20 Tips to Save Time and Money in Your Small Business and At Home





These are difficult times and every small business (and large one) needs to find ways to save money and time without delivering less value to their customers.  Service to customers must be maintained, and product or service value is the key to continued business.  So what can you do?

Here are 20 tips that are proven time or money savers. Time is money so the two savings are combined here. Since many small businesses are operated out of home offices, these will also save money and/or time at home. Choose the ones that work for you and start saving now.

20 tips to save money, time

1. STOP BUYING “STUFF”: If you don’t need something, don’t buy it — no matter how great the deal is.  There’s no right price for something you don’t really need. Learn the typical promotional cycles-clearance sales in January (before the retailers’ fiscal year end), for example.  Buy office products when the ones you need are on sale-plan ahead. Buy non-perishable holiday supplies after the holiday, and save money next year.

2. DIY (Do It Yourself) INSTEAD OF HIRING SOMEONE: Do the simple jobs yourself instead of hiring it done.  Janitorial services charge more if you have them empty wastebaskets and replace liners every day.  Few people fill wastebaskets daily, some don’t in a week.  Tell everyone where the dumpster is and have them plan to dump their trash while on another trip.  Ditto for window washing.  It’s nice to have clean windows, but staying in business is nicer.

3. SHOP FOR BEST BANKING DEALS: Switch bank accounts to the places where they offer free, unlimited check writing, no fees on accounts, etc.  Shop around and see whose deal is best.  If you plan to keep a healthy balance in any account, ask where it can be parked to earn interest and swept to the checking account when needed.

4. USE EMAIL TO AVOID PHONE TAG: Use email to set up phone calls and avoid frustrating phone tag.  Tell the person what you want to talk about, and whether you need a decision from them, information, or just a discussion.

5. PHOTO DOCUMENT MISHAPS: Use the camera on your cell phone to document mishaps.  Photos of the damage, an accident, the site where it happened, etc. can be invaluable if a dispute arises or an insurance claim needs to be filed.

6. USE EMAIL WISELY: Don’t argue on email.  It is damaging, counterproductive and usually escalates an argument instead of resolving it.  Meet face to face (first choice) or talk person to person on the phone.  Assume that you can and will resolve the argument and say so-that alone goes a long way to resolving it.  Don’t print emails unless you need a hard copy for some good reason – it just wastes paper, ink, time and money.

7. PRIVATE LABEL GOODS ARE GOOD BUYS: Buy private label goods where the store guarantees them or will replace them with brand names if you are dissatisfied.  Kroger and OfficeMax both do this.  Wal-Mart will match any competitor’s advertised deal-but bring the ad along.  Compare prices and learn who has the best deals, on what.

8. SHOP (& NEGOTIATE) GAS PRICES: Pay attention to which service stations seem to always have the best gas prices and plan fill ups.  If there is a loyalty program with a grocery store, wait to fill up until you can use a discount for more gallons of gas. Negotiate with your favorite gas station if you are a heavy user, or have a fleet of vehicles.  Ask for a discount-they are often available.  Use the right grade of gas for best mileage and don’t be a “lead foot,” it’s not a race.

9. COMBINE SAVINGS WITH GIFT CARDS: Take advantage of gift cards sold in stores with such programs (Giant Eagle is one such chain).  You can buy a $1,000 worth of stuff at Home Depot with two $500 gift cards purchased at Giant Eagle and save a lot on future gas purchases at Giant Eagle.

10. PLAN AHEAD –  AVOID WASTED TRAVEL TIME & FUEL: Plan trips, in fact, plan all activities, to avoid doubling back or traveling further than necessary.  Think of making a loop, hitting all the stops and ending up where you want to be. Arrange the pickups/dropoffs in an order that takes you out & back in the loop, not in & out, back and forth.  You’ll save time, fuel, wear & tear on vehicles-and money.

11. GROUP SIMILAR TASKS: Accumulate similar tasks and do them in a group.  Often the “make ready time” is a sizable part of the job, so whether its paying bills, returning calls, mailings, filing or whatever-group the work then “knock it out.”  Assembly lines in plants are efficient because they combine work in the best way.

12. MINIMIZE SMALL TALK – e.g., HOW’S THE WEATHER:  Small talk is nice, but it wastes time.  Discussing the weather is the most common time waster.  If you need to bond with someone ask about family, fun or favorite sports team.  Otherwise, get on with business.  That includes Texts and Twitter Tweets, unless there is a valid reason for them.

13. USE MEETING AGENDAS & TIMES: Don’t hold a meeting without an agenda, a time frame, and a statement of what is to be accomplished (information exchange, decision, next steps by whom and when, etc.)   Take notes and record who will do what by when — then follow up.  It’s a powerful time saving habit.

14. USE FEWER WORDS – GET TO THE POINT: Don’t write long letters or emails if short ones will do.  Ditto voicemails.  What’s the subject, what do you need (info, help, meet, etc.), when can you be reached with a call-back?

15. DON’T REPLY TO ALL: Don’t use the “reply to all” function.  It just makes more emails for everyone else to read, wasting time.  Occasionally an embarrassing email goes to someone who shouldn’t get it — and that can cause big trouble.

16. CONSOLIDATE INTO A SMART PHONE: Electronically consolidate all of your calendar, contact information, etc. on a “smart phone” which is backed up to your computer (in case of loss or damage). Preferably choose a smart phone will also do email, text messaging and have web access; most can also serve as a calculator, camera and alarm clock …  and more.  Print out your calendar and address book once in a while, and put it in a safe place — just in case.

17. SAVE ELECTRICITY: Turn off lights when no one’s around. (It doesn’t cost more to turn lights on and off.  It costs more to leave them on). Turn off copiers; unplug chargers, shut down computers over night. All use electricity even when idle. Use compact fluorescent bulbs or the new LED bulbs instead of incandescent bulbs — they use less electricity and pay off in savings over a few years.  Use timers (or motion sensor) to turn lights off — or on — when appropriate.

18. SAVE ON ALL UTILITIES: Turn down the thermostat  (or up) — one degree makes a difference; 2-3 saves more.  In winter, wear heavier clothing; in summer, dress cooler.  Use a programmable thermostat-reduce heat and A/C use when gone or sleeping.  Reduce water heater temperature settings; run only full loads in washers, dryers & dishwashers.  Maintain your HVAC, and it can save you money. A humidifier in winter keeps the air feeling warmer, and reduces health problems due to winter dryness.  Maintain furnace filters — change (or clean) them regularly.

19. BUNDLE YOUR TELECOMMUNICATIONS BUYS: Negotiate a bundle of your phone & electronic communications.  You get a better deal buying Internet, Phone and Data (and cable or satellite TV too, if you need it) from one source.  Shop around. Cell phones added to a plan and bundled minutes are very economical.  Call and ask for a better deal.  If you need to keep a “wired phone line” negotiate that deal too. If they can’t find one, talk to the department that keeps people from switching via price concessions (AT&T’s is called “Retention”).

20. CLIP COUPONS & USE THEM: Use coupons and deals aggressively for office products.  Some superstores will begin sending them every month.  Other stores will honor them even if expired.  Plan your purchases to maximize the savings-but only buy stuff you need.  Use affinity plans that give you discounts too.  Shop at super-discount places like Aldi Foods that sell house brands or generics.  Many are made by major manufacturers and are as good as brand name goods.  There are many coupon websites, and most major manufacturers, and some retailers have coupons too.

Finally, smile a lot and keep an upbeat attitude.  Make “saving time and money” into “fun.”  Give recognition to employees who find new ways of saving money.  A “certificate” and praise — in front of peers — are very valuable motivators.

If the people you work with see you with a positive, can do attitude, that’s contagious.  Try it — it works.

Editor’s note: this article was originally published at the American Express OPEN Forum.

* * * * *

John MariottiAbout the Author: John L. Mariotti is President and CEO of The Enterprise Group. He was President of Huffy Bicycles, Group President of Rubbermaid Office Products Group, and now serves as a Director on several corporate boards. He has written eight business books and a novel and has been a conference keynote speaker, a radio talk-show host, and a multi-national columnist for IndustryWeek, Management Centre Europe, the American Management Association, Fortune Small Business, Tiempo de Mercadeo, and a contributor to Business – The Ultimate Resource and the Encyclopedia of Health Care Management. His electronic newsletter THE ENTERPRISE is published weekly. His Web site is The Enterprise Group.

26 Comments ▼

John Mariotti John Mariotti is an internationally known executive and an award winning author. In The Chinese Conspiracy he merges a fictional thriller with factual reality of America’s risk from Cyber-Attacks. John does Keynote speeches, serves on corporate boards and is a consultant/advisor to many companies.

26 Reactions
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  2. Great Tips! Leveraging your time and efficiently accomplishing things will lead to success. Avoid being too impulsive as that will only lead to more work inefficiency and time wasted. Do everything you can do everyday in an efficient manner.

  3. I would also add the suggestion to think efficiently. While I agree that doing tasks yourself to save money is great in many applications, it doesn’t apply to all. I would suggest to think efficiently.

    Thinking efficiently means to think objectively and evaluate the following factors in anything:

    — Do I need to do this?
    — Does this contribute to sales, customers or is it just a nice to have?
    — Can we do this on a smaller scale?
    — Can we scale this?
    — Could I be doing something else more productive?
    — Is there an App for that?

    These questions are the tough decisions small business leaders have to make in order to grow. Not everything needs such narrow scrutiny but, just consider the effect of not being efficient — high cost, low delivery.

    Overall, this is a fantastic post. I hope people apply some of their principles.

    ~Joseph

  4. John L. Mariotti,

    Great tips! Have you read David Allen’s books on productivity and “getting things done”?

  5. Amen to planning ahead (saves a lot of miles and time), using a meeting agenda (nobody likes the meeting that drags on and on, and DIY solutions (tooting my own horn, but LotusJump lets you do your own SEO).

  6. #1 is very important. Too many companies and people at home by ‘Stuff’ they do not need.

  7. It is very necessary that you hire a well-experienced contractor who has the trusted ability to build the kind of house that you wish for your family.

  8. John,

    The DIY is a big one, just like you pointed out even doing something as easy as taking out the trash can save you money. If everyone pitches in then there is no need to hire someone. A big one I recently heard is buying office furniture and putting it together, while it may be easier to buy it already assembled it’s cheaper to buy it and assemble it yourself. Thanks for the tips!

  9. A good way to save money is by switching from your contract cell phone to a prepaid cell phone. Tracfone and Verizon Wireless merged to create the Straight Talk plan. With this plan, you can get rid of your home phone and just use the cell phone. It is $45 a month for unlimited talk and text. It’s a great deal on America’s most reliable network.

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  11. My office has took a lot of extra precautions and stopped spending money on things that aren’t absolutely needed due to hard economic times recently. We have been able to save a lot of money thus far from the big to the small. Just recently we switched to a telephone answering service. Its been great. We’ve saved money on employee and supply costs and got to reap the benefits of a much more efficient system.

  12. This is information I wish I had starting out with my business. Thanks a bunch for describing in detail how a business can keep their overhead down without sacrificing the quality their product or service. Keep up with the great work.







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