Shark Tank Star Lori Greinerâs 4 Money Rules for New Entrepreneurs
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Lori Greiner is frugal. The Shark Tank star investor and reigning âQueen of QVCâ says she didnât splurge on a single luxury item until she was in business for four years.
Mind you, she could have. Easily. The one-time aspiring Chicago journalist and playwright earned millions shortly after first starting out, selling out one invention after another on QVC and constantly dreaming up new ones in between. Now sheâs now up to more than 400 inventions, with 120 patents to her name to boot.
Greinerâs first big celebratory âI made itâ purchase was a stainless steel Cartier watch she still adores today, she wrote in Invent It, Sell It, Bank It! (Ballantine Books, 2014), her new idea-to-pitch how-to guide for inventors. She didnât buy herself another extravagant gift for a long time. Not because she didnât want to, but because she diligently scrimped and saved wherever and whenever she could as a beginning entrepreneur. It proved to be a prudent choice that paid off more than just financially.
Related: Shark Tank Star Lori Greiner: I Never Think of Myself as a Female in Business
âIn the beginning I was really, really lean,â she says. âFor the longest time I did it all. I played every hat. I was in the factory, doing the graphic design, the photography, the selling â literally everything. I saved money doing what I could myself. It was hard but I learned. I learned that nobodyâs better than you to get your business off the ground. The experience you get is priceless.â
She says entrepreneurs can make âso much more moneyâ â and gain immeasurable business experience â from remaining frugal early on, even as their products and services take off and pay off. âFor now and for the near future, enjoy roughing it,â she writes in her book. âTake pride in the fact that youâre tough enough to run a business on a tight budget. There will be plenty of time later to indulge in luxuries, comforts, and labor-saving purchases, and youâll appreciate them more.â
Related: Shark Tankâs Lori Greiner on the No. 1 Mistake to Avoid When Manufacturing Your Product Overseas
Here are four wise ways Greiner saved money (and sanity) when she first started out and how she says you can, too:
Forget the swanky office suite
Work from home instead. âAvoid spending money unless you absolutely have to,â Greiner, who worked from home for five years following the launch her first smash-hit jewelry organizer, writes in her book. âTry to work out of your home for as long as you can, even if you have a few employees, to keep overhead low.â
When sheâs not busy filming marathon 12-hour days on the set of Shark Tank or selling innovative wares on QVCâs Clever & Unique Creations, Greiner still works from home today. âI roll out of bed in the morning, whenever I want, and I work right away because, to me, thatâs the life. Thatâs freedom. The whole point for me is that I love the freedom of being an entrepreneur, that I do what I want to do when I want to do it.â
Related: Lori Greinerâs Advice on How to Get Your Invention on Store Shelves
Donât go on a hiring spree
Stay small and donât bring anyone on staff until you absolutely need to. Greiner says she sees fledgling entrepreneurs âtrying to impress people from the outset by hiring all over the place.â They often showboat and blow money they donât even have yet on employees they donât need. Instead, she suggests rolling your sleeves up and doing what you can yourself, without hiring anyone.
âYou answer your own phone or get an automated system,â she says. âYou can keep track of your own books.â (After five years in business, she hired her accountant husband to handle her finances.) âYou have to be willing to do as much as possible by yourself up until you simply have no choice but to hire someone; and even then, you will have to stay intimately involved in the day-to-day operations, because even the best employee will never be as vigilant as you will.â
Eventually, and only when you have the means, she advises you hire in baby steps. You might consider contracting with a freelancer â someone who works out of his or her own space, not yours â to take on a few marketing or graphic design tasks. âHire prudently, go slow and donât go overboard.â Or you could go broke.
Related: Investor Lori Greiner on Her Swim in the âShark Tankâ
Donât stock up on too much inventory
This is one of the worst and most common mistakes Greiner sees first-time entrepreneurs make. âNever manufacture a product before you even get your first order,â she stresses. âFirst, youâve put yourself on the hook to pay for all those units, even though you have no guarantee of revenue. Second, you now have the additional burden of paying for storage. Third, when you order your inventory too soon, youâre wasting the money you paid for your prototype because youâre undermining one of the main reasons you got it in the first place â to conduct your market research.â
Blindly guessing how much inventory you might or might not need is a recipe for disaster. Instead, Greiner says you should carefully size up your market, your competitors and the demand for your product. Doing so should give you a decent idea of how much inventory you should order out of the gate.
Related: The Stars of Shark Tank on How to Dress For Success
Donât borrow money from your family
That is, unless Mom and Dad and Grandpa Joe are completely okay with never getting paid back. âItâs a gamble. Itâs like walking into a casino. You never know if itâs going to work out or if itâs going to end your relationship.â
No matter how clear your boundaries, borrowing cash from your loved ones to get your business off the ground can go south fast and irreversibly sour relationships forever. Itâs best to avoid this common mistake altogether, even if you think you can handle it.
Greiner, who did not take out a loan from her family to start her business but admits she had a plan in place to financially lean on them, if needed, recommends several other, less potentially messy routes for raising capital.
The first is to apply for a small business loan from a bank or from the Small Business Administration. Venture capital firms are another avenue for raising money for your product, but she cautions narrowing down a reputable one that is well-suited to your particular line of business. She also recommends crowdfunding, on sites like Kickstarter, Indiegogo and GoFundMe, as an effective means of raising capital, particularly if you donât want to give away any equity.
Related: Would You Sell Your Startup Right Now If I Gave You $600,000?
Lori Greiner is frugal. The Shark Tank star investor and reigning âQueen of QVCâ says she didnât splurge on a single luxury item until she was in business for four years.
Mind you, she could have. Easily. The one-time aspiring Chicago journalist and playwright earned millions shortly after first starting out, selling out one invention after another on QVC and constantly dreaming up new ones in between. Now sheâs now up to more than 400 inventions, with 120 patents to her name to boot.
Greinerâs first big celebratory âI made itâ purchase was a stainless steel Cartier watch she still adores today, she wrote in Invent It, Sell It, Bank It! (Ballantine Books, 2014), her new idea-to-pitch how-to guide for inventors. She didnât buy herself another extravagant gift for a long time. Not because she didnât want to, but because she diligently scrimped and saved wherever and whenever she could as a beginning entrepreneur. It proved to be a prudent choice that paid off more than just financially.



