Maybe It’s Time To Practice A Little Minimalism In Your Business

There are two ways to make more money: (1) Make more money, (2) spend less.

Sounds like a life lesson passed down from our grandfather in a lecture about saving money. Of course, it is sound advice. Smart advice to apply to our business and our personal finances.

I’ve talked about minimalism before and I think there is a lot of truth to the workability of it. It is the idea of simple living, reducing the number of possessions, and increasing self-sufficiency. When you get rid of stuff in your life, you gain more time and you gain more mental energy. Many people have changed their lives for the better simply by getting rid of a lot of their stuff (to whatever degree they’re OK with).

What about applying it to our businesses?

What Got Me Thinking About This

When I published my annual blogging income report for 2010, I came right out and said that my business was leaking money. I was spending too much money. As a start, I was paying for two dedicated servers for my sites, running me a total of about $700/month. On top of that, I was spending money on my shopping cart, email list, video hosting with Amazon S3…. the list goes on.

So, it put me onto a little project of trimming some fat from my business. Over the last couple of weeks, I have centralized all of my sites onto a single server and ditched one of them. That move alone has trimmed close to $275/month from my expenses.

When I looked at my domains…. get this… I currently own 100 domains. This means I’m spending close to $900/year just on renewing domain names. Without counting, I bet all but maybe 15 of the domains aren’t even being used. I bought them “just in case”.

So, this put me onto a line of thinking regards cutting expenses and minimalism as applied to my business. It goes beyond finances. It goes into simplification and running things in a “lean and mean” fashion.

Why Now?

I’m not giving this thought because I’m running low on cash. I can afford to spend what I’ve been spending… but that doesn’t make it smart. :)

But, here’s the other thing…

I believe that our economy is in for some potentially tough times. Hell, we’re already there, in many circles. And, I think it is going to get worse.

Doom and gloom? No! It is just called keeping my eyes peeled and planning accordingly. When you run a lean business which is flexible, and couple that with kicking ass in all the right places and making a lot of money, you can survive anything. Economize and flourish.

How You Can Apply Business Minimalism

The whole idea here is to simplify, and in the process, trim the fat and make your business lean and flexible.

In my case, I’ve dropped a server. I’m going to get rid of some of these domains I own. Realistically, many of these “just in case” domains I have are projects I’ll never run with, so why keep the domain? I’ve also been re-evaluating the various services I subscribe to.

It isn’t only about expenses, either. What about processes? Are there things in your business that you’re doing that you could just stop? Chances are, most of us have various habits or procedures in our businesses that we could stop with no ill effects at all. Most of us have things which could be streamlined, simplified, or dropped altogether.

So, here are some ideas:

  1. Are you paying to keep any sites online which are not contributing to your business? Consider dropping them.
  2. Go paperless. The busy-work of dealing with paper and filing/shredding it is a pain in the butt. I’m now operating paperless and it makes my job easier, saves trees, and reduces office clutter. Evernote is my best friend. :)
  3. If you own a lot of domains, trim off the ones you’re likely never to use. There’s no use in stockpiling these things, really.
  4. Have excess crap in your office? Many of us keep crap in your offices. Old magazines, old computer equipment, books we never look at anymore. If you’re interested in internet marketing, perhaps you have a bunch of IM courses sitting around. Why don’t you clear out your space somewhat and get rid of this stuff? Take the time to go through those magazines and scan anything you want to reference later – then toss it! You can digitize those info products and then get rid of the physical version (or give them away). You can give a bunch of stuff to Goodwill, maybe, and take the tax writeoff. You can sell stuff on eBay.
  5. If you’re looking to expand your business with additional personnel, consider the virtual model rather than hiring employees. Whether you hire overseas or in the U.S. is completely up to you. The unfortunate fact is that our government makes it difficult and more expensive to hire employees (and they wonder why unemployment is high). I have one employee now, and I can tell you that the paperwork that goes with it is ridiculous. Trust me – go virtual. Use independent contractors.

I don’t know what your business looks like, but the idea here is simply to simplify. Your business doesn’t need to be complicated in order to grow. Keep things simple and nimble and you’re more free to expand.

How have you practiced a little minimalism in your business? What ideas might you have to share? Post a comment and let me know.

Lastly, a little heads up… I’m going to be getting rid of a bunch of internet marketing courses soon in some kind of giveaway. I’ve got several thousand dollars in training programs here that I don’t want in my office anymore. So, stay tuned for giveaway details. Not sure when or what, but it’ll be some time rather soon. :)

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  • http://DonnyGamble.com Donny Gamble

    I am a very frugal person because I know if something does not have the potential to make me more money, then I don’t need to spend a lot of money on it.

  • http://www.soleroo.com Mrsoleero

    less is more :)

  • http://personaldevelopmentx.com/ Gordie

    Good on you, David for being frugal even when you don’t have to. I think that’s a sign of a good businessman who’ll stay prosperous.

  • http://bizhax.com Keith Bloemendaal

    I am with you Dave, I have been letting a bunch of domains go and trimming the fat all over the place. I still have a hard time giving up my legal pad and a mechanical pencil, but I am trying to use other products like Google Docs and Evernote to change my patterns… hard to break old habits sometimes LOL.

  • http://hpshappyhomebusiness.blogpsot.com Hpvanduuren

    Yes and No….,

    It goes without saying that it definitely can be practical to keep it simple making
    it easier to operate the business.Talking about a Little Minimalism, on my Home Business Lifestyle Blog, I also made an effort to make it a little less ‘Busy’ trying to make
    it a little more ‘Under-design’-like. :) (BTW I do think it still is somewhat
    to busy, feel free to let me know what you think)

    On the other hand it also reminds about a story of a man and his Diner,
    with his Son entirely re-organising his Diner, skipping the real flowers that need much
    time and care, and skipping the cosy little window curtains that need to be washed once
    in a while etc. etc. making it all ‘Leaner and Meaner’ So lean and Mean that nowbody liked to actually go to it anymore. Sometimes I think that some companies go to far and become
    companies without service and without a ‘soul.’ Also with a Centralised Server ‘Putting all
    your Eggs in one Basket’ also does seem to make it a little more risky depending
    on only one server that way.

    I do think that it does have two sides to it.
    So indeed Maybe.

    All the Best,
    To your Happy – Home Business – Inspiration,
    HP

  • http://garinkilpatrick.com/ Garin Kilpatrick

    Less really is more. It’s worth noting the “Minimalism” is one of the few interests that Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg has listed on his public profile.

    I apply the concept of minimalism to website design as well. By having only the calls to action that will generate the greatest return on investment, such as an opt-in to my email list, I mimimiz the clutter on my site and maximize the chance that my visitor will become a repeat visitor and a member of my community.

    Great post as always David, and I’m looking forward to the quick tip videos in your Facebook page!

    Cheers,

    Garin

  • http://healthmoneysuccess.com Vincent

    Domain cost does adds up and I think keeping too many in case domains doesn’t do us any good when we do not use them.

  • http://davidrisley.com David Risley

    Yeah, just excess baggage.

  • http://davidrisley.com David Risley

    Thanks, man. And, yeah, definitely it plays a role in design, too. You may have noticed how the trend now on sales letters is just a video – and nothing else.

  • http://davidrisley.com David Risley

    Thanks, Ethan. And, I agree. I use separate domains for different products, but not separate domains for the purposes of tracking.

  • http://davidrisley.com David Risley

    Well, its a little different… because you’re talking about a service industry. In such a case, those items would be necessary. And, any decent business owner would see that the stats dropped, ask what changed, and immediately put those flowers back. :-)

    In my case, the things I’m cutting are things that don’t affect service. And, my server is a dedicated server, with full backups and everything. Having an extra one is simply redundant.

  • http://davidrisley.com David Risley

    Hey, if paper works for you, use it. :-) Nobody says you have to stop. Some people hate using digital stuff for task lists, and that’s fine.

  • http://davidrisley.com David Risley

    Well, seeing as my kids suck money constantly, one could make an argument that I *do* have to. ;-)

  • http://www.radicalmarketingsolutions.com/ Bill

    There are actually 3 Ways to make more money-Get more customers, Charge more for your goods and servers and get your customers to buy more often or spend more with you each time they buy. I’d rather think ” Expand” rather than shrink. Of course keep costs down is always a good thing to do where you can and where it makes sense.

    Bill

  • http://ferodynamics.com Ferodynamics

    Google and Facebook, they can see the effect of little changes (with stats, analytics, metrics) in realtime. So they know immediate if new menu options are killing off other areas of their business. I think this is one big driver of minimalism.

    I think it’s worth going after traffic volume for a while just so you can experience this, to learn how these little changes affect you. I can make one little change to my theme and literally watch the ad revenue plummet until I reverse the change. So later on, if I build a niche site, I remember what I learned from all that A/B testing.

  • http://ferodynamics.com Ferodynamics

    If you have a domain for 6 months and you don’t think it’s going to break $10 for the year, I just sell it. Why wait 12 months?

  • http://www.dojo-design.com/blog Ramona Iftode

    I’ve worked from home for the past 2 years. I run a very small web design business and was able to earn a living from it and also travel quite a lot. This “minimalism” is what I focused A LOT from the beginning. While fellow web designers would get offices in the city to look “professional”, I worked all the time from my desk in my bedroom. I’ve invested minimally in promotion and kept my costs low. The good thing is that while many studios closed down when recession hit, I am still paying my bills and doing my ‘magic’.

    Knowing where and what to spend is a very good thing.

  • http://www.paginafinanciara.ro Afacere

    It is very true, not that we should spend less, but that we are forced to.
    No more money, hard times. I hate this crisis.