Home/Office Organizing Business

Start a home or office organizing business

Help declutter

If you have a flair for putting things in their place and have everyone asking for your help in de-cluttering their house or office, then starting an organizing business might be for you.  You’ll be working with hoarders, pack rats, busy moms, busy executives, seniors, and many others so they can find their stuff more easily.  The benefit of your services will be saving people time and money while reducing their stress levels.

Services can revolve around arranging papers on up to organizing professional responsibilities or long distance moves, giving advice on what to keep, what to toss, and where to take action.  You can specialize or be all encompassing, figure out what you’re good at organizing and begin there.  Additional services can be added later.

The job could range from organizing the kitchen and pantry, or an overflowing closet, to working with an entire house.  Room space planning, improved storage of papers and computer files, personal finances and other important records.  With businesses, organizers can help business owners improve productivity and profitability by improving filing and storage, work flow, and time management.

Other specializations could be working with seniors, students, kids, those with ADD, or someone who’s just plain disorganized.

According to StateUniversity.com, earnings for professional organizers vary widely according to qualifications, experience, type of service offered, and geographic area. Organizers may start out with an hourly fee of $25 to $35, while those with more experience may charge as much as $125 per hour. Some organizers charge by the day, collecting as much as $1,500 for an eight-to ten-hour day.

Getting started does not take a big expense and you don’t have to be certified, although holding a professional organizer certification can add credibility.  The main expense up front will be your marketing to get the word out of your presence and develop relationships with suppliers and vendors for organization products you’ll use with your clients.

Promoting:

After you determine who your target audience is, find out where they hang out, what papers/magazines they read, what businesses they might shop.  This will determine where you might place some advertisements.  Local papers, magazines, Craigslist can be a good start with minimal expense.

Websites can be set up relatively cheap if you have a basic know how or can have a professional designer set it up for you ranging from a few hundred dollars on up to $2000 depending how much designing and features you’d require.   A basic site explaining your services and a way to contact you for an appointment should be all that’s needed.  Add a blog to the site where you provide organizing tips for added credibility and will help place your site higher on the rankings ensuring people will be able to find you.

If it’s in your budget, paying for some AdWords on Google can help drive traffic to your website in the beginning until more people start finding your site naturally.

Of course, the most important form of marketing is your quality of service and customer satisfaction.  Many people can offer an organization service, but the organizers who will always come out on top are the ones who develop positive relations with their customers and will do whatever it takes to get the job done right.  Provide a satisfaction guarantee to help eliminate any doubts in your service.

Referrals are the cheapest and most effective form of advertising you can generate.  Provide free written estimates of costs before you begin.  List services, storage items and their cost so clients will know up front what they’ll be expected to pay.    Many satisfied customers will provide names of people they know that you could contact by phone or mail.

Helpful Resources:

NAPO – National Association of Professional Organizers

You can become a certified professional organizer by taking courses through NAPO.


Basic Steps For Starting A Small Business

 

illustration by Ethan Bloch

Dave Ramsey has proven he can run a very successful small business and run it debt free.  He gives some very basic, yet so important, pointers on starting your home business.  Going into debt to start a business without any revenue being generated is a high risk to take when the odds are against you in the beginning.  Be sensible about your strategy and follow Dave’s wise advice -

I Want to Start a Small Business
from daveramsey.com

Doesn’t it sound like a great idea to start your own business, maybe from home, so you can be in control of your destiny, have flexible hours and not have to worry about a control-freak boss?

Unfortunately, it’s not as simple as that. Small-business owners work unbelievably hard, and even hard work doesn’t guarantee success. According to the Small Business Association, only two-thirds of small businesses survive two years.

There’s no magic formula to making a business work, but here are a few tips to get you thinking in the right direction:

Love what you do!

What would you do if money and time were not factors? What do you have a passion for? According to Success magazine, the entrepreneur is the only one who can go from sheer terror to sheer exhilaration and back every 24 hours. It’s a roller coaster ride, so you better love what you’re doing in order to survive it. That doesn’t mean you won’t have bad days if you’re doing work you love. Everyone has days when they want to throw up their hands even though they love what they do. But if you don’t love it and are just doing it for money, it won’t last long.

Save up. Don’t borrow.

Start your business debt free with an emergency fund in place. It’s easier if you can start part-time and get the kinks worked out while you still have other income. If you’re going to quit your job and walk out, you definitely need substantial savings. You have to think about how long it will take from starting your business to the time money will start rolling in and plan accordingly. Never use credit cards for a business loan or to float you through hard times. It’s a good way to cause your business to fail. Saving up for purchases is key. Pay with cash. Make sure your business can pay its own way. Don’t go out and purchase a bunch of new equipment and supplies in hopes that the business will succeed. Start off small.

Do your homework.

If you want to be skinny, talk to skinny people and see what they do. If you want to open an eBay store, talk to people who have successful eBay stores. Talk to people who have started similar businesses, read about the industry, and do some research.

Recycle Wood Pallets For Cash

Wood pallet image from Hitchster

Here’s a quick, easy start to earn some cash if you already have a pickup.  Warehouses who receive truck shipments will receive their products on wood pallets, commonly  48×40 size.  Some warehouses reuse or send the pallets back to the shipping companies, but others have no use for extra pallets and place them outside for anyone to pick up for free, which you can sell to your local pallet recycling center for cash.

Drive around industrial and warehouse complexes searching for companies that do this on a regular basis and soon you’ll be able to efficiently drive around, gathering quick load of pallets for recycling .  Payment averages $2-5 per pallet depending on wood quality and pallet condition.  Pallets with broken boards are usually not ones you’ll be paid for, these usually are skipped over for the dumpster or to be shredded into mulch.  You can also save broken pallets as scrap to fix others.

How often businesses place pallets out for pickup is sporadic and some days will be better than others.  Develop a route of constant producers to check everyday as to minimize your fuel costs.

I used to work in a warehouse and had a couple regular guys come by and pick up our pallets we didn’t want to store.  They created a stacking system to load roughly 26 pallets into the pickup bed without being a road hazard.  Even better would be to have a nice size trailer to fill for one big trip. Average $3 per pallet and build up to 3-5 pickup loads per day and that could add up to a nice side job.

Helpful resources:

North American Pallet Recycling Network

IFCO Pallet Recycling locations

Recycle.net – pallet recyclers list

Palletpages.com

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