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Advice on protecting your wellbeing, self-confidence and mental health from the pressures of starting and running a business.

Learn why business planning is an essential exercise if your business is to start and grow successfully, attract funding or target new markets.

It is likely you will need funding to start your business unless you have your own money. Discover some of the main sources of start up funding.

Businesses and individuals must account for and pay various taxes. Understand your tax obligations and how to file, account and pay any taxes you owe.

Businesses are required to comply with a wide range of business laws. We introduce the main rules and regulations you must comply with.

Marketing matters. It drives sales and helps promote your brand and products. Discover how to market your business and reach your target customers.

Some businesses need a high street location whilst others can be run from home. Understand the key factors from cost to location, size to security.

Your employees can your biggest asset. They can also be your biggest challenge. We explain how to recruitment and manage staff successfully.

It is likely your business could not function without some form of IT. Learn how to specify, buy, maintain and secure your business IT.

Few businesses manage the leap from start up to high-growth business. Learn what it takes to scale up and take your business to the next level.

Essential guide to developing an export strategy

Exporting offers the prospect of new markets, more sales, better profits and a greater spread of customers. A clear export strategy makes it much more likely you will succeed

Your export strategy should be based on an assessment of your own position and research into promising opportunities. You will need to think about how to reach new customers and finance your exports, as well as making sure you understand legal and tax issues.

Your export position

Export action plan

Research overseas markets

The legal and tax position

Reaching overseas markets

Export finance

1. Your export position

Be clear about your reasons for exporting

  • You want to boost turnover and spread your costs.
  • You are looking for new markets.
  • You have built up a strong domestic base and want to keep growing.
  • You have an internationally competitive innovation.
  • Your customers expect you to operate on an international basis.
  • You want to extend the lifecycle of your products.
  • You are receiving enquiries from overseas or attracting international visitors to your website.

Are you ready to start exporting?

  • Winning export orders takes time. Make sure you have the resources and commitment to support your efforts.
  • Identify any new skills that your employees will require to handle international business.
  • Review the extent to which you are able to operate in the local currency or language.
  • Be realistic about your ability to motivate a sales team from a distance.

Identify the key risks

  • Differences in language, currency and business practice can complicate any sale.
  • Securing payment from customers can be lengthy and complicated.
  • Delivery cycles will be longer than you may be used to. You may risk over-extending yourself, particularly with large high-value orders.
  • More people will be involved in any sale. As well as your customers, you may have to deal with regulators, banks, insurers and carriers.
  • Long lines of communications mean that overseas partners are likely to act more independently than you would normally expect at home.
  • Every foreign market is likely to pose its own particular risks. These could range from import restrictions to political change, economic instability, poor transport infrastructure and intellectual property theft.

Decide how aggressively you want to pursue opportunities

  • You might decide just to pick up orders from foreign buyers in the UK or from traffic on the web.
  • Licensing your intellectual property or franchising your business format internationally might allow you to profit overseas without extensive direct involvement.
  • Finding experienced intermediaries to work on your behalf in different markets could reduce your initial costs and the complexity of the challenge.
  • You might decide to pursue growth directly and handle all aspects of the export process yourself.

2. Export action plan

Decide where you should focus your efforts

  • Work out your competitive position and decide which products are likely to perform best in international markets.
  • Choose markets that offer you scope for growth and that you understand. Selling to a country with a very different business culture may not be the best first step into exporting.
  • Thoroughly research potential markets to inform your decision.

Establish your objectives and budgets

  • Spell out what you are hoping to achieve in terms of sales, turnover and profitability.
  • Draw up an export budget, clearly indicating how initial expenses should be allocated and when you expect to see a return.
  • Ensure that you set an export price that covers the additional costs and risks of exporting.

Plan how you will manage your exports

  • Appoint someone to lead your export activities and decide how much time senior managers should allocate to export activities.
  • Ensure that employees have the equipment and systems they need to handle international orders.
  • Decide how you will organise marketing, sales and delivery to reach the market.
  • Work out your terms of trade and how you will finance your exports, including delivery terms and payment method.
  • Use your export plan as an active management tool and regularly update it.

Consider getting help.

3. Research overseas markets

Find out about export markets

  • Search for international trade statistics online to find out where demand is strongest for your products.
  • Look at the list of export opportunities held by DBT and supplied by British embassies in different countries.
  • Join an export club to learn from the experience of other companies.
  • Go to Chamber of Commerce events to meet international companies in your sector.
  • Read the reports on different markets and industries published free of charge by DBT.
  • Commission market research or use the fee-based information service from DBT.
  • Consider checking with international aid agencies for companies that are looking for partners.

Explore foreign markets in person

  • Attend a trade fair to meet potential competitors, suppliers and customers.
  • Go on a trade mission. You will be given a full briefing on the market and make a large number of contacts. You may be able to get a grant towards the cost of your trip.

4. The legal and tax position

Find out about the key legal issues in your potential export market

  • If you are selling goods like firearms, software, chemicals or fine art, you may require an export licence.
  • Your product will need to comply with local regulations: for example, safety standards and labelling requirements.
  • Decide what steps you should take to protect your intellectual property. UK patents and trademarks only protect you at home.

Prepare a comprehensive sales contract

  • Be clear in the sales contract about where your responsibilities end and the buyer's start.
  • Use internationally agreed 'Incoterms' to avoid any confusion about who is delivering the goods, arranging freight insurance and paying for transport.
  • Make sure that any agreement has clear measures for performance and only lasts a fixed term. You want to retain your flexibility in case of changes in the market.

Make sure you understand the tax rules

  • Exports are generally zero-rated for VAT. You need to keep proof that your goods have left the UK.
  • Your customer will normally be responsible for paying any taxes or duties in their country, though it will depend on what you have agreed in your contract.
  • Since Brexit, exports to customers in the EU are treated much the same as exports to any other country.
  • Check government guidance on how to export to the EU after Brexit.

5. Reaching overseas markets

Take account of local rules and cultural preferences

  • Be prepared to modify your product and your marketing.
  • Check your market proposition. Overseas customers might think about your product in ways that you do not expect.
  • Think about how best to reach your target audience. You might find that your product is sold in different ways and through different channels.
  • Consider any changes that you need to make to your branding and labelling. For example, you may have to rename your product.

Select a channel for selling into the market

  • You may be able to sell directly: for example, via your website or at trade shows.
  • Appointing an agent to sell goods on your behalf can be a cost-effective option. Take advice on your responsibility for their activities, and draw up a suitable agreement. For example, you could be held liable for any bribes they pay.
  • You may find it easiest to use a distributor who buys goods from you to sell on to their customers.
  • Other options include entering into a joint venture with a local partner, opening a local office or setting up a local subsidiary.

Be clear about how you will deliver your goods

  • Your choice of whether to use sea, road, rail or air as your mode of transport depends on your type of goods and how quickly they have to be delivered.
  • You will need the right documentation to clear UK and overseas customs and to avoid any unnecessary tax payments.
  • Many exporters use a freight forwarder to handle their transport. Find one who knows the territory and who can handle your documentation.
  • Check packaging and transport regulations in your destination country.

Aim to offer a service that equals or surpasses local expectations

  • Reply promptly to any enquiries.
  • Make sure your product has service support.
  • Don't disappoint importers by failing to ship as promised.
  • Keep your contacts informed of any changes to the arrangement.

6. Export finance

Guard yourself against non-payment

  • Credit check all overseas customers.
  • Decide how much credit you are prepared to extend yourself or take out insurance.
  • Always check if a prospective customer is a properly formed company and can pay its bills.
  • Be clear about how you are going to chase up payment. Ask your bank about invoice discounting to protect your cash flow.
  • Have a back-up plan for re-selling your goods if the customer refuses to accept them.

Negotiate a method of payment

  • Advance payment is safest. You are paid before the goods are shipped.
  • Letters of credit confirmed by a British bank are highly secure, but you must ensure that your documentation is absolutely correct. Any error and the bank will turn down payment.
  • Documentary collections allow you to raise payment directly through your customer's bank.
  • If you sell on open account, you offer credit of 30 days or more, so only use it with customers you know well.
  • If you have a series of contracts, rather than a single project, consider setting up a line of credit with your bank.

Take care about how funds are transferred

  • Secure payment options include: international bank transfers, credit or debit card payments or merchant services.
  • You could also use local bank transfers. However, some countries cap the amount of local currency that can be transferred out of the country

Before dispatching any goods, think about insuring yourself against common risks

  • Credit insurance offers protection against non-payment. UK Export Finance provides insurance for capital goods and major projects, or you can use a private insurer.
  • If you are being paid in local currency, guard against any fluctuations in foreign exchange rates by setting up a forward contract with your bank.
  • Take out cargo insurance to cover any damage or loss to goods in transit.

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