Business Plans

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Posted on: Sep 19, 2008
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Posted by: SBOCTeam

Do I Need One? How Do I Go About It?

By Christopher Freeburn


You're ready to take the plunge. You have a good idea for a new business. You've done the requisite soul-searching and determined that owning your own business is the thing for you. You've spent some time researching the idea and you've figured out where you will locate the business, who your customers will be and what sort of market exists for the business. Now it's time to sit down and create a real business plan.


Benefits of a business plan
There is no understating the value of having a properly written business plan. A business plan helps to clarify the challenges you will face when trying to get your business off the ground. It helps you anticipate problems and obstacles in advance and thus work out solutions before you actually run into trouble. It allows you to make a reasonable estimate of how much money you will need to get things going and to keep them going through the early days. A well-researched plan can give you a handle on how much revenue to expect and how to target your business's promotional efforts.


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Business plans are not for your eyes alone, however. If you need to borrow money to get your business started, having a professional looking business plan is crucial. "You want to demonstrate to any potential lender that you are serious about your new business and that you have a good idea of what running it will entail," says Martin Lehman, counselor at the New York chapter of the Service Corps of Retired Professionals (SCORE). By providing potential lenders with a well-drafted business plan that deals honestly with potential expenses and problems and demonstrates that you have done the necessary market research, you greatly improve the chances of landing that loan.


Anatomy of a business plan
In general, most business plans follow a basic format.


Executive summary: The purpose of the executive summary is to define the business-what it does and why you are the best person to run it. The summary should be no more than a few sentences, a paragraph at most. The idea is to convey your business's basic activities as concisely as possible.


Market Research: Follow the executive summary by making a case for the viability of your business in the marketplace you've chosen. Is there enough consumer demand to keep your business going? Are there enough potential customers in the given area in which your business will operate? What are the costs of getting the business started? What sort of revenues can you expect in the first year? What will be the cost of rent, utilities, office supplies, equipment, and materials for your products or services? Are there any competing businesses similar to your own in the same area? How does your business differ from them? Government publications, industry publications, trade groups and local chambers of commerce are excellent sources of demographic and marketplace data that you can use when compiling your research. Be as realistic as possible.


Business Outline: Here you will sketch the anatomy of your business. Identify your management structure, supply chain, and operations. "Be as detailed as you can," advises Lehman. "This is the time to work out fundamental questions about how everything in your business will work." Ask yourself the basic questions. Where will your business be located? Will it be a sole proprietorship, a partnership or a corporation? Who will be the owner? Are there employees? How does it provide products or services to customers? Who are the suppliers? "Iron out ownership and decision making roles ahead of time," advises Lehman. "Who gets the final word on things? If there are other people involved in the business, this is the time to figure that out." If there are partners or employees already in place, make sure that their duties and powers are well defined.


Marketing: The business plan should make clear exactly what you are selling and how you plan to let potential customers know about your business. Detail any advertising plans and their likely cost.


Cash Flow: How much money will your business need to get started? How much revenue can you expect from operations? This is an extremely important part of the business plan, and the one that requires considerable research and attention. Try to estimate, as best you can, exactly how much it will cost to keep things going for the immediate future and how much revenue you think your business can reasonably gain. "This can be really difficult for the first time business owner," Lehman warns, "If you don't have an established track record to draw on, you are going to have to make an educated guess. This is where your market research becomes essential." Lehman says that the biggest mistake new business owners make is being too optimistic with their revenue projections while underestimating costs. "Then they find themselves stuck with higher than expected bills and too few customers and they can't afford to keep things going," he says. It's better to err on the side of pessimism when estimating costs and potential revenues. Potential lenders or investors appreciate a little pessimism in financial projections since it indicates a more realistic outlook on the part of the small business owner.

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Sep 19, 2008 7:58 PM Click to view GrowthCurve's profile GrowthCurve

I'm not sure what the take-away is for this article. Is the reader supposed to realize that they need a business plan, or are they supposed to know how to write one?

The article also pretty much lost me right here:

"The summary should be no more than a few sentences, a paragraph at most."

As someone who has written over forty business plans, I can not agree with this statement. A summary can be one or two pages. A few sentences? A paragraph? Impossible.

Many times the only thing that a lender or investor will ask to see initially is the executive summary. They don't want a complete business plan unless they know they are interested. A good summary states:

(1) What the current problem is in the market
(2) How you intend to solve that problem
(3) Why you are the right team to make this work
(4) How much money you need and for what
(5) A sense as to what you're offering for the money and how investors can profit

At the very least, a referral to a solid business plan book would have been a good idea.

All my opinion, of course...

Sep 20, 2008 10:28 PM Click to view chefbry's profile chefbry

I AM STILL LOST!

Sep 22, 2008 6:35 PM Click to view Mergent's profile Mergent

I think that this is one of those articles that is the same thing as every other one on starting a business. I am a professional business plan writer and I can tell you, both the topics included and the structure of the plan will change.

What happens if someone has a services business? They may not need to have sections on products. What happens when they have a product to sell? Then they wont be concerned with the delivery of services. Giving general topics that people need to have is someone detrimental to those who think that those three or four topics is all they need to get money from a bank.

I know in my practice, I use a hand crafted business survey that is 75 pages long that delves into the persons business, and makes them take a hard look at the venture. I hand write EVERY plan, from ground up. People need to be able to look at their business from a hard perspective, instead of just answering general questions.

Brian Mosko
Mergent Planning
www.MergentPlanning.com

Sep 29, 2008 9:12 PM Click to view simon07's profile simon07

This article seems to cover the basics

Apr 14, 2009 6:44 PM Click to view BizBlackBelt's profile BizBlackBelt

According to a Small Business Administration survey, of all the businesses that failed, 60% had no business plan. What does that tell you? For the most part, you're off to a good start... We produce BizPlanBuilder business planning software and it goes into great detail on each of those subjects and more. (We also refer our customers to business planning professional as well for further development and possible introductions to investors.) And I think Brian Mosko (above) is right too. The most difficult for most people, it seems, are the financial projections -- especially if you are a right-brained artistic type -- but a good spreadsheet template can step you through a financial model quite easily.

Burke Franklin
www.jian.com

Apr 25, 2009 1:31 PM Click to view Creative2009's profile Creative2009

Excellent source of information. I was looking for this information for my new business venture. Now I found this on time. Thank you for the post

Jun 1, 2009 4:49 AM Click to view kiki55's profile kiki55

Well, If you are looking to sell or buy a business. Check out www.Bizcloud.net for Free. You can post biz for sale, associate with a business, promote your business and view businesses for sale.No fees! They provide tons of tools, neighborhood, demographic data, and ratings so you can make an informed choice. If you are a broker why pay other sites to list a biz for sale when you can do it for free at Bizcloud? Read tips in buying and selling a business or participate in the business blog on the site.
www.Bizcloud.net

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