Stop googling "how to start a business" and actually start. Templates, tools, and systems — all in one download.
Not a 50-page MBA document. One page that forces you to answer the 8 questions that actually matter: what, who, how, money.
Spreadsheet template to research your top 5 competitors. What they charge, where they market, what their customers complain about.
Interactive tool that calculates your prices based on costs, desired margin, and competitor pricing. Stops you from undercharging.
Revenue, expenses, profit, cash flow — all in one sheet. Pre-built formulas. Monthly and annual views. Tax-category tagging.
Step-by-step checklist for every new client: intake questionnaire, welcome email, project kickoff, communication expectations.
Professional invoice template with clear payment terms. Late payment policy included. Works for any industry.
Plain English contract template covering scope, payment, revisions, IP, confidentiality, and cancellation. Customizable for any service.
Website privacy policy and terms of service templates. Fill-in-the-blank format. Covers the basics for a small business website.
Day-by-day marketing plan for your first month. What to post, where to post it, how to find your first customers. No ad budget required.
Welcome email, follow-up, proposal, invoice reminder, testimonial request, referral ask, upsell, re-engagement, thank you, and breakup.
Standard Operating Procedure templates for your most common tasks. Document your processes once, delegate forever.
15-minute weekly review: wins, metrics, lessons, priorities, energy audit. The one habit that compounds everything else.
Mix of HTML (interactive tools), CSV (spreadsheets for Google Sheets/Excel), and Markdown (text templates). All work on any device.
No. The templates are designed to work for any service-based or product-based small business. You customize the content for your industry.
No. HTML files open in any browser. CSV files open in Google Sheets (free) or Excel. Markdown files open in any text editor.
No. It's a starting point. For high-value contracts or complex situations, have a lawyer review it. For most small projects, it covers the essentials.