How to Develop and Use a Business Plan
A well-prepared business plan is more than a
necessary tool to seek funding. It should also be a functional road map
for your growth strategy.
� WHAT TO EXPECT
For any business to be successful, it must be started and operated with
a clear understanding of its customers, its internal strengths, its
competitive environment, and a vision of how it will evolve to compete
in the future. A business also needs money to start, to operate, and to
grow. By expending the effort to develop a comprehensive business plan,
you will have a powerful tool for attracting investors. Your business
plan is the roadmap for your company. It clearly states where you are,
how you got there, and how you plan to proceed.
This Business
Builder steps you through the process of developing a comprehensive
business plan. Although businesses may vary with regard to the products
or services they offer, there are specific elements that a potential
investor will look for in any business plan. Therefore, every well
thought-out business plan includes a description of products and
services, a competitive analysis, a marketing plan, a management plan,
and a financial plan. Your business plan will provide you — and
potential investors or lenders — with a clear understanding of your
objectives, strategies, and financial viability.
WHAT YOU SHOULD KNOW BEFORE GETTING STARTED
Why Write a Business Plan?
Business plans are prepared as a necessary instrument for raising
capital from potential investors, bankers and other lenders. It is an
essential document when taking your business public or selling all or
part of a company. In fact, without one, soliciting a bank for funds is
pointless. To lenders or potential investors, it not only provides
information and reveals an evaluation of your venture's feasibility,
but also reflects your management abilities. An analytical, objective
business plan convinces lenders that you are capable, organized and
prepared. One that is poorly researched, or makes unsupported
assumptions shows that you are inexperienced and in their
eyes…reckless. Lenders receive an enormous number of proposals and
usually don't spend much time with them. That means your plan has only
a few minutes to make a good impression, and must stand alone as an
initial sales tool. Do the best job you can, and let it favorably
represent you as the capable, competent business owner that you are.
Preparing a business plan will take time, but it is well worth your
investment in the long run. Not only will this document provide
valuable information to outside investors and lenders, it will lay out
the game plan from which to operate your firm. This is, by far, the
most important use for your business plan. It will become your
blueprint and direct you towards achieving your overall business goals.
A typical entrepreneur has a good business idea but is rarely qualified
in all areas of running a business. Good business plans are
comprehensive, well thought-out documents that provide the basis for
entrepreneurs to make sound business decisions. Whatever the intended
use of your business plan, make sure it's thorough, accurate, and backs
up all your claims with facts.
Tips For Creating a Good Business Plan
The following are some pointers to consider before creating your business plan:
- *
Very few people would argue that planning is unnecessary. However, it
involves a great deal of work. Be prepared to spend weeks — or months —
completing your plan.
- * While this undertaking may appear
overwhelming at first, don't get discouraged. Break the project into
manageable chunks. One effective approach is to put each of the
following steps behind a separate tab in a three-ring binder. Fill in
your plan, making steady progress toward your goal.
- *
Although you may have volumes of supporting material, aim for a plan
that is brief and succinct but includes everything important to the
business. A proposal of 10-15 typed pages, double-spaced is often
ideal. Leave secondary issues and details for discussion for a later
meeting.
- * Focus on your intended reader. Use the plan to
organize your effort around your objectives is to ensure that you have
all the bases covered. Investors or lenders are interested in
determining whether you will be able to achieve your objectives.
- * Avoid highly technical descriptions of your products, processes, and operations. Use layman's terms.
- * A business plan is a "living" document. Update it as your knowledge grows and whenever your strategies become more concrete.
- *
Be realistic — base your projections on the results gathered from your
analysis. Be honest about positive and negative findings.
- *
Discuss your company's business risks. Your credibility can be
seriously undermined if existing risks and problems are uncovered by
lenders or investors on their own.
- * Don't make vague or
unsubstantiated statements. For example, do not just say that sales
will double in the next two years or that you are adding new product
lines. Back up your statements with underlying data and market
information.
- * You may have two sets of business plans — one
internal, one external. To be an effective management tool internal
business plans usually are more detailed than those presented
externally.
Who Should Write Your Business Plan?
The only right answer is — YOU! You may be persuaded by professional
advisors that you need their services or maybe the software they peddle
to produce an effective business plan. However, the truth is you will
be doing most of the work with or without their help. A business plan
is 75% research and 25% format. They can help you with your format,
putting your information into a readable plan, but you will have to
provide the research that makes up the bulk of the plan. The same is
true with this Business Builder — it'll show you what needs to go into
a comprehensive business plan and how the plan should be organized for
maximum readability, but you will need to do the majority of the work.
It's a lot of work to be sure, but is an important investment towards
your business success.
What Lenders Look For
Following are some key questions that investors and lenders will be
looking to answer. Keep them in mind when writing your business plan.
- *
Is there sufficient demand for your product or service? You'll need to
provide evidence that there is a customer base for the product or
service you want to offer. If the product exists today, provide market
potential data, market share breakdown, sales history and sales
projections for the product/service. If this is a new concept, you'll
want to conduct some market research and present results of surveys,
focus groups, or test markets.
- * Do you have a sustainable
competitive advantage? Your product or the process for manufacturing
your product may be unique enough to apply for and be awarded a patent
that provides you with protection from "copy cats" for a maximum of
seventeen years. Maybe your location is protected from allowing
additional competition. Or perhaps you provide your service in such a
way that makes you the cost leader.
- * Are you being
realistic? Although investors and lenders love to back businesses with
high growth potential, they are also skeptical when the projections
seem too good to be true. This is a flag to them that you may be overly
optimistic, naive, or worse, deceitful. Make sure you can back up your
projections with reliable data.
Following, you will
find a thorough discussion on what can be included in a business plan,
but understand ALL OF THIS INFORMATION DOES NOT NEED TO BE IN YOUR
PLAN. What goes into your plan depends upon your specific business and
the information required by your lenders and investors. If you can, you
may want to check with your lender or potential investors beforehand to
determine their specific requirements.
PROCESS FOR DEVELOPING YOUR BUSINESS PLAN
This section presents the steps for developing your business plan. This
is the basic information that you will be required to provide to
lenders and investors and is the minimum you'll need to operate your
business effectively. Read each step, and complete the tasks outlined
in each. Then, depending upon the nature of your business, you may want
to add further information that may prove valuable to potential
investors and lenders. Where possible, examples will be included to
provide you with further clarification on what you should supply.
Following is a ten step process you can use to develop your business
plan.
- * Begin the Plan with a Summary
- * Describe Your Company — Its Business, Goals and Objectives
- * Analyze Your Market and Determine Your Marketing Strategy
- * Describe Your Product/Service and How They are Produced
- * Describe Your Management Organization
- * Describe Your Operations
- * Summarize Your Financial Needs
- * Determine Your Proposed Financing
- * Outline Your Plan(s) for the Future
- * Other Considerations
These steps are presented in a logical order for discussion. Use your
judgment on how you work through the process. You may be able to
perform many of the steps simultaneously. Use the checklists provided
in each step to ensure that your information is complete.
Begin The Plan With a Summary
Most investors and lenders are inundated with potential opportunities,
so provide a focused and brief summary — about one or two pages in
length. Your summary will give them a first impression of whether your
business is worth further scrutiny. A business plan is unique to your
company and, accordingly, the approach used and structure of plans vary
considerably. Regardless of form, however, certain basic questions
should be addressed considering your plan. They are:
- * Cover Sheet: Include the company name, owner's name(s), business address, and phone number.
- *
Business Description: Briefly describe the business that you are in.
For instance, is your business in high tech computer imaging, or are
you a developer of shopping malls? If you have an existing company,
describe your company's history, highlighting your
successes/achievements that might be pertinent. Also, include your
major short-term and long-term goals and objectives with the strategy
and tactics that will enable you to achieve them.
- * Describe
the purpose of your business plan. Are you seeking financing from
lenders and investors or are you using it to attract potential managers
for your business?
- * Describe your product/service sufficiently
so that someone reasonably familiar with the technology or the industry
can determine whether it is viable and what stage of development it's
in — concept, prototype, or market-ready. Discuss the extent of
invention or development required for successful commercialization of
the product/service. Highlight the track record of key personnel who
have completed similar developments. Explain why your product/service
is better than what exists. Don't forget to include proprietary or any
other sustainable competitive advantage that you may have. For
instance, do you own any patents? Does your location restrict entry of
additional competitors?
- * Describe the five or six critical
factors that will make a difference in your success. Also, discuss your
most vulnerable spot, what would happen if it were exposed, and what
you will do to guard against it. For example, if you are a high tech
firm in the computer imaging business, potential factors might be key
R&D personnel, a highly trained workforce, state-of-the art imaging
equipment, and a strategic alliance with a reputable technical school.
- *
Customers: List your present major customers and describe your market
potential. You'll want to highlight the results of your market analysis
here.
- * Financial Picture: Describe your financial forecasts
and explain how they were determined. Include relevant assumptions such
as projected market share, market potential, market penetration, etc.
State your desired financing and show how the funds will be allocated.
Show when and how the money will be paid back.
Describe Your Company — Its Business, Goals And Objectives
It is critical that you present a thorough picture of your company — a
description of your business with your key goals and objectives.
- *
Describe your business. Include an explanation of the business that you
are in. While this may sound obvious, it really isn't. For instance, if
you manufacture catalytic converters, are you in the pollution control
business or the auto supply business? Different answers to that
question can mean different businesses altogether. When you decide on
the type of business that you're in, you'll know the types of product
and services you need to provide, the market that you should target,
the competitors that you are up against.
-
Also
include your company history, current business conditions, industry
trends, and what makes you unique. To help you with your business
description, ask yourself the following questions:
Analyze Your Market And Determine Your Marketing Strategy
It is critical that you understand your market. A good product is not
enough to guarantee marketing success. For example, you may make the
best buggy whips in the world, but this doesn't matter if there aren't
customers to buy your product. This is one of the most important
sections of your business plan. It will be scrutinized carefully,
therefore, your market analysis should be as specific as possible,
focusing on believable, reliable, achievable projections. You may want
to refer to the following training Business Builders to help you with
this step:
� � � � � � - How to Prepare a Market Analysis
� � � � � � - How to Identify a Target Market and Prepare a Customer Profile
� � � � � � - How to Gain a Competitive Edge
� � � � � � - How to Create Your Company's Identity�
You
may want to introduce this section with a one page summary highlighting
the key elements of your marketing plan. Follow your summary with the
information that will support this page. Finally, include additional
information and evidence that you feel is necessary in the appendix.
- *
Potential Market: This is where you present a picture of your
customers. Convey your broad understanding by describing relevant
characteristics such as their demographic breakdown, their buying
habits, their interests, their special needs, and their geographic
location. Explain how you did your market research — the resources you
used, the types of studies you conducted, the focus groups you led.
Most of the information that you need here can be found at your
library, from the U.S. Small Business Administration, U.S. Department
of Commerce, and the Census Bureau. See the resources section for
information on how to contact these groups.
Questions you should consider in describing your potential market are:
- - Who are your prospective customers?
- - What characteristics make them similar? What makes them different?
- - What are their buying habits?
- - What is your projected market size for your product or service?
- - Where are you going to sell your product? Where are your customers?
- - How much market share do you plan on capturing?
- - What are your customers' needs?
- - How will you satisfy those needs?
- �
- *
Sales: Include your forecasted sales volume. What do you expect to
achieve in the next three years? Make sure you specify sales in
dollars. If you want to include units, that's fine, but don't forget to
translate units into sales dollars. Do you experience any seasonality
effects? Do any of your customers account for a significant portion of
sales? Are there any other unique considerations you should include?
-
Since
cost of sales is usually a company's largest expenditure, it's
important to forecast it realistically. Costs should be divided among
materials, labor and overhead with special attention provided to the
most significant cost components. For instance, in high tech companies
specialty materials and high-priced labor are frequently significant
costs.
- - What are your material, labor and overhead costs?
- - How does your cost of sales compare against industry norms?
- �
- *
Competitive Analysis: Now consider your competitors, how they market
their products, and why people buy from them. Determine their strengths
and weaknesses, their position in the marketplace, and their status
(growing, maintaining, scaling back). Investors sense danger when an
entrepreneur suggests there is no competition for his product/service.
In fact, there are two kinds of competition of which you should be
aware — direct and indirect. Direct competition offers the same
product/service to the same market; indirect competition offers similar
products/services, only to a different market. You'll need to include a
discussion on both. As you evaluate your competition, you'll want to
include:
- �
- - Names of your major competitors
- - Their location
- - Products or services they offer
- - Their market share and dollar sales
- - Current performance
- - Strengths and weaknesses
- - Names of competitive operations that have recently closed with reason why
- *
Market Feasibility: State why the market will support your business.
Include trends in your industry, an economic analysis, and
"optimistic-pessimistic-realistic" scenarios. Again, you can find this
information at your library. Start with The Encyclopedia of Business
Information Sources published by Gale Research Company for manuals,
publications, trade associations, and directories on more than 1200
industries and businesses. Also include any anticipated impact that
laws and regulations may have on the market.
- * Marketing
Strategy: Explain how you will sell your product(s), and how you will
move into new markets. Identify the specific marketing techniques you
plan to use. For instance:
- �
- - How do you plan to identify, contact and sell to potential customers?
- -
How will you distribute your product/service? Will you sell it directly
through your own sales force or indirectly through agents, brokers,
reps?
- - How will you price your product/service? Do you have
a different pricing structure for different markets — retail,
wholesale, catalog? Consider materials and supplies, labor and
operating expenses, planned profit and competition when determining
your pricing. Include your price list in the plan.
- - What is your planned timing for product/service introduction? Include a tentative calendar with targets for introduction.
- -
Present your promotional plan, including your budget. Make sure you
describe your mix. What will you allocate for media, print, direct
response, and public relations? Attach any product literature or
marketing brochures in your appendix.
Describe Your Products/Services And How They Are Produced
Describe
your product/service in layman's terms. Explain any niche you may have.
Discuss your competitive advantage — why people will choose your
product over your competitors', the benefits of your product/service,
and how you will sustain your edge.
- * Product Lines:
Detail the features and benefits of your product/service. Remember,
features are the characteristics of a product or service that
automatically comes with it. The benefit is the result your customer
enjoys — in other words, what he gets from it. For instance, a
telephone company may offer an automatic switching line to re-route
calls to another location in the case of a power failure. That's the
feature. The benefit to the customer is that potential sales will not
be lost.
-
Explain how you acquire, produce or
develop your offerings. Do you manufacture all of your products or do
you purchase some from other vendors? Do you utilize contract
manufacturers? Is your service provided internally or do contract
employees perform a portion of them? If your business is manufacturing
or retail, list your suppliers, average inventory costs, and timing of
deliveries.
-
* Unique Features: Explain your competitive
advantage. What makes your product/service better, faster, more
durable, etc.? Include any proprietary features. Do you have any
patents, copyrights, trademarks? Include evidence of these in your
appendix. Also, describe how you are going to sustain your competitive
advantage.
Describe Your Management Organization�
Describe
your business structure. Also, include a discussion of your management
team in this section. List officers and/or principal owner/managers,
and detail your management team's responsibilities and qualifications.
Referring to the Business Builder How to Determine the Legal Structure of Your Business may help you with this step. Make sure you include:
- *
Legal Structure: If you are an existing business, describe your
business structure. If you're just starting out, your options include
sole proprietorship, general partnership and joint venture, limited
partnership, corporation, S corporation and limited liability
corporation. Consult with your accountant and lawyer to determine the
best approach for structuring your business.
- * Management
team: Show that you have the talent in place to develop your
product/service, sell it, and manage the financials. Explain your
hiring criteria, training plan, salary and benefits structure, and your
system for performance evaluation. Financiers invest in people
especially people who have run or are likely to run successful
operations. Potential investors and lenders will look closely at the
members of your management team. Your team should have experience and
talents in the most important functions of your business, whether it's
research and development, sales and marketing, manufacturing or
finance. You may want to include an organizational chart to demonstrate
functional interactions.
- * Resumes: Attach detailed resumes for all key personnel in an appendix.
- *
Board of Directors: If you have a board, include their names and place
of employment. If you have an advisory board, include them, too.
Describe Your Operations
Describe
how you plan to operate your business. Go into detail about location,
facilities, equipment, raw materials and suppliers, workforce, hours of
operation, and methods of recordkeeping. Make sure you include:
- *
Manufacturing or Service Operations: List your basic process for
producing your product or service. You may want to use a flowchart to
explain it.
- * Location and Facilities: Describe the
advantages and disadvantages. Location and facilities may be crucial to
projecting your business image. They can provide you with a competitive
advantage (e.g., modern, state-of-the-art facility, a strategic
location). Provide plans of the exterior and interior if your customers
will visit your facilities, or if you plan to manufacture your products.
- *
Equipment: List the equipment necessary for producing your product.
Include leasing arrangements, service agreements, and warranties.
- *
Raw Materials and Suppliers: List the materials that go into producing
you product and who will provide them to you. The reputation of your
suppliers may be important to potential investors and lenders. Are any
special considerations necessary for storage?
- * Staffing
analysis: Your workforce projections should represent a head count by
function or department for a specified time period. This analysis not
only will allow you to better plan your hiring, but will also
demonstrate to potential investors the sensitivity of your plans to the
hiring of key personnel. Include job descriptions for all functions in
your appendix.
Develop Your Financial Forecast
Most
forms of business financing require forecasts. These forecasts serve to
demonstrate not only the need for funds but also the potential future
value of equity investments or debt repayment. Developing the proper
financial forecasts is, therefore, a critical factor in obtaining
capital for your business. It may be the most crucial task in
determining the viability of your business. You will need to:
- * Establish the need for funds in the amount requested.
- * Demonstrate your ability to realize investments or repay loans.
- * Indicate your understanding of the financial implications of your business's growth plans.
Your
forecast should cover a minimum of three years — a period in which
realistic assumptions can be made without much speculation. Your
forecast should be broken out monthly, at least until you achieve
positive cash flow. This is important because an overall annual cash
flow total could hide some cyclical problems that you have and should
provide for in your financial plan.
Referring to the following training Business Builders may help you with this step:
� � � � � � - How to Prepare a Cash Budget
� � � � � � - How to Prepare a Cash Flow Statement
� � � � � � - How to Prepare a Profit and Loss Statement
� � � � � � - How to Analyze Profitability
� � � � � � - How to Prepare and Analyze a Balance Sheet
� � � � � � - How to Analyze Your Business Using Financial Ratios
Be sure to include:
- *
Operating Profit and Loss Statements: Project revenues and expenses out
on a month-to-month basis for the first year, and on a yearly basis for
the next three years of operation. All expense categories should be
reflected in your financial forecasts. Although they are frequently
subjective determinations, revenues and expenses should be tied to
historical numbers and expected projections. Key financial ratios
should be compared to industry norms.
- * Cash Flow Statements:
Project all cash receipts and disbursements out on a month-to-month
basis for each of the next three years. Cash flow analysis is critical
to any capital investment and the overall survival of the enterprise.
- *
Balance Sheets: Project your assets, liabilities, and retained earnings
(capital) at the end of the first, second and third years. Because your
balance sheet performance has an impact on your cash flow (current
assets and current liabilities), it will be a key concern to potential
investors. The balance sheet must be utilized the same assumptions as
the profit and loss (or income) statement. Again, you may want to
compare some financial ratios to industry norms.
- * Break-even
Analysis: A break-even analysis will provide you the information on how
much you need to sell to cover costs. This will be done to determine
the level of sales in which a new product/service will start paying for
itself. The formula for determining your break-even is:
- Break-even = total fixed costs/(selling price - variable cost per unit)
-
*
For instance, if Pets with Pizzazz has a fixed cost base of $110,000,
its variable costs per collar sold is $5, and each collar sells for an
average of $25, then its break even point is 5,500 collars.
Break-even = $110,000/($25 - $5) = 5,500 collars
- *
Notes describing all assumptions made in the forecast. Provide a
summary of all significant assumptions used in forecasts including
changes in customer base, price increases, margin improvements, cost
reductions, capital expenditures, etc.
When properly
prepared, financial forecasts can increase the probability of obtaining
capital and can act as a tool to measure and evaluate actual
performance. Prepared improperly, they seriously deteriorate your
chances of obtaining financing and increase your risk of not managing
the business properly from a financial perspective.
Financial Forecast or Operating Budget?
There is a distinction between a budget and a financial forecast. A budget
is a company's planned course of operating during a period and
generally is structured to motivate performance as well as communicate
planning strategy. Budgets may or may not factor in the negative
effects of all significant contingencies and uncertainties. The budget
is prepared as part of the planning process, but normally is not an
item for external distribution.
A financial forecast,
on the other hand, is management's best estimate of the company's most
likely results of operations and financial position in the forecast
period. A good financial forecast is realistic, considers achievable
opportunities and recognizes all cost factors and contingencies. More
importantly, the financial forecast covers a much broader financial
perspective — the impact assets, liabilities, income, expenses, and
cash sources and uses. It is this comprehensive, realistic forecast
that is used in a business plan, not the budget.
Determine Your Proposed Financing
If
you are looking for funds, you'll need to include this section. If the
purpose of your business plan is not to secure funds, you can omit this
altogether. Based on your financial forecast, determine how much money
you require, when you need the money, how you will use the money, and
how you will pay it back. You should distinguish your capital request
in either of three ways — working capital financing, growth capital
financing, and equity capital financing. Working capital financing
is generally a short-term loan for normal business expenses to be paid
back within a year through cash generated by the business. Growth capital financing
is needed to finance the growth of your business, usually requiring
longer term financing, and must be paid utilizing the profits of the
growth it financed. Finally, equity capital financing is obtained from investors for permanent needs and paid back through dividends, capital gains, or a share of the business.
When seeking financing, make sure you include:
- *
Summary of Financial Needs: State why you are seeking funds, how much
you need to borrow, and how much you, or others, have to invest.
Present Your Plan(s) For The Future
An
important point to remember — whether you're planning a new business or
expanding an existing business — is that you must show that you have
the potential for continued profitability. Be sure to include:
- *
Startup Plan: Present the tasks involved, their priorities, how long
each task will take, and who is responsible for each task. Also,
include any "deliverables" for each task. Extend your plan through at
least the first year.
- * Three Year Plan: Again, provide the
detail listed above in the startup plan. Project how your business will
compete in years three to five. Much of this work has been done in the
financial forecast, but you will want to support it with a clear
explanation.
Other Considerations
- *
Table of Contents — Make sure you include a table of contents in your
business plan, especially if its length exceeds more than ten pages. It
should appear after your summary but before your company description.
Although it is one of the first pages in your business plan, it will be
one of the last that you create. Now it is fairly easy to create your
table of contents if you are using a popular word-processing software
package. It's worth the extra few minutes to create, especially when
people, who are not as familiar with your business plan as you, must
present it for consideration.
- * Addendum of Supporting
Documents — There are some documents that don't warrant inclusion in
the body of the plan, but are important enough to offer as support.
They are:
-
- - Resumes of the owner and other principals.
- -
Personal financial statement of the owner that includes assets,
liabilities, and net worth. Include it here only if you are a current
business owner. Otherwise, you'll need to include it in the Financial
section if this is your first attempt at business ownership.
- -
Evidence of credit worthiness which include letters of credit from
existing suppliers, a Dun & Bradstreet rating, or a personal credit
history from a credit bureau or a bank that you've worked with.
- - Current leases for facilities, equipment, cars, etc.
- - Letters of reference.
- - Completed and current contracts including loan agreements, "high ticket" purchase agreements, service contracts, etc.
- -
Legal documents of the business including articles of incorporation,
titles, insurance policies, partnership agreements, patents, etc.
- - Other miscellaneous documents that provide supporting evidence to your claims.
YOUR FINISHED PLAN
- *
Presentation — For internal purposes, bind your business plan in a
three-ring notebook. Since it is your working copy and intended to be
updated frequently, this format will make it easier to do so. For your
business plan that will be circulated externally to lenders and
investors, aim for a professional look. There are a variety of
appropriate folders available from office supply stores or mail order
houses that you can purchase. You can also take a computer disk with
your business plan or a clean copy of your business plan to your local
printer and have them copy and bind it for you. You don't need to spend
a lot of money here. In fact, it could even leave an unfavorable
impression on prospective lenders and investors if you do.
- *
Prospective reviewers — Your business plan should not be a mass mailing
piece. You should be very selective with the people you choose to read
your plan. After all, you've put a lot of sweat equity into the plan so
you don't want it to fall into the wrong hands to be used by another
aspiring entrepreneur. Keep track of all outstanding business plans,
and request the return of those from lenders and investors that decide
against you.
YOUR PLAN AS A ROADMAP
The
business plan should be used to guide and evaluate the direction and
actual operating results of the company. If, after completing the
business plan, it is tossed in a drawer because it's out-of-date
shortly after it was prepared, you've missed out on the real value of
the business plan — its usefulness as a management tool. But to get the
full value of all your hard work, you'll have to keep it updated.
Changes do occur. You can count on it. Changes within your company,
changes with your customers, changes in the business environment all
can render your business plan ineffective if you don't constantly
update it.
Entrepreneurs and other business owners who sit down
to prepare an initial business plan are surprised to discover that the
process is really a corporate self-appraisal and sometimes even a
personal self-appraisal. It is not an easy task by any strength of the
imagination. It is this assessment aspect of business planning that
makes the process so important for any ongoing operation to perform on
a regular basis, even when additional financing is not a factor.
The
corporate self-appraisal may be performed in conjunction with
establishing an operations budget for the coming year. In conducting
your corporate self-appraisal, ask yourself the following questions:
- * What business am I really in?
- * What skills in our organization are valuable or unique?
- * What is my position in the industry?
- * What is the nature of our markets?
- * What customers am I serving? Where is my market?
- * How do major customers view us?
- * What image do we have in the marketplace?
- * What image changes would we consider desirable?
- * What market share do I want? When?
- *
What major changes are likely? In our present services and projects? In
the technology of our industry? In the nature of our competition?
- * What, if any, plans should I have for product improvement?
- * What business do I want to be in? In three years? In five years?
- * How can I finance growth?
- * Will my objective require capital expenditures?
- * What specific steps do I need to take if the organization is to achieve my objectives?
As a result of your management assessment, the objectives of your
company may be more clearly defined and stated. Also, the appraisal and
planning process should put you in a position to better summarize
strategies and tactics that will enable you to reach your objectives.
In determining your operating strategies, consider the following with
respect to your objectives:
- * What will be the effect on my current organization? Do I have the proper management team, or must I recruit?
- * What is the likely impact short-term and long-term, on my financial statements? Can I afford this course of action?
- * Can I raise the necessary funds for implementation? How much will I need? When?
- * What will be the reaction of my bankers, stockholders, customers and community?
- * What is my probability of success, and what must I do to improve my chances?
- * What is the risk of doing nothing?
- * How long will implementation of my plan require, and what will be the results?
- * In what ways can I minimize the risks?
- * When will I break even?
- * When should the plan be re-evaluated for possible revision?
Resources
Books
Anatomy of a Business Plan
by Linda Pinson and Jerry Jinnett. (Dearborn Publishing, 1999). Covers
the basics, like this document, and adds lots of examples and
worksheets.
Business Plans to Game Plans: A Practical System for Turning Strategies into Action, 3rd ed. by Jan B. King. (Wiley, 2003). OK, you've got the plan. Now how do you make sure it gets carried out?
The Prentice Hall Encyclopedia of Model Business Plans by Wilbur Cross and Alice M. Richey. (Prentice Hall, 1998).
Web sites
Sample Business Plan Components. CCH Business Owner's Toolkit.
Business Planning Tools. Startup Journal / Wall Street Journal.
Advice from our Business Plan Expert. Entrepreneur.com.
Writing a Business Plan. Inc.com.
Writer: Glen Greene
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rights reserved. The text of this publication, or any part thereof, may
not be reproduced in any manner whatsoever without written permission
from the publisher.
This In-Depth Business Builder was originally published in 1996.