Alan is right. I spent over 10 years scanning B&W negs and printing them on an inkjet at home or sending the file online to be printed.
Why? Because I thought the whole do-it-yourself thing would be immensely complicated, expensive, and I didn't have a dedicated darkroom.
Step by step I got away from that. First, I did home film developing. After a few mistakes, that process was wonderfully easy! Then the prints.....no darkroom turned out to be no problem. A bathroom, kitchen or bedroom turned out to be fine. Just wait until it gets dark, or block the windows out, and I cobbled together a great enlarger and everything else needed to print for less than $200.
No matter how much we try to lead people towards taking charge of their image from beginning to end, it all looks really, really expensive and difficult to a newbie. It's a process no one does, at all, so it seems like a huge thing to master. But it's not.
Manufacturers could sell it as a kit: one purchase gets you a 10 sheet box of 8x10 RC paper, a roll of film, developing and fixing chemicals, and a simple enlarger. It could be made pretty cheaply. For a newbie, making initial decisions on something you have never done is daunting. Just give 'em some Tri-X, Dektol, fixer and D76 and let them do their thing.