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The Water Cooler
General Discussion
PDR(Paintless Dent Repair) as a side business
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<blockquote data-quote="DanB" data-source="post: 1975010" data-attributes="member: 237"><p>I'm in the middle of doing a basic business plan for a PDR business I plan on starting early next year. Its going to be a part-time gig nothing full-time for the forseable future. Although the business plan does cover expansion to a full-time venture with more than PDR as a revenue source. I'm getting a handle on the realistic costs to get this started as well as the possible earnings that can be made on a part-time basis</p><p></p><p>I looked into this back at the end of High School and wish I had jumped on it. Although the profits have subsided as well as the number of companies offering PDR has increased. I still think its a fairly easy source of income. This is after the skill is learned and can be applied with accuracy and swiftness. But it is one that can be operated at little to no overhead once the initial investment of tools and training has made.</p><p></p><p>I figure after some training and a couple of months of practice I should be ready to seek out my first paid customer.</p><p></p><p>I know there is more than a handful of members that have been down the small business route that have some valuable pointers for me. I'm all ears.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="DanB, post: 1975010, member: 237"] I'm in the middle of doing a basic business plan for a PDR business I plan on starting early next year. Its going to be a part-time gig nothing full-time for the forseable future. Although the business plan does cover expansion to a full-time venture with more than PDR as a revenue source. I'm getting a handle on the realistic costs to get this started as well as the possible earnings that can be made on a part-time basis I looked into this back at the end of High School and wish I had jumped on it. Although the profits have subsided as well as the number of companies offering PDR has increased. I still think its a fairly easy source of income. This is after the skill is learned and can be applied with accuracy and swiftness. But it is one that can be operated at little to no overhead once the initial investment of tools and training has made. I figure after some training and a couple of months of practice I should be ready to seek out my first paid customer. I know there is more than a handful of members that have been down the small business route that have some valuable pointers for me. I'm all ears. [/QUOTE]
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