Joint ventures in business are a wonderful thing. They can
allow you to make money you wouldn’t otherwise be able to make on your own, they
enable you to tap into other people’s expertise and knowledge, and potentially
they can speed up projects, whilst making them more successful and
sharing some
of the risk. Joint ventures are talked about a great deal in the internet
marketing world, but despite the many benefits there are also a number of
drawbacks. Here are 5 things to think about before doing a joint venture:
1. Joint
ventures mean shared profit
Say
you decide to join forces with another marketer and create your own product
together. You can share some of the development costs and utilise both of your respective
expertise, however assuming the joint venture is split straight down the middle
then it also means you’ll only make half of what you would if it was solely
your own product. Of course in many scenarios this is irrelevant because the
project might have been impossible on your own, but it’s something to think
about.
It
can be the case that your joint venture partner simply doesn’t share the same
commitment to the project as you do. This can be extremely frustrating if you’re
putting in lots of hard work yourself and your partner simply doesn’t do their
bit.
3. Before
you start, make sure you have an agreed timetable
It
is all too easy for a joint venture project to slip behind schedule because
your partner is not good at doing things on time (relating back to the point
above) or simply that you both have other commitments and the project never
gets finished. Before you start make sure you agree a timetable that both of
you are happy with and are sure you can commit to.
Are
you compatible with the other party? Should you even be considering working together?
There is little point in doing a joint venture with someone who has a
completely different skill set or way of thinking. Whilst joint ventures allow
you to tap into other peoples expertise, it is also essential that you have
SOME shared knowledge, skills or common ground since otherwise the venture will
become impossible. Similarly it is usually of little value to join forces with
someone who has exactly the same skill set or market access as yourself. If,
for example, you have a product but no list to sell it to then look to joint
venture with someone who has a list but no product to sell to them!