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Starting Breeding Business
I am starting my own breeding business and any ideas, suggestion, comments...anything will help ANYTHING!!!
I am most likely going to be breeding Ball Pythons at first but maybe Corn or Hognose snake.
Then most likely going to get into lizards preferably geckos.
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Re: Starting Breeding Business
 Originally Posted by MagroskyMarvels
I am starting my own breeding business and any ideas, suggestion, comments...anything will help ANYTHING!!!
I am most likely going to be breeding Ball Pythons at first but maybe Corn or Hognose snake.
Then most likely going to get into lizards preferably geckos.
The best advise I can give you is to get the animals, learn the care of and what it takes to successfully breed them, THEN think about making it a business.
Jerry Robertson

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The Following 2 Users Say Thank You to snakesRkewl For This Useful Post:
CLSpider (05-10-2012),twistedtails (05-04-2012)
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There is so much involved with breeding as a business, so this response could go on and on, I will keep this response primarily towards the actual business and not the breeding aspect of it. This may be a bit over the top, but it is always better to be prepared.
Starting a breeding business involves the same planning steps as another successful business would require, here are the 10 steps I follow when advising on a start-up.
What should you do?
1 Write a sentence describing what products or services your business provides. You have a short statement that tells people-investors, customers, family members-what you do. You'll use it all the time.
2 Write down who your customers are and why they will buy from you over the competition.(Price, quality, innovation, service, convenience?) You get a mental picture of the ideal customer, including demographics, and the way the customer thinks. It's very helpful in your marketing and other decisions such as pricing, distribution and so on.
3 Research your market before investing in resources. For example: products, customers, competition, traffic patterns, parking, rents, employee availability, labor costs. The more you know, the better. Try to get real numbers, not estimates, to use for your projections.
4 Decide how you will get your product or service to your customers-how will they learn about your product or service. For example, directly to customers through retail, distrbution arrangements or over the internet. You can now put some costs to these items and make sure the methods you chooese are linking up to the customers you have identified and their reason for buying from you. You will also begin to recognize any problems or bottlenecks in your strategies and develop solutions or alternate plans.
5 Decide where you will conduct your business. Can you work at home or do you need an office, a plant or a store? Choose a location that balances all your important criteria such as budget, traffic and visibility. This will lead to concrete information about the cost of rent or real estate, labor and distribution. You may also be able to determine traffic patterns, customer parking availability and other important considerations.
6 Forecast your finances: Create realistic income statements and cash flow projections. What will your costs, sales and profits be for the first two or three years? Will you have sufficient cash flow to survive the start-up? What is your break-even point (the point at which you begin to make money)? Talk to your accountant and banker. These will prove to yourself and indicate to lenders and other backers that your ideas are based in reality. You must show that your plan has a definite timeline and will make money and pay back investors.
7 How will you obtain raw materials or other crucial supplies? Are there backup sources to draw upon? With a list of suppliers and alternatives, you are prepared if one goes out of business or cannot meet your requirements.
8 Decide how many employees (if any) you need, and find out whether it is easy to hire people with the required skills in your market area. You will know what skills you will be looking for and you will have a better understanding of what you will need to pay, including benefits, to attracts employees and fully staff your company.
9 Set up your advisory team: Get professional advisors, partners and mentors behind you. You get the benefit of their experience with other companies that have gone through similar situations.
10 What are the key risks your business will face? (Consider problems such as the failure of a key supplier or customer, product-performance issues, legal disputes and illnesses befalling key employees-including you.) What will you do to deal with these risks? You will be prepared for most foreseeable situations. You may wish to buy insurance for certain risks. Check with your small business advisor or insurance representative
 Originally Posted by snakesRkewl
The best advise I can give you is to get the animals, learn the care of and what it takes to successfully breed them, THEN think about making it a business.
There you have it, to the point.
Enjoy the hobby and establish your short term and long term breeding goals and take it form there. Next, refer to the above... =)
Last edited by el8ch; 05-04-2012 at 01:05 PM.
Reason: added quote
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4Ballz (05-04-2012),CLSpider (05-10-2012),cmack91 (05-10-2012),crossbonecorns (05-10-2012),FoxReptiles (05-07-2012),John1982 (05-04-2012),rigomez4 (05-06-2012),snakesRkewl (05-04-2012)
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For ball pythons Id recommend getting as many females as you can. Make sure your husbandry is up.
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