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Business Expansion Consultants Tacoma WA

Time to open a second office, a branch store? Here's what you need to know from seasoned startups who've made that next big move in Tacoma.

Greg Towne, Consultant
(253) 380-0523
3906 S 74th St Ste 201
Tacoma, WA
WSU/Small Business Development
253-680-7768
1101 S Yakima Ave Rm M123
Tacoma, WA
Greenfield Development Group
(253) 272-3232
728 Pacific Ave Ste 300B
Tacoma, WA
Katharine Dexter & Associates, LLC
(253) 759-0939
2522 N Proctor St Ste 7
Tacoma, WA
KnightVision Consulting, LLC
253.376.8598
1267 Fernside Dr
Tacoma, WA
Tacoma Athletic Commission, Inc
253-759-1124
PO Box 11304
Tacoma, WA
John Comis Associates
253-272-6808
401 Fawcett Ave Ste 213
Tacoma, WA
Thompson Smitch Consulting
253-879-1250
4041 Ruston Way Ste 201
Tacoma, WA
Edge Learning Institute, Inc
253-272-3103
2209 N Pearl St Ste 100
Tacoma, WA
Edwards Consulting Group
(253) 952-3445
4255 Sw 323rd St
Federal Way, WA
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Good Growth: The Art of the Second Location

When Laura Moore opened a second shoe store in Austin, Texas, she went about it all wrong.

She had no full-time personnel at the first location of InStep to operate the store while she supervised the opening of the second. Also, Moore didn’t know what to ask her real estate broker when she went looking for a second location; within a year, the biggest tenant of the upscale strip mall where she set up shop moved out and two other retailers followed suit.

“We had this expensive space in a great part of town, but all the customers were going across the highway to shop where there was more stuff,” Moore says.

She learned the hard way that it’s not easy to expand to a second location – unless you have a clear plan with specific objectives. A new shop is like another startup – even if it’s part of an existing structure.

So how can you open a second location easily and thrive? Follow this advice.

What’s the plan?

Have a business plan for each office, advises Robbie Ferris, CEO of SFLA Architects, with three offices in North Carolina. “Each office has a very different function. What works in one office doesn’t necessarily work in other offices.”

Based in Fayetteville, the honchos at SFLA talked for years about opening a branch in Raleigh. But they didn’t do it until the market was ripe for the picking. Specializing in designing schools and university buildings, SFLA opened its Raleigh office when it saw “a tremendous need for schools” there, Ferris says.

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