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Starting a Business and Not Sure What to Do First?

If you’re starting a business, it’s normal to feel pulled in ten directions at once.

A logo feels urgent. A website feels urgent. Social media feels urgent. And before you know it, you’ve spent time and money – yet the business still isn’t truly “ready”.

Most founders don’t fail because they lack motivation. They struggle because they do the right things in the wrong order.

This article gives you a simple launch sequence you can follow so your setup is clean, your early decisions are calm, and your business looks credible from day one.


Why founders lose weeks at the start

The first stage is full of distractions. Many founders:

• Spend on branding before they are clear on what they sell and to whom.

• Build a website before they have a clean offer and message.

• Start marketing before the bank account, processes, and basics are ready.

• Apply for funding before the plan and numbers are strong enough to support it.

It’s not that these are “bad” actions. They are just actions taken too early.

The result is common: avoidable delays, messy admin, wasted spend, and a launch that feels stressful instead of controlled.

The goal is not speed alone. It’s starting correctly.


The simple launch sequence

Below is a practical sequence you can follow. You might move faster or slower depending on your situation, but the order protects you from the most common early mistakes.


Step 1: Clarify the basics

Before you form anything or build anything, be able to answer these in one or two sentences:

• What problem do you solve?

• Who do you solve it for?

• Why should someone choose you?

• How do you make money (pricing)?

If you can’t explain this clearly, branding and marketing will not work properly later.


Step 2: Choose the right setup route

Now you can decide how to set the business up.

This is where many founders rush. The structure you choose affects tax, admin, credibility, and responsibility. If you set up incorrectly, fixing it later is often slow and frustrating.

At this stage you should also be clear on:

• Who the directors/owners are.

• The name and trading identity you will use.

• Your registered office setup – and whether you need a different trading address.


Step 3: Make it “bank ready” before you apply

A common early pain point is bank account onboarding delays.

Even when a business is legitimate, applications slow down when details are inconsistent or unclear. Simple things like mismatched addresses, unclear business activity, or incomplete documents can cause repeat checks.

To reduce delays, prepare:

• A clear description of what your business does.

• Consistent addresses and contact details.

• Basic supporting information about your activity.

• Clean ownership and director information.

This step alone saves many founders weeks of frustration.


Step 4: Build a simple business plan that a decision maker can trust

Most founders either overcomplicate the plan – or avoid it completely.

The right plan is not a long document. It is a clear, credible explanation of how the business works.

A strong startup plan should cover:

• Your offer – what you sell.

• Your target customer – who buys.

• Your pricing – how you charge.

• Your delivery – how you fulfil.

• Your marketing and sales approach – how you win.

• Your costs – what it takes to operate.

• Your first 90 days – what you do first.

If you ever plan to speak to banks, partners, landlords, or funding routes, this plan matters.


Step 5: Forecast cashflow before you spend

Many founders look at revenue and forget timing.

You can be “profitable on paper” and still run out of cash if:

• Customers pay late.

• You pay suppliers upfront.

• Costs land earlier than expected.

• Sales ramp slower than hoped.


A useful forecast gives you:

• A clear view of cashflow month by month.

• Your runway – how long cash lasts.

• Simple “what if” scenarios – if sales slip or costs rise.

This protects you from spending money you don’t truly have.


Step 6: Create a go to market plan that is focused

Marketing becomes easier when the message is clear.

A practical go to market plan answers:

• Where will your first customers come from?

• What will you say to them (your message)?

• What channels will you test first (not all at once)?

• What does “traction” look like in 30/60/90 days?

The mistake founders make is trying everything. The smarter approach is testing a small number of channels properly, then doubling down.


Step 7: Use mentoring to keep decisions calm and consistent

Startups often slow down because the founder carries everything alone.

Mentoring is not motivational talk. It is decision support.

It helps you:

• Prioritise the right actions each week.

• Avoid distractions and wasted work.

• Make decisions faster with less stress.

• Stay accountable to your plan and numbers.

When your business is new, that calm structure is a major advantage.


The “quick checklist”

If you only take one thing from this article, take this:

• Get clear on what you sell and who you sell it to.

• Set up the business properly before spending money on appearance.

• Prepare for banking early to avoid delays.

• Write a simple plan that matches reality.

• Forecast cashflow before you commit spend.

• Launch with a focused go-to-market plan.

• Get support so you don’t become the bottleneck.


When should you speak to an advisor?

If any of these are true, it is worth having a short conversation:

• You feel unsure about what to do first.

• You want to avoid bank delays and admin confusion.

• You want a plan and forecast that are credible and simple.

• You want to be funding ready at the right time.

• You want traction without wasting budget.

A good advisor doesn’t slow you down. They speed you up by removing mistakes.


Ready to start properly?

If you want to launch with clarity and control, we can help you put the right steps in the right order.

Book a consultation


Information only. Funding outcomes depend on eligibility and third-party criteria.

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