go into all of them here, but these are the main ones:

  • It’s easy to learn.
  • It’s easy to leverage.
  • You can limit your exposure.
  • It’s easy to spot an overvalued market unless you are a fool, so there is little chance of going broke.

That’s not true of real estate as a business. When you are developing properties, your personal wealth is at risk. The better you do, the more insistent the banks are that you put your own neck on the block.

FYI, I have just bought a property in my neighborhood to add to my real estate portfolio. It is a duplex that is currently generating $1,350 a month in rent. It was on the market 18 months ago for almost $300,000, and I bought it for $110,000. I expect to be able to fix it up and increase the rents - but it will yield a nice positive cash flow even if rents go down. And I know how to sell rentals – something I didn’t know when I started investing in rental real estate.

But this is an investment, not a business. So let’s get back to the question: What is the perfect business for today? In my opinion, this is what it would look like:

1. I’ve mentioned my first criterion already. It would be a real business that could become more valuable over time and eventually be sold for millions of dollars. Single-store retail enterprises, as I’ve said, seldom qualify. Most have a net zero balance sheet when they are mature. You can sell them for a portion of the inventory and physical assets. That’s about it. No big payday.

2. It would have unlimited upside potential. It could go from 10 million to 100 million as easily (actually, more easily) than it could go from zero to a million. (For a complete explanation of what I mean by this, read my book Ready, Fire, Aim.)

3. To have that kind of upside potential today, it would have to have the entire world as its marketplace - not just a local community or even an entire country.

4. Richard Russell pointed out in his essay - and, of course, I agree with him - that the perfect business would sell a product that benefits from “inelastic” demand. Inelastic means that the price you charge for the product is determined by you, not the market. If you are selling canned goods or beer, for example, you can’t charge whatever you want. But you can do that if you are selling luxuries, rarities, or unique pieces. That’s one of the reasons I like the art business. (Still, as those of us in that business know very well, even art can be affected by the market. Prices have dropped by about 30 percent in the past year.)

5. In addition to benefitting from inelastic demand, it would be a product that could not be easily substituted for or copied. Ideally, as Russell said, it would be “an original, or at least  … something that can be copyrighted or patented.”

6. The perfect business would not employ blue-collar workers. Forgive me for saying this, but, in my experience, the hassles are just not worth it. Working with professionals is infinitely easier. Take my word for it - or learn on your own.

7. The perfect business would be financially leveragable. By that I mean it could be grown - at some point - without requiring an enormous amount of your attention. This is the difference, for example, between owning one hamburger joint and owning a string of burger joints. Opening a second restaurant is always a high-risk, low-return prospect. But adding another location to an already-successful chain is much easier.

8. The perfect business would not take up all your time. In the beginning, you’d surely have to put in 12-hour days. (I’ve never encountered a business where that’s not true.) But after you learned the industry secrets and taught them to your top employees, they would be able to take over day-to-day operations.

9. Similarly, the perfect business would not depend on you to keep it going. After a few years, it would run on its own.

10. The perfect business would have a very high net-revenue-to-employee ratio. This is an idea I developed many years ago. (I’m sure MBAs have a name for it - but I don’t know what it is.) Whenever I contemplate starting a business, I insist that it can reach $10 million in sales, after refunds and cost of goods, with no more than 20 employees. That’s a $500,000-to-one employee ratio.

11. The perfect business would have little or no inventory. If you have been in an inventory business, you know how important that is.

12. The perfect business would be cash-based and, therefore, have no receivables - meaning your income would never be held up by payment terms or bad debt. Receivables are fine when an economy is booming, but disastrous when the market sags.

13. The perfect business would have no debt. Customer payments would be sufficient to pay all bills and finance growth. (Imagine how lovely that would be!)

14. Another Russell criterion that I endorse: The perfect business would not need “an expensive location … large amounts of electricity, advertising, legal advice, high-priced employees, etc.”

15. Yet another Russell criterion: The perfect business would be relatively “free of heavy government and industry regulations. The cost of dealing with such regulations is always burdensome but will break you during a serious and long recession.”

16. And yet another Russell criterion that I agree with: The perfect business would be portable or easily moved. In other words, you could take your business (and yourself) anywhere you wanted - Nevada, Florida, Texas, Washington, South Dakota (none of which have state income taxes). Or, hey, maybe even Monte Carlo or Switzerland or the South of France.

17. I was trying my best to keep Russell’s criteria out of this article. In fairness to him and you, I wanted all the advice to be uniquely from me. But that’s not happening. My final requirement for a perfect business is from Russell too: It must be able keep your mind thinking and your heart pumping. You don’t want to become bored with it after a few years. You want it to be intellectually and emotionally satisfying, which is another way of saying “fun.” Most businesses simply can’t offer that.

That’s my list. It’s pretty demanding, I’m sure you’ll agree. Is there a perfect business? Yes. Next week, I’ll tell you exactly what it is.

Michael Masterson
Guest Contributor
THE TOTAL PACKAGE

Michael Masterson is the founder of the Internet’s most popular health, wealth, and success e-zine, www.EarlytoRise.com. Each day, he and the Early to Rise team of experts help more than 450,000 success-oriented individuals achieve their financial goals. 

Masterson has been making money for himself and others for almost four decades. At one time or another, he has owned and managed multi-million dollar companies that were either public/private, onshore/overseas, local/international, service-/product-oriented, retail/wholesale/direct mail, and even profit/not-for-profit. 

Masterson is the author of seven books, including the New York Times and Wall Street Journal best sellers Ready, Fire, Aim: From Zero to $100 Million in No Time Flat and Seven Years to Seven Figures: The Fast Track Plan to Becoming a Millionaire and the Amazon.com best seller Changing the Channel: 12 Easy Ways to Make Millions for Your Business.

To get wealth- and business-building advice from Michael and the Early to Rise team for free, visit www.EarlytoRise.com.

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Attribution Statement: This article was first published in The Total Package. To sign-up to receive your own FREE subscription to The Total Package and claim four FREE money making e-books go to www.makepeacetotalpackage.com.


12 Comments »

  1. I think the answer is… becoming an affiliate marketer, or own a list that you can rent/jv/ with others who have products.

  2. The perfect Portable business can be done from a lap top, or a computer center or a public library. Obviously is copy writing, affiliate marketing,(that will run itself on the auto responder) and article marketing. Get it up and running and you can sit back and watch it run. The Article marketing
    will take more time, maybe 30 minutes a day but that’s the breaks. My first blog about my year with prostate cancer has drawn a lot of interest. I’m learning.

  3. Great insight from M. Masterson. One couldn“t expect less from him.

    Yes, I also believe the only business that could meet almost ALL of the above mentioned criteria is an internet-based business model, particularly if dealing with information products.

    I look forward to read the Masterson conclusion

  4. Copywriting is not the perfect business…it is a great and “financially valuable” skill but not a business.

    However, perhaps owning a copywritng agency…where you could train other copywriters, help build other businesses bottom lines etc… would be a great business.

    Although I’m still not sure that would meet all of the above requirements…but it comes close.

    My bet is on Information Publishing not as a writer but as a business owner…there is a huge difference.

  5. [...] The Perfect Business For Today | The Total Package [...]

  6. [...] Attached is a national press release that will be going to the media soon and we were hoping to getThe Perfect Business for Todaymakepeacetotalpackage.com says: At my favorite restaurant yesterday afternoon a debate broke out. It [...]

  7. GREAT article!

    I too was taken by Richard Russell’s popular article, one that inspired me to write my own as I believe I did find the perfect business.

    Nice to know I’m thinking along the lines of great minds like Michael Masterson’s!

    http://www.betternetworker.com/articles/view/mlm-news/companies/is-mlm-the-perfect-business-model-take-score-see-for-yourself

    Thanks Clayton & Michael!

    Tony Lauria

  8. Oh great, now I won’t be able to sleep until I find out what it is. :-) Excellent article.

  9. This is every reason why Mr. Masterson operates Early To Rise. Now, how imaginative are YOU such that you can come up with something unique and not an attempt to shadow what he and so many others in the financial business are doing?

    That’s the challenge.

    I’ve got a few ideas but I’m keeping them under my hat.

    Michael, I want to write for you!!!

    sn

  10. The easiest has to be affiliate marketing. Let the seller pay for top graphics and copy while you earn up to 50% of the sale price. All you need is a list to offer it to!

  11. As usual, Michael Masterson’s business savy is acute. His foresight reminds me very much of a line of thinking I enountered in an article years ago by golf pro/entrepreneur Greg Norman.

    Norman’s primary strategy is that the very moment you set up a business, you draw up a plan for when you intend to sell it. If you can’t see through to this endgame, then you haven’t got yourself a bona fide business. At best, you’ve got yourself a living; but that’s it.

  12. Leave it to a boring attorney to name a chemical company as the best business ever. I don’t think there’s any confusion about who has the best business in the world. That would be Hugh Hefner.

    He does have to manage some inventory though… an inventory of hot chicks! Could be stressful at 82 yrs old, but he doesn’t seem to mind it.

Join the Discussion!

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The only rule: RESPECT THIS HOUSE! Postings that contain abusive language and/or personal attacks will be cheerfully VAPORIZED. One cross word and – POOF! – your well-thought-out post will be gone in a puff of smoke.

– Clayton

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