FOUNDERVILLE BUSINESS CENTER
Starting a Physical Business
Opening a business with a physical presence — a storefront, a service location, or a market booth — involves decisions that online businesses never face. This section walks you through every step specific to businesses where customers show up in person, from validating your idea in a real community to your first day open for business.
Why physical businesses are different from the start
When you open a business with a physical presence, every decision has a higher upfront cost and a longer time horizon than an online business. You're choosing a location before you have a single customer. You're signing a lease before you know if the neighborhood is right. You're buying inventory or equipment before you know your busiest hours. Getting the foundations right matters more — and the cost of getting them wrong is higher.
$65K
Average startup cost for a small
brick-and-mortar retail business
3X
More licenses and permits required vs
a home-based or online business
6-12 months
Typical timeline from signing
a lease to opening day
60%
Of physical retail failures are linked to location choice or occupancy costs
Module 01
Validating your idea for a local market
Testing demand in a real community
before commiting to
a location or inventory
Module 05
Licenses and permits for physical businesses
Certificate of Occupancy, health permits, signage permits, and market vendor licenses — more complex than for online businesses
Module 08
Business insurance for physical locations
Commercial property, slip-and-fall liability, business interruption — coverage a physical business needs that online businesses don’t
Module 04
Registering your
business
State registration, EIN, DBA —
the paperwork that makes
your business officially exist
Module 07
Naming your business and your location
Choosing a name that works
on a sign, in local search,
and on Google Maps — not just on a website
Module 10
Starting a home or
land maintenance business
The trades startup sequence — licensing timeline, equipment acquisition, first customers through referral, and the transition from side work to full-time business.
Module 02
Writing a business plan for a physical business
Adds location analysis, build-out
costs, and foot traffic projections
to a standard plan
Module 03
Choosing a legal structure
for your business
LLC vs. sole proprietor vs S-Corp —
physical businesses have higher liability exposure so this decision matters more
Module 06
Setting up
your finances
Business bank accounts, bookkeeping setup,
tax reserves, and
cash handling procedures
Module 09
Starting as a market or
pop-up vendor
Permits, booth setup, mobile payhments,
and the path from weekend market
to permanent location
Three things physical business owners must understand first
01
Your location is your most important business decision - and the hardest to undo
02
Your rent is not your only occupancy cost - and the gap can be significant
03
Physical businesses take 2-3x longer and cost 2-3x more to open than most owners expect
Suggested Learning Paths
Opening a brick-and-mortar retail store
From validating your concept to cutting the ribbon — the full pre-opening sequence for a retain storefront.
Modules 01 → 02 → 03 → 04 → 05 → 06 → 07 → 08
Starting a physical service business
Salons, studios, auto shops, childcare — service businesses with a fixed location generally have the same startup sequence.
Modules 01 → 02 → 03 → 04 → 05 → 06 → 07 → 08
Starting as a market or pop-up vendor
The fastest path to a physical presence — start selling at markets before commiting to a lease.
Modules 01 → 03 → 04 → 06 → 09
From market vendor to permanent location
You’ve proven the concept at markets — now the path to a real storefront.
Modules 02 → 03 → 05 → 08 → then Location & Space section
Starting a trades business from scratch
The full sequence for landscaping, contracting, cleaning, and home maintenance businesses — from licensing to first customers.
Modules: 01 → 03 → 04 → 05 → 06 → 10
BEFORE ANYTHING ELSE
If you haven’t yet confirmed that real people in your specific community want what you’re selling — at a price that makes your business work — start with Module 01. Skinpping validation is the most expensive mistake a physical business owner can make.