Close X

Leave a comment


Name:
Email:
Comment:
  I have read and understand the terms and conditions
 

Please click the post button only once - your comment will not be published immediately

Leadership

FEATURED CONTENT

Smith & Williamson

Enabling entrepreneurs

Smith & Williamson is a great business. To realise your full potential, discover the benefits of working with people who really care.
Click here for more

  • hot

Waste not, want not

by Melissa Hancock - Thursday, 8th May 2008 -

Waste not, want not

In setting up his publishing company Vegetarian Guides, Alex Bourke learnt a few hard lessons along the way – namely choose your bank carefully and ask yourself “Do I really need an accountant?”

“In my experience, I’ve found that most of the people that are giving advice to small businesses are accountants, bankers and representatives from organisations like Business Link. The problem is that none of these people have ever run a small business!

They basically get you to write a business plan and borrow money which surprisingly enough doesn’t actually help very much,” says Bourke who set up Vegetarian Guides in 1991. To date, he has published a Europe and France guide, three editions of the Britain guide and the sixth edition of Vegetarian London has just been released this month. 

“The most important thing is to drive down your costs and one of the best ways is to avoid ridiculous bank charges.”

Bourke recalls how he started off his business banking with Barclays who were charging him several hundreds of pounds a year in bank charges and interest fees on loans.

“I estimated that around five per cent of my turnover was being pocketed by the bank which just seemed a ludicrous ratio for a small business trying to get off the ground. I wish I had realised earlier that there were banks out there that offer free business banking like the Co-op or Alliance & Leicester. Of course, once I’d switched banks, my margins drastically improved."

"Bourke also advises fledgeling small businesses to do their own accounting which he explains can save thousands of pounds: “You can buy an office self-accounting package like QuickBooks or Sage Instant for £100 which will do it all for you. By contrast, most banks will charge you £25 a month to use their small business accounting software – that translates to £3,000 over ten years!” 

Bourke recalls how he has been advised by four accountants not to do his own book-keeping. "They all said: ‘Ooh, Sage isn’t very good, or QuickBooks isn’t great with this.’ I remember thinking: ‘200,000 people use it – what are you talking about?!’ Of course they want me to pay them £30 an hour to post invoices and purchases through their accounting system that I’ve already processed.”

As far as Bourke is concerned, the only time that a new business owner should enlist the help of an accountant is for checking their annual accounts: “Again you need to be savvy with this. Most accountancy firms will charge you £700 a day and what most people don’t realise is that the accountant will only see about £100, the remaining £600 goes to the directors and paying off overheads. So I now use a part-time accountant who I pay £100 to spend a day doing my annual accounts. He’s happy and so am I!”

Picture source

 

BUSINESS NEWS >>

Businesses to run in a recession: part three

By Rebecca Burn-Callander - July 02, 2009 4:43pm GMT

Even in a recession, a good entrepreneur is always on the look-out for the next hot spot. Don’t wait around for the upturn. These are the businesses you want to be in now.

Access takes another step towards sales target

By Catherine Woods - July 02, 2009 4:33pm GMT

Access founder Alistair O’Reilly has embarked on a “brand elevation” exercise as he aims to grow turnover at his consulting and software company to £100m.

Tech entrepreneur: "The banks won't lend you an umbrella when it rains"

By Rebecca Burn-Callander - July 02, 2009 4:22pm GMT

At a roundtable hosted by Dell this morning, Real Business heard three technology entrepreneurs talk about the challenges of growing a business during the recession. People aren't the problem, they say. It's the mindset of banks and other financial institutions that needs to change if we're to come out of recession.

Government fund provides a "timely injection of capital"

By Catherine Woods - July 02, 2009 4:06pm GMT

Octopus Ventures, which invests in entrepreneurial businesses, has welcomed the governments’ proposed £1bn innovation fund, saying it will support entrepreneurialism.

Businesses confident about surviving recession

By Catherine Woods - July 02, 2009 2:36pm GMT

Most mid-size businesses believe they will survive the recession and most believe the downturn will end during the next 12 to 24 months.


BUSINESS COMMENT >>

Sir Alan Sugar: "You're hired!"

By Rebecca Burn-Callander - July 01, 2009 1:12pm GMT

Great piece by The Telegraph's Richard Tyler today about the confirmed appointment of Sir Alan Sugar to the post of enterprise tsar. "A tentative date of July 20th has been pencilled in for his hairiness to don the rabbit fur," he says.

Pre-stained underwear: the next big thing?

By Rebecca Burn-Callander - June 22, 2009 2:54pm GMT

That's right. "Pre-stained". Suspend your disbelief for a moment. Canadian entrepreneur Philip Watson founded Easy Tiger Corp to peddle underwear that has been - ahem - ready-soiled, shall we say. And he reckons these nasty knickers will be a surefire hit with "the dudes".

It can only be... the Friday Funnies

By Rebecca Burn-Callander - June 12, 2009 12:16pm GMT

As swine flu hits the headlines for the second time, the swine flu jokes are just pouring in! Laugh till you oink, readers.

Jokes. Jokes. Jokes.

By Rebecca Burn-Callander - June 05, 2009 12:14pm GMT

Further to popular demand, this week we're devoting a whole section of our jokes blog to our hapless prime minister, Gordon Brown.

Cassetteboy does The Apprentice

By Rebecca Burn-Callander - June 01, 2009 2:34pm GMT

Hats off to Broadbean MD and Real Business columnist Dan McGuire for scouting this out. An even darker side to Sir Alan Sugar is revealed in this daft mash-up.


Click here to sign up for the Real Business newsletter Click here to subscribe to the Real Business RSS feed

In accociation with
Real Business Front Cover