Showing posts with label business coach. Show all posts
Showing posts with label business coach. Show all posts

Fully Equipped Supermarket For Lease « Australia Business & Property Classifieds



Fully Equipped Supermarket For Lease « Australia Business & Property Classifieds

This formerly trading Supermarket is available For Lease- Part of A Major Suburban Shopping Centre with over 40,000 Vehicles Passing Daily -Good Signage Available. Landlord Willing To Provide Incentives to Suitable Operators
Enfield Plaza Shopping Centre
Approx 900m2
Formally Trading As IGA Clearview
Turn Key – Fully Equipped
We will assist suitable Lessee’s Re Establish this Supermarket back to it’s former glory.
Space may be suitable for various other businesses – subject to necessary consents
Further Details – Antonio Sawlwin
0401 733 363
enquiry@reddogstrategies.com.au

RIGHT NOW, INTERNET MARKETING IS CHANGING THE BUSINESS MODEL FASTER THAN ANY OTHER TIME PREVIOUSLY


RIGHT NOW, INTERNET MARKETING IS CHANGING THE BUSINESS MODEL FASTER THAN ANY OTHER TIME PREVIOUSLY


Many businesses will simply not survive in their current format and will need to be ready to adapt to fast changes in coming technology should they wish to remain viable.
Gone are the days where a small business can rely on a physical office or retail location to attract new customers. Research clearly shows that those small businesses who are bucking the economic trend and are experiencing growth can attribute most of the growth from online marketing or having an online presence.
Shoppers now have more choice at their fingertips than ever before. Statistics tell us that nearly 50% of people will not do business with a website that does not load correctly, is cumbersome and slow to use or is not designed to be viewed on the persons device. Coupling this is the fact that consumers will use a number of different devices across numerous platforms throughout the day. Mobile is now expected.
A quite remarkable number bandied around is that approximately on 30% of Small Businesses have an internet offering that can not be viewed on any platform and even more astounding is that close to 30% of small businesses in Australia do not have a dedicated website for their business. With over $92 Billion transacted in 2013 via mobile gateways a figure that is over 300% higher that 5 years ago these retailers are missing the opportunity to capture sales from this group of people. They are in fact promoting their business to a little over half of their available markets.

REDDOG Business & Marketing Strategies
Don’t be fooled by the latest trend or gimmick. Sustained Activity aimed at the correct audience will get you far better results than any tool or software

When the internet first arrived it took many years for people to feel safe enough to purchase and pay for things online. Sites like Ebay were the pioneers that made online purchasing an everyday event. With the introduction of the internet, there were  benefits for small business owners in that it  allowed a particular organisation to reach many prospective clients wherever those clients may be.. Even if you have one store or location you could now advertise your goods/services anywhere in the world.
The hard part for Small Business Owners though is the fact that getting your business on the  internet and getting noticed is not an easy task. Think of the Internet as the biggest shopping mall in the world with new shops opening and others closing every millisecond. Each operator ever more keen to promote their products and services with the latest gadget or plug in.
Think back 20 years ago; having a small flyer designed and printed was a two week-long event – if you were lucky! Today you can order printing from any where in the world and have it delivered to your door within a few days. Not only do you have a product and service far more superior than 20 years ago you also have literally thousands of competitors worldwide all trying to get your business.
The lesson for small business is don’t regard the internet as a medium for advertising your business, if you look at it from that angle you might as well take a classified advert out in every paper in the world. Obviously there needs to be some narrowing down of target markets, research needs to be conducted and testing and improvement is extremely important to develop a profitable distribution channel. All of these things are part of the core principle of Marketing, Product, Price Promotion & Price.
People often confuse marketing as being only advertising related, they feel a catchy slogan or an amazing offer will be enough to sway people to their product or service over their competitors. However Marketing is far more of an exact science that relates to getting a product to market whilst earning the greatest amount of return on your investment of time and money.
Think of Marketing as the recipe to product success; just like with baking a cake some ingredients suit better than others.
The answer and solution is working out what ingredients and at what amount need to be added to your cake mix to bake that award winning masterpiece. Sacrificing water for milk or cream for eggs does not work just as mixing the wrong marketing tools together will not work either.
To succeed online you have to harness and maximise the unique qualities of the web, this includes being able to find a way to offer your clients or customers a better way of doing things or a better experience than they can get elsewhere.
The words Online marketing – these two simple words placed together cover an enormous amount of subject matter, This is where a good marketer will understand that this raw data needs to be filtered and targeted to a point where you now have a method to communicate effectively to  those who may be seeking your product and services and what you are promoting is an enticing offer that in some way is better than your competitors.
Remember as a Small Business you do have some leverage over large competitors in terms of speed to market and the ability to be adaptable without a big bureaucratic noose around your neck. As a small business owner you need to maximise these weaknesses in your competitors Armour and cement your place in the market place before someone in a far far distant place finds your customers and begins to drag them away.
REDDOG Business & Marketing Strategies is an agency that differs from many other marketing consultants as we are salespeople and small business owners ourselves and first and fore most we agree and understand that having the biggest glossiest website or the best pay per click budget is worth nothing unless they are proven to be the right ingredient used at the right time in the right way.
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Small Business Failure Post GFC

Ever notice how some small businesses seem to thrive under just about any economic conditions, while others constantly struggle and miss opportunities that come their way?

 In part, in might be the type of business, the location, or financial backing.

 But the most successful business owners display some clear patterns and habits.

When struggling entreprenauers were analyzed there were some findings that occurred regularly , there was a period or point in time when a decision was made or not made early enough that started a rapid spiral down in both motivation and more importantly resouces. Trying to make money in business is hard enough, never mind havng to take a large portion of profit out to pay off previous liabilities.

You see profit is the blood flow over every business, not enough and certain areas start starving for resources and ultimately hinder future performance.

Now most people would consider a business failure to be the cause of a misguided enthusiasm coupled with a poorly researched and planned idea. Interstingly, the data does not confirm this, in fact quite the opposite.
Yes, there are many people who have a dream to buy or own a business. Now who wouldn't want that, you're your own person, no one to answer to, you are top dog in the workplace and you'll need a wheelbarrow every Saturday to get all that moolah into the sagging boot of your car.

However, whilst it is correct that the majority of new start up ventures will never gain traction and will swindle down to nothing or the business owner just accepts his fate and takes his medicine, usually a bankruptcy, and a fight to keep hold of that family property you assured everyone would be fine.

No business failure is nice and no real entrepreneur will go through life without there fair share of failure and most who make it the top of the hill can tell the war stories they encountered on the way, as we all know it is tough, emotionally you are up and down like a yoyo and i'm yet to meet a small business owner who hasn't spent at least the occasional evening laying in bed with tired eyes but a head running around like a dog in the butchers shop. Things like "how can i pay that supplier tomorrow, I hope he comes after lunch etc.

Of course for every 8-9 failures , these are usually an result of 1 or  combination of 3 things.

1) WOW Factor - Geez, we thought it would popular but wow. Right time, right product, right place.

2) Deep Pockets,  Now if you can afford to pay the shop rent for a year or so even if no one walked in the door well that turns the tables, it becomes not so much as struggling to get a business to a critical mass point it is more on making sure you do not do anything to harm what is coming or will come in time.

3) The Grafter, these are the people who personally I really admire, not so much as they're the hardest workers, infact that flies in face ove basic management principle, My admiration is based on their tenacity to not give up and if that means working 20 hours a day to break even then so be it, to these people failure is not an option.

The area I want to discuss, is those small businesses that found growth, albeit at a steady consist level, they had operated for for between 2-3 years and began to become a brand rather than just a restaurant or shop.. This could be the couple who took over a restaurant, built it to a sustainable level and even started to leverage by expansion.

This is the point where I think that a lot of potential gold mines die a unfulfilled death, now lets go back to the start, the couple obviously had some skills and obviously people wanted what they were offering. So whst goes wrong.

Well with leverage, every up side has a down side so and just like the sharemarket, the more leveraged you with debt to asset ratios then the more vulnerable to market fluctuations. Cashfow id king in business so if you're not paying bills on time, never mind bein profitable your on a long hising to nothing.

1) Firtstly, without enoogh cash flow the only survival mode is contraction. If a business cant pay for the things it uses to operate on time, then how can you increase that risk by doubling order volumes. and attempt to increase revenue, improve margins and focus on eliminating areas that could e detrimental


other business owners make many of the same mistakes that are often avoidable, especially when it comes to growing a business. Part of the problem is short-term thinking – chasing the latest shiny advertising object that happens to pass by, for example. Or spending too much time seeking new customers and not enough taking care of the ones you have.
Solid, long-term growth starts with what I call “inside-out” thinking – doing the things inside your business that you can control, and paying less attention to the outside things you can’t control.
Here are 10 such “inside out” secrets for successful growth.
 1. Change how you think about growth
Consider growth a constant – not something you switch on or off depending on conditions. For example, many business owners reduce offerings at the first sign of an economic storm, or overspend when the outlook seems rosy. But a steady-as-she-goes approach makes for long term success.
2. Check your ego; seek out sound advice
You know your business inside and out, but that doesn’t make you an expert at running every part of it. Smart business owners know what they don’t know. Don’t be afraid to ask for advice and then take it.
3. Remember your first fans
Many entrepreneurs seem to forget who helped them get started. If you have investors, keep them apprised of what’s going on. Good communication is critical.  A good investor group can provide mentoring and other resources, so keep them involved.
4. Share your knowledge
In today’s social media driven world, success and influence are in the hands of those who share ideas and information. So when you’ve found a great tool or solution, or gained insight, tweet it, blog about it, author an article, post it to Facebook.
5. Hire help to watch your money
Lack of strong accounting and finance can be the only thing keeping you from reaching your financial goals. Find well qualified people who share your vision and then step back and take their advice.
6. Know when to persevere
Stick to your mission. Many would-be success stories end prematurely because they give up when challenges mount. Don’t let hurdles stop you. Arm yourself with market knowledge and an expert team and push through.
7. But recognize when to change direction
Still, there are times you may need to change direction or call it day, and having the courage to do so can be liberating. You may end up with a clearer picture of what will or won’t work.
8. Keep cash on hand
One of the biggest mistakes growing businesses make is to run out of cash. While the sun is still shining on your business or before your financial picture has a chance to turn sour, meet with lenders and/or landlords proactively to see if there are opportunities to restructure debt, payment terms, etc. Having cash on hand is critical for staying afloat and continuing to grow.
9. Get more when you have more
Don’t wait until cash balances get low to secure more funding. The best time to get more is when you don’t need it. Securing a line of credit while you still have money in the bank gives you the ability to negotiate a larger line and better terms. It also gives you the ability to make payroll during slow times and to have access to cash as needed. In addition, it gives you an opportunity to develop a business relationship with a bank.
10. Sell when you get the chance
Many business owners miss, or worse – pass up – incredible chances to sell their company because they are not prepared to adequately evaluate the opportunity. Know where you stand in the marketplace at all times. That includes what your potential is, and what it will take to reach your potential.  That way, when opportunity knocks, you’ll know

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Mobile Apps are Exploding & Australian SME's Rubbing their hands together

The mobile commerce sector in Australia is booming, with monthly sales for December growing by a massive 448% in just three years, according to an ACMA report.

The research snapshot, which uses data sourced from Roy Morgan, shows 3.4 million Australians used a mobile commerce service during December of 2013, significantly up from just 620,000 for the same month in 2010.

The figures measure the number of consumers banking, paying bills, or buying goods and services online using their smartphones.

According to the report, the local smartphone market is still growing, with 12.07 million Australians owning a smartphone as of May 2014, up 8% from a year earlier.

Overall, 59% of Australians now own a smartphone, a penetration rate that’s higher than either the US (56%) or the UK (51%).

The growth of smartphones led to the number of Australians using the internet on their mobiles to grow to 8.3 million during December 2013, up 196% from 2.8 million during the same month in 2010.

Not surprisingly, younger consumers leading the charge, with people aged 25 to 34 being 33% more likely that average to use mobile commerce, whereas use of those same services was 58% less likely than average among consumers aged 65 and older.

In terms of mobile shopping transactions, 33% of Australians over 18 participated in online auctions through their phones, 33% used an online mobile payment system and 21% paid for purchases using a credit card.

Meanwhile, a massive 77% of adults transfer funds using their mobiles, while 46% use them to pay bills, suggesting there’s still significant further room for growth in mobile shopping.






Mobile Business Is Booming—Miss it and Miss Out! - POSTED BY INNA KUBOVSKI IN SMALL BUSINESS MATTERS

For anyone still dubious about mixing mobile with business, it’s time to get used to the new reality: Mobile is no longer the future. It’s the present. Everywhere you look, the signs point to more and more growth for mobile—and we haven’t even seen the wearable device movement take off yet. The numbers speak for themselves:
  • According to The New York Times, the mobile industry is now valued at more than $1.6 trillion. It’s expected to spike to a multi-trillion dollar industry in the next ten years.
  • Almost a billion smartphones were shipped in 2013, according to Business Insider.
  • On average, we spend one hour each day on our smartphones.
  • Perhaps most important of all, mobile devices are the only media devices growing with regards to how much time we spend using them. Time spent on mobiles increased another 8% in 2013, while time spent on desktop, radio, and print all decreased. Amazingly, over a fifth of all Internet traffic is now happening via mobile devices.
And we’re not just using mobiles for fun and games anymore. Mobile devices now account for about 25% of e-commerce traffic and 13% of e-commerce sales. PayPal witnessed $30 billion in mobile transactions in 2013, while Starbucks saw a billion dollars. Apple, meanwhile, earned $10 billion in app revenue last year.
Let’s also remember that the great mobile boom is changing small businesses just as much as big ones—if not more so. A recent survey commissioned by AT&T and the Small Business & Entrepreneurship (SBE) Council found that small business owners save some $67.5 billion a year by using mobile apps, tablets, and smartphones in their day-to-day business activities. “Apps offer small businesses a means to increase revenues and visibility, as well as enhance the customer experience,” Marla Tabaka explains in Inc. “Whether you own a restaurant, offer a service, write a blog, run events, or manage a DIY platform, you can grow your business just by adding an app.”
The revenue is expected to just keep coming. In her recent State of the Internet talk, Kleiner Perkins Caulfield & Byers partner Mary Meeker predicted use of mobiles will keep growing. Meeker sees a $30 billion opportunity in U.S. mobile advertising alone, as consumers spend more and more time on the channel.
Those in the marketing industry take note: Mobile app revenue now accounts for 68% of mobile monetization, making it the biggest opportunity for marketers. What’s more, Gartner predicts that global revenue from app stores will further increase 62% this year to $25 billion.
One vertical that will especially benefit from the mobile boom is the travel industry, with PhoCusWright estimating that by 2015 mobile will make up a quarter of U.S. online travel sales and a fifth of bookings in Europe. This is up from 2% of U.S. online bookings in 2011.
With this kind of growth, it’s no wonder that the Mobile World Congress trade show is such a huge event—this February there were a record 72,000 attendees. As the Times puts it, the event has “evolved from a networking event for industry insiders to a convention where companies from all corners gather to introduce new gear, services, and partnerships to gain attention in an increasingly crowded market.”
It comes down to this: Mobile has become a key channel for reaching customers and sparking sales, whether or not those sales actually occur on a phone. If you’re running a business—big or small—and mobile is not a central part of your strategy, you’re missing out. Big time.
Do you agree? How do you see mobile impacting your business? Share your thoughts!
 - POSTED BY INNA KUBOVSKI IN SMALL BUSINESS MATTERS

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3 Agents Have Been - Now which one do I Choose?


Which Agent Should I Choose?


Choosing the right real estate agent to sell your house can be an overwhelming prospect. Deciding to sell is a big step in itself, and selecting the right person to take on the challenge with you can be tough. Most consumers will meet with a few different agents before making a decision about which person to entrust the job to, but after the agents have done their ‘pitch’ and headed home, who do you choose?


They All seemed to make sense 

Each contender was probably equally friendly and professional, albeit overly extroverted and a little pushy as sales people tend to be, but no matter how ‘nice’, ultimately you know that they’re trying to sell you something - themselves! - which can make it difficult to trust your gut.

Do you pick the down-to-earth agent with the realistic price and fair, reasoned approach? Should you pick the one with the lowest commission fees, or instead choose the agent who promised to get you your asking price? Maybe you should take a leap of faith with the guy who promised to sell for more, even though he could be too good to be true.

Head or Heart

Whether the agent is pitching their years of experience, promising to get you exactly the price you’re asking for, or ‘buying the listing’ by offering more than they expect to get in the long-run, sometimes you have to ask yourself “can I trust my instincts?” especially when it comes to hiring a master salesperson.

It helps to arm yourself with as much information as possible, and there’s plenty of it out there once you know what you’re looking for, but even if you know everything you need to know about the market, it’s ultimately the agent’s experience and attitude that will play the biggest role in determining the outcome of your sale.

Most Salespeople are hard-working

There are many dedicated, hard-working, ethical and compassionate people working in the industry, that’s for sure, but there is also no doubt that real estate agents have a reputation for insincerity. In an industry motivated largely by commissions it’s easy to understand why. One particularly surprising thing about the commission structure of the industry is that although it feels like something that will work in your favour, in actual fact, that isn't always the case.

According to Steven Levitt and Stephen Lubner, authors of Freakonomics (www.freakonomics.com)  it is actually more profitable for an estate agent to sell your house sooner, for less money, than to hold out for a higher price.

It’s counter intuitive, but the math holds out; if your agent gets a 3% commission on your $300,000 home they will walk away with a $9000 cheque in their hand. 

But 3% of $310,000 is only an additional $300, so if the higher offer takes an additional 14 days to come through, that’s only an extra $21.50 each day for the agent. While holding out would work out to be an almost $10,000 benefit to the seller, the agent is actually better off selling the house for the lower bid rather than investing any more of their time.


Maybe an Independent 3rd Party

That’s just one of the reasons why savvy consumers are seeking out an objective third party who can help them make a clear headed decision about their choices. Getting an independent property appraisal from a property coach who will make no money from the transaction is the best way to guarantee yourself an honest opinion about the state of your property and what to expect over the course of the sale.

A property coach isn’t an agent, and doesn’t sell property or arrange financing, but with years of experience in all types of property transactions they know the best in the business who do, and can offer you invaluable, unbiased, independent advice about every aspect of the selling process.

Taking the time to talk to a property coach could save you a small fortune, not to mention help you make the best decision when it comes to choosing an agent. 


 www.mypropertycoach.com.au



Welcome to mypropertycoach.com.au



Welcome to mypropertycoach.com.au




Part of the BVP Group Australia

mypropertycoach.com.au 

was founded to revolutionise the property industry by helping everyday Australians realise their dreams of wealth through property investment.

What makes us unique is the fact that we provide 100% unbiased professional property advice.



Every client is assured that our primary focus is on their needs and helping them find effective solutions to their property investment questions and concerns.




Visit mypropertycoach.com.au for more details on how mypropertycoach.com.au can teach you how to build Wealth through Property.

Coaching - Australia's Second Fastest Growing Industry




Australia's Latest Growth Industry: Personal Service Coaching


As life becomes increasingly complicated in a world with tough economic conditions most people experience an increased amount of stress in some form.

People who want to perform better at their jobs and improve their quality of life are employing personal lifestyle and business coaches.

 Personal service coaches establish a dynamic and highly interactive relationship with their clients to work toward solving the broad range of life and work-related issues that might impede the client's success.

Recession Proof

When coaching first gained a foothold in the early 2000s, analysts questioned whether the concept would remain viable in the long-term, or if it was just a vanity service that people would view as expendable in periods of economic contraction.

This question was answered during the 2008 Global Economic Crisis when people and businesses not only chose to continuing working with their coaches, but business leaders and other individuals who had not previously used coaches also opted to try this service to improve their productivity and competitive edge in both life and business. As a result, personal service coaching not only remained stable during the economic downturn, but also grew as an industry as more forward thinking individuals and businesses used these services to gain a competitive edge.

Coaching Today

Today, personal service coaching in Australia is the second fasted growing industry after the Information Technology sector.

Lifestyle and business coaching generate roughly $ 2 billion in revenue on an annual basis.

The outlook for this high growth industry remains strong, as both individuals and business find that they receive as much as a 50:1 return on their investment. (ie. $50 return for every $1 spent on coaches / mentors)

Individuals find they are able to find new career opportunities more quickly than they were able to before they worked with a coach. Additionally, they find that they are happier, less stressed, make better decisions, and have more fulfilling personal and business relationships than they did before they hired a personal service coach.

Business leaders, entrepreneurs, and small business owners find that they are able to recruit better talent, have less employee turnover, and are able to develop and execute more effective and innovative strategic plans when they work with a business coach.

Lifestyle and Business Coaching 

According to the International Coaching Federation, professional lifestyle and business coaches offer a unique service that focuses on working with a client to establish goals, creating desired outcomes, and implementing strategies to manage and enhance the personal change the person has achieved.

According to the Worldwide Association of Business Coaches, the process of lifestyle and business coaching entails the following steps:

1. Initial Meetings

During this first meeting, the coach will meet with the client to determine the client's goals, to determine what obstacles prevent the client from achieving these aspuirations, to define the roles of the coach and client, andto make clear the responsibilities of each person in this dynamic relationship. During these first two initial meetings, the coach works to establish trust and an atmosphere of safety and both coach and client make a mutual commitment to honesty. These sessions also involve the coach offering support as well as high value feedback. Additionally, the coach might start to challenge the client about negative habits and patterns of thinking that can impede the client's progress toward desired goals.

At the end of this step, a formal contract is presented to the client that defines the coaching process, the role of the coach and the client, and the responsibilities of each party. Additionally, the client and coach will also sign a separate confidentiality agreement.

2. Compiling Information and Debriefing


People live in a variety of complex systems. Together, the coach and client will work to assess and define each system in which the client operates on a regular basis. For lifestyle coaches, this might entail exploring the client's relationships with a significant other, family, friends, and colleagues, as well as how the client handles his or her career and personal finances. For business coaches, this might entail reviewing the structure, vision, and mission of the business in which the client is involved, the client's personnel file, as well as other documentation that can provide insight into the person's business environment and the manner in which the client functions in this climate.

With the permission of the client, the coach might gather information from people with whom the client interacts. The coach will directly observe the client in a variety of contexts. This will provide the coach with insight into the manner in which the client handles a number of situations so that the coach can develop strategies.

Additionally, the coach might employ a variety of assessment tools to provide further insight into the person's thoughts and behaviours that affect their daily performance.

3. Feedback


The coach will provide their client with the coach's impressions about the way in which the client performed in each situation the coach observed.



4. Planning and Coaching


Based upon the client's baseline level of functioning, the coach and client can develop goals and benchmarks along with strategies to help the client can use to overcome the challenges they face in achieving these goals. The interventions and strategies are experiential actions that take place in real world situations.

5. Reassessment


At a time specified in the coaching agreement, the client and coach will revisit the initial assessment to evaluate the progress that has been made during the months of active coaching. Based upon this assessment, the client and coach can determine what goals the client has achieved, the need for additional goals and benchmarks, and means to reinforce the positive changes that the client has made.

6. Final Assessment


At the end of the coaching services, the coach and client will meet to evaluate the progress that has been made by the client. The coach will point of how the behavioural change the client has made has improved his quality of life or his or her performance in the business world. Prior to this meeting, with the permission of the client, the coach might re-interview the people whom he or she initially interviewed to determine the impressions of significant others in the client life about the changes the client has made. The coach and client will develop a plan that the client can use for continued change and growth.

Since personal service coaching is involves intensive individualised investment of a considerable amount of time, it is easy to how both individuals and businesses can spend thousands of dollars on personal service coaching. Fortunately, this coaching service is tax deductible so that those who invest in coaching haveanother source of investment deduction.

Demographics


Those who opt to use lifestyle and business coaches tend to be people who have already achieved a certain degree of success in their life and business ventures and who want to achieve the next level of achievement. They tend to be self-motivated professionals in their 30s to 50s who are in the upper middle class to upper class socio-economic groups. Some examples of people who opt for lifestyle and business personal serving coaching include Chief Executive Officers and directors of major corporations, entrepreneurs, and those who achieved a high level of success in their business life who want to find the same level of fulfillment in other areas of their lives. According to the Chartered Institute for Personnel and Development, large corporations have started to employ business coaches for their front line employees in order to increase productivity and decrease turnover.

The Benefits of Lifestyle and Business Coaching

Some of the benefits of lifestyle and business include the following
* Help establish and implement strategies to overcome barriers in both personal and business situation
* Rejuvenate both personal and business growth
* Build interpersonal confidence and competencies
* Learn new skills and refine old ones

The Future of Lifestyle and Business Coaching 

Just as personal athletic trainers started as independent contractors who then found that in order to meet demand, they needed to join forces and open gyms that later turned into franchises, the future of personal service coaching appears to be moving in the same direction. Think of how Gold' Gym in the United States that started as a small neighbourhood gym for weight builders transformed into a national franchise of gyms that cater to the fitness needs of casual fitness enthusiasts as well as those who are training for competition.

Rationalisation


Currently, the lifestyle and fitness coaching industry is highly fragmented as most coaches offer their services as independent contractors. In order to meet demand, personal lifestyle coaches will start to join forces and those who are most effective will begin to start franchises. As these initial start-ups gain a foothold, the industry is forecasted to evolve into multi-service franchise organisations offering personal service coaching services under a single corporation. As corporations become established and the lifestyle franchises gain brand recognition with the public, it will be much more difficult for independent lifestyle coaches and small groups of coaches to remain viable or to transform their business into a franchise. The reason for this difficulty is it will be much more difficult for new franchises to gain the brand recognition and clientele, as they will be competing against a known established brand.



For venture capitalists and investors, lifestyle coaching franchises offer the opportunity to get in on the ground floor of a new industry with solid long-term growth potential

Meet The Aurthor

Antonio Santolo is the founder and CEO of My Property Coach, a professional real estate coaching company that provides honest and reliable property investment advice. He has more than 20 years of experience in all areas of the real estate market, and provides expert property coaching advice to clients interested in property investment. Santolo specializes in both residential and commercial property, and helps his clients invest properly in real estate to maximize their investment potential. His years of experience in both investment strategies and real estate have provided him with the leadership skills and knowledge necessary to coach others on how to realize their own financial freedom through strategic property investments. Santolo also shares his real estate expertise as a freelance property author, and has experience in property case conflict, arbitration and resolution

Contact info@mypropertycoach.com.au

Impact of Global Crisis now being felt in Australian Property



Impact of Global Crisis now being felt in Australian Property


Australia has weathered the recent global financial crisis better than most countries. Thanks to a more stringent set of banking laws, it did not experience the same sub-prime issues that other nations did. As a result it had one of the strongest economies in the world after the crisis began. However, the average Australian has seen relatively little benefit from this, due to a quickly rising cost of living. In a relatively short period of time, Australia has become more expensive to live in than almost any other country. Living in Australian cities is now less affordable than even New York, London, or Singapore are. This is having a significant negative impact on many first time home buyers.


The Rising Cost of Living in Australia

Sydney is now the sixth most expensive city to live in out of all the countries in the world. Even though the Australian dollar has nearly doubled in value relative to the US dollar between 2002 and 2011, the purchasing power of the average Australian has not increased at all. The price of imported goods has not been significantly reduced as a result. Over this same period, the Consumer Price Index rose by a whopping 28 percent. The average Australian home owner spends 45 percent of his or her income after taxes just in paying off debts. One in five first time Australian home owners spends more than half of his or her income paying off debt. This is a significantly higher level of debt than that carried by citizens of most other developed countries. The citizens of the United States, the United Kingdom, Canada, Ireland, India, and Mexico had an average of 38 percent of their income spent on debt.

 

The Rising Cost of Housing in Australia

In the 1980, an average house cost three times the median family income, which is considered to be an affordable level. Today, the average house costs nine times the median family income, which is not very affordable. Interest rates have been rising as well, making mortgage payments higher and more difficult to meet. Mortgage payments now account for over 27 percent of the total household income. As of 2010, more than 40 percent of all first time home buyers were having some degree of difficulty paying their mortgages. In other words, housing costs are skyrocketing at the same time that it is becoming more difficult for Australians to purchase food, fuel, and all of the other necessities of living. This is counterintuitive, as Australia's abundance of land should mean that housing prices are amongst the lowest in the world. Nor is the government able to do much to ameliorate this situation. There is very little public housing available, the government only provides 1.4 percent of Australia's total housing property, and is loath to build large amounts of additional housing for fear of negatively impacting existing house prices and causing economic instability.

 

The Effect on First Time Home Buyers

This has radically changed the home buying landscape in Australia. In the 1970s, the average age of a first time home buyer was 25. Today, it is 31. Many young people are now finding home ownership to be entirely out of reach, and are having to settle for either renting, or continuing to live with their parents. In a recent survey of members of the youngest generation, Generation Y, one out of three respondents replied that they did not believe that they would ever be able to afford a home of their own when asked. Generation Y may be shaping up to become the first "homeless generation." This kind of radical change in living patterns would have repercussions across almost every facet of Australian life.

 

Home Ownership and Dynastic Wealth

This pessimistic housing outlook may spur some "Mum and Dad investors" into thinking that they should play it safe, and wait to see how the global financial crisis plays out before making a move. This kind of fear can be the wrong reaction, though. Many of the biggest fortunes were made during recessions and even during depressions, and the perennial wisdom that "there is security in land" is as true as ever. Now is the time for Mum and Dad investors to buy a home because no matter what happens with the economy, that home offers significant long term profit of one kind or another. With prices and interest rates going up, it is better to buy a home sooner rather than later. If the economy rebounds after the recession in the same way that it has tended to historically, then this home will have been a good investment financially. Even if the economy does not rebound, then parental investors will still have gained in another important way. They'll have created dynastic wealth, something that will be passed on to their children and their childrens children


 Mum and Dad investors putting their money into buying a home are helping subsequent generations to have a better standard of living, a substantial investment in the family's future. As with many economic downturns in the past, the present situation presents an opportunity for those who look toward the long term when assessing their investment opportunities.

From The Author

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