Eight Ways NOT To Write a Business Plan
Eight Ways NOT To Write a Business Plan
Here is author Michael Jenkins' "Not To Do" list for writing a business plan:
1. Don't write a lengthy tome. More is rarely better, when it comes to writing a business plan. Most of the people who will be reading your business plan are busy people, who have to get through a lot of such submissions, and they aren't likely to have the patience to wade through a 50- or 60-page document. The trend these days is to write a tightly edited, cogent document that is perhaps 10 or 12 pages in length, just long enough to make your key points. Your "executive summary" (about a page) may be the only part that gets read, unless it is well done, so be sure it is well-honed and polished, and makes it clear what your competitive advantage will be -- that which gives you a good shot at making high returns on invested capital -- rather than merely showing that it is a good, hot market you're entering, and that you are just another "me-too" business going after that market, with no particular competitive advantage.
2. Don't do a "cookie-cutter," fill-in the blanks plan, if you want yours to stand out from the crowd. Most lending officers or venture capitalists who will read your business plan see a lot of such plans, and can easily spot a "canned plan," most of which will end up unread, in a local landfill. You need to go through the intellectual exercise of doing the research, and laying out in writing, in your own words and using your own thought processes, how you will succeed with your business. One additional advantage of doing so is that you may come to realize that your planned business may NOT work out, for various reasons, once you've parsed it all out -- which may save you a great deal of grief (and money) once you realize it.
3. Avoid naive assertions. If you're going to tout some "secret, unique" process that you and only you have, it better be a real show-stopper. Otherwise, it will sound rather foolish to a sophisticated money runner. For example, you might want to assert in your business plan that your cookie company's chocolate chip cookies are made from a "secret and unique" recipe. Well, maybe. But even Coca-Cola, which has kept its soft-drink formula more secret than the Manhattan Project for a century, doesn't have a totally "unique" product--as any Pepsi drinker, who may prefer the quite similar taste of the very competitive Pepsi-Cola, will be quick to point out to you.
4. Avoid using overblown cliches or claims. When discussing your financial or market projections, don't try to label them as "conservative estimates" or use terms like "guaranteed profits." Remember that your audience is not likely to be unsophisticated "widows and orphans." Bankers and equity investors tend to be hard-nosed realists. They know that if you think you can reasonably predict a million dollar a year profit by Year 3, you are unlikely to do projections that show only a $200,000 profit in Year 3 and then label it as a "conservative estimate." The cynics know the writer of such a business plan is more likely to project $1.5 or $2 million profits by year three in that case, and call THAT number a "conservative estimate" of profit levels that can support the $10 million loan they are seeking. Let your numbers speak for themselves -- better to "walk the walk, than talk the talk." Puffing won't impress your target audience.
5. Don't think of your business plan as just an application for financing. Some of the most successful businesses around develop a business plan and use it not only as a tool for obtaining financing (often putting out a condensed version for lenders or investors), but also use it as an ongoing blueprint for their business operations and aspirations. Those who do so update it on a regular basis, to help maintain their focus on their goals. This may mean you will create a rather long, detailed business plan for internal use, and crop it down to a condensed version for presentation to outsiders.
6. Don't wait until after the business is started to begin work on your business plan, if at all possible. Ideally, get started on it 5 or 6 months before the business is ready to open. Once you have started up the business, you will be hard-pressed to find the time to do a thorough job of researching and writing a business plan, as it will often take 50 to 150 hours of your time to do a proper job of research and writing it up. Once your business is up and running, you will probably be working long, hard hours, to keep the business afloat, meet your payroll, put out fires, and keep your customers happy and your creditors at bay. If so, you will won't have much spare time to do the necessary work involved in thinking through and creating a first rate business plan. You will probably have to resort to using a "canned" plan or hiring a ghost writer who doesn't really understand what your business about to concoct the plan, rather than doing the work yourself and creating a document that shows you really have a grasp of what can be accomplished by your enterprise and how you will do it.
7. Don't work in a vacuum. A good business plan is not simply a document you can sit down and write in a room by yourself in a couple of days. You need to get input from your business partners or associates, potential customers, and others. In addition, once you've completed the plan, don't "publish it" until it has been vetted by other knowledgeable people, such as the above, or your friendly counselor at the local S.C.O.R.E. (Service Corps of Retired Executives) chapter. Someone with a little gray in their hair can often be very helpful to you in pointing out flaws in your presentation or your logic. Better that they find the flaw in the plan than some hard-eyed bank lending officer or venture capitalist, who would quickly file your business plan in the trash can.
8. Don't forget to build in and explain an exit strategy. You need to be able to demonstrate clearly with your cash flow projections how you will not only turn a profit but that you will also generate ample cash flow to pay off the loan you are seeking, on a timely basis. Even if you are seeking equity financing (such as convertible preferred stock), instead of a loan, you need to be able to lay out a plausible "exit strategy," since everyone, including equity investors, wants to know how they'll get their money out, at some point. This, of course, means profits and cash flow will have to be adequate to cash out equity partners within a reasonable time frame. The hope of "going public" someday or getting another round of financing to cash out today's investors or lenders will usually not be too attractive or thrilling to anyone who is being asked to provide you with risky startup financing. Cold, hard cash flow is always preferable to wishful thinking about going public.
Eight Ways NOT To Write a Business Plan - To learn more about this author, visit Michael Jenkins's Website.
Like this article? Share it with your friends
Creating a good business plan is often a crucial requirement for any small business that needs to raise substantial amounts of capital, either in the form of loans or equity capital (common or preferred stock). Every day of the year, thousands of business plans are being generated by small businesses and submitted to prospective lenders or investors, most of which, unfortunately, are amateurish efforts that are quickly filed by the recipients in the "round file." A lot of good paper, not to mention time and effort, goes to waste.
Here is author Michael Jenkins' "Not To Do" list for writing a business plan:
1. Don't write a lengthy tome. More is rarely better, when it comes to writing a business plan. Most of the people who will be reading your business plan are busy people, who have to get through a lot of such submissions, and they aren't likely to have the patience to wade through a 50- or 60-page document. The trend these days is to write a tightly edited, cogent document that is perhaps 10 or 12 pages in length, just long enough to make your key points. Your "executive summary" (about a page) may be the only part that gets read, unless it is well done, so be sure it is well-honed and polished, and makes it clear what your competitive advantage will be -- that which gives you a good shot at making high returns on invested capital -- rather than merely showing that it is a good, hot market you're entering, and that you are just another "me-too" business going after that market, with no particular competitive advantage.
2. Don't do a "cookie-cutter," fill-in the blanks plan, if you want yours to stand out from the crowd. Most lending officers or venture capitalists who will read your business plan see a lot of such plans, and can easily spot a "canned plan," most of which will end up unread, in a local landfill. You need to go through the intellectual exercise of doing the research, and laying out in writing, in your own words and using your own thought processes, how you will succeed with your business. One additional advantage of doing so is that you may come to realize that your planned business may NOT work out, for various reasons, once you've parsed it all out -- which may save you a great deal of grief (and money) once you realize it.
3. Avoid naive assertions. If you're going to tout some "secret, unique" process that you and only you have, it better be a real show-stopper. Otherwise, it will sound rather foolish to a sophisticated money runner. For example, you might want to assert in your business plan that your cookie company's chocolate chip cookies are made from a "secret and unique" recipe. Well, maybe. But even Coca-Cola, which has kept its soft-drink formula more secret than the Manhattan Project for a century, doesn't have a totally "unique" product--as any Pepsi drinker, who may prefer the quite similar taste of the very competitive Pepsi-Cola, will be quick to point out to you.
4. Avoid using overblown cliches or claims. When discussing your financial or market projections, don't try to label them as "conservative estimates" or use terms like "guaranteed profits." Remember that your audience is not likely to be unsophisticated "widows and orphans." Bankers and equity investors tend to be hard-nosed realists. They know that if you think you can reasonably predict a million dollar a year profit by Year 3, you are unlikely to do projections that show only a $200,000 profit in Year 3 and then label it as a "conservative estimate." The cynics know the writer of such a business plan is more likely to project $1.5 or $2 million profits by year three in that case, and call THAT number a "conservative estimate" of profit levels that can support the $10 million loan they are seeking. Let your numbers speak for themselves -- better to "walk the walk, than talk the talk." Puffing won't impress your target audience.
5. Don't think of your business plan as just an application for financing. Some of the most successful businesses around develop a business plan and use it not only as a tool for obtaining financing (often putting out a condensed version for lenders or investors), but also use it as an ongoing blueprint for their business operations and aspirations. Those who do so update it on a regular basis, to help maintain their focus on their goals. This may mean you will create a rather long, detailed business plan for internal use, and crop it down to a condensed version for presentation to outsiders.
6. Don't wait until after the business is started to begin work on your business plan, if at all possible. Ideally, get started on it 5 or 6 months before the business is ready to open. Once you have started up the business, you will be hard-pressed to find the time to do a thorough job of researching and writing a business plan, as it will often take 50 to 150 hours of your time to do a proper job of research and writing it up. Once your business is up and running, you will probably be working long, hard hours, to keep the business afloat, meet your payroll, put out fires, and keep your customers happy and your creditors at bay. If so, you will won't have much spare time to do the necessary work involved in thinking through and creating a first rate business plan. You will probably have to resort to using a "canned" plan or hiring a ghost writer who doesn't really understand what your business about to concoct the plan, rather than doing the work yourself and creating a document that shows you really have a grasp of what can be accomplished by your enterprise and how you will do it.
7. Don't work in a vacuum. A good business plan is not simply a document you can sit down and write in a room by yourself in a couple of days. You need to get input from your business partners or associates, potential customers, and others. In addition, once you've completed the plan, don't "publish it" until it has been vetted by other knowledgeable people, such as the above, or your friendly counselor at the local S.C.O.R.E. (Service Corps of Retired Executives) chapter. Someone with a little gray in their hair can often be very helpful to you in pointing out flaws in your presentation or your logic. Better that they find the flaw in the plan than some hard-eyed bank lending officer or venture capitalist, who would quickly file your business plan in the trash can.
8. Don't forget to build in and explain an exit strategy. You need to be able to demonstrate clearly with your cash flow projections how you will not only turn a profit but that you will also generate ample cash flow to pay off the loan you are seeking, on a timely basis. Even if you are seeking equity financing (such as convertible preferred stock), instead of a loan, you need to be able to lay out a plausible "exit strategy," since everyone, including equity investors, wants to know how they'll get their money out, at some point. This, of course, means profits and cash flow will have to be adequate to cash out equity partners within a reasonable time frame. The hope of "going public" someday or getting another round of financing to cash out today's investors or lenders will usually not be too attractive or thrilling to anyone who is being asked to provide you with risky startup financing. Cold, hard cash flow is always preferable to wishful thinking about going public.
Eight Ways NOT To Write a Business Plan - To learn more about this author, visit Michael Jenkins's Website.
Like this article? Share it with your friends
| |||
| No article feedback found. | |||
| Leave Your Feedback | |||
|
|||
|
| |||
| If you're like me, you'll read an article, ebook, a physical book, etc. and think, "Wow, that's great stuff!" then let it lay, ending up doing nothing with this new information. |
|||
|
| |||
| Do thoughts of your future excite you? Or fill you with fear and stress?
Picture a mouse inside a wheel – running, and getting no-where.
If this describes your life there’s a strong chance you haven’t set any goa... |
|||
|
| |||
| Business plans are important for starting and growing a business but often people are resistant to preparing them. Entrepreneurs need to envision the business they wish to build and then let their enthusiasm and ex... |
|||
|
| |||
| Many women business owners struggle through their first years of business without a business plan. There’s so much to do, they think. It’s hard enough just earning a profit. Who has time to write a business plan?
... |
|||
|
| |||
| Are you confused? Is your home business overwhelming you? Not sure in what order to do things? At times it can be daunting, but if you make small changes to your daily plan, it will clarify itself and become a bit e... |
|||
| |||
Dr. John OdaJohn Oda Ph.D NLP is a business peak performance expert, an author, and speaker frequently called upon to provide corporate training, workshops and seminars for many companies in the United States. He is an expert in coaching sales and business professionals in overcoming the behaviors and obstacles that may impede their sales results and affect their bottom line. Since 1995, John has created a speaking bureau such topics, which include: time management, sales training, human diversity, leadership programs and etc. He provides companies with a strategic plan to increase their bottom line by over 25 percent yearly. - Visit Dr. John Oda's Website |
|||
Leanne Hoagland-SmithAre your sales where you want them to be? Will you be one of the few who achieves sales or business success or one of the many who have failed to change? Are you tired of being told you are like everyone else? Then you may find my first book on sales of interest. Be the Red Jacket in the Sea of Gray Suits, The Keys to Unlocking Sales available at Amazon or at http://www.processspecialist.com/red-jacket.htm. This book is a reflection of my no-nonsense approach to improving sales to overall business results. If you are truly committed to making sustainable changes, then I can help you secure a positive return on your investment because I focus on executable solutions not telling you the problems you already know you have. From training to corporate (group) coaching to executive one on one coaching, my approach is to assess, create awareness, build a goal driven action plan and then execute. The bottom line question is "Not do you or your employees know it, but do you or they want to do it?" Please call for a free strategy session at 219.759.5601. - Visit Leanne Hoagland-Smith's Website |
|||
Dave KurlanDave Kurlan is the founder and CEO of Objective Management Group, Inc., the industry leader in sales assessments and sales force evaluations, and the CEO of David Kurlan & Associates, Inc., a consulting firm specializing in sales force development. Dave has been a top rated speaker at Inc. Magazine's Conference on Growing the Company, the Sales & Marketing Management Conference and the Gazelles Sales & Marketing Summit. He has been featured on radio and TV, including World Business Review with General Norman Schwarzkopf, in Inc. Magazine, Selling Power Magazine, Sales & Marketing Management Magazine and Incentive Magazine. He is the author of Mindless Selling and Baseline Selling – How to Become a Sales Superstar by Using What You Already Know about the Game of Baseball. He created and wrote STAR, a proprietary recruiting process for hiring great salespeople, and he writes Understanding the Sales Force, a popular business Blog and is a contributing author to The Death of 20th Century Selling and 101 Great Ways to Improve Your Life, Volume 2. - Visit Dave Kurlan's Website |
|||
David BarrDavid Barr is the President of Venture Opportunities, Inc. David has been a professional business broker/intermediary since 1980 focusing on General Business Brokerage and Mergers and Acquisitions representing client transaction value from $400,000 to $20,000,000. Mr. Barr has handled the sale of over four hundred and fifty companies. David earned a university degree from the State University of New York majoring in economics and business. David holds the Mergers and Acquisition Master Intermediary and the Certified Business Intermediary designations from the International Business Brokers Association. He is also a Senior Business Analyst and a Texas licensed Real Estate Agent. For more information about David and Venture Opportunities, visit www.bizdealmaker.com. - Visit David Barr's Website |
|||
Jeff FosterWebBizIdeas.com is a Minneapolis website design company founded to help people start an internet business by providing them with website, business, and internet resources that help foster the growth of successful online businesses and develop innovative Internet business ideas. - Visit Jeff Foster's Website |
|||
Anne BarrAnne Barr has over 26 years experience in sales and marketing, six years as a franchisee. She has assisted over 367 business owners and purchasers to achieve their goals in career change, transition and exit strategy. She holds the designation of Certified Franchise Executive from the International Franchise Association, Certified Business Intermediary from the International Business Brokers Association and Board Certified Broker from the Texas Association of Business Brokers. Anne is active in professional organizations, networking groups and volunteers for non-profit entities. As owner/operator of four successful businesses, Anne has proven people skills and enjoys helping clients find the right "fit" in business ownership. Visit www.FranchiseOpportunitySpecialist.com for more information about me and my company. - Visit Anne Barr's Website |
|||
Casey GollanCasey Gollan, Business Coaching & Mentoring Programs. Add $1 Million to $10 Million in the next 1 to 3 years. Since 1996 Casey has to added hundreds of millions of dollars to businesses. Watch a free video see client results Business Coaching website. - Visit Casey Gollan's Website |
|||
Kim CastleWith nearly two decades in the advertising and design business, with clients like Domino's Pizza, General Motors, Direct TV, Pedigree, Wolfgang Puck, Higher Octave Music, Hollywood Celebrity Products, Disney, and Paramount, as well as thousands of entrepreneurs around the world define, structure, communicate, and position their business for greater profits, BrandU(R) co-creators Kim Castle and W. Vito Montone discovered that entrepreneurs could experience the same power that big brands command for a fraction of the cost with the world's only process-based results-drive Integral approach to business creation. BrandU(R) is helping entrepreneurs grow with the power of extreme clarity from idea...to brand...to market(TM) and helping one million entrepreneurs become successful and whole so that they can make a difference in the world. Are you one of them? If you want to experience clarity all the way to the bank(TM), get started now at http://www.brandu.com. - Visit Kim Castle's Website |
|||
|
To learn more about the Evan Elite Author Program please contact us. | |||
![]() | |
![]() Michael Jenkins (Visit Michael's Website) Author Michael D. Jenkins, is a graduate of the Harvard Law School and has practiced as a tax attorney and a CPA with major California law and CPA firms and with a major national management and economics consulting firm in Washington, D.C.. Since 1981, he has authored the "Starting and Operating a Business" series of small business guidebooks for each of the 50 states and D.C., all of which are now published only in electronic format (e-books with included Windows software that customizes the book for the user's specific business). Each 2006 or 2007 state edition is roughly 500 to 600 pages, if printed out, and each is bundled with the Small Business Advisor (Windows) software, which interviews the reader about his/her business and then assembles a customized version of the book, based on the facts and applicable federal and state laws for that specific business.
| |
![]() |
|
|
![]() |
|
|
|
![]() |
| Modeling the Masters: Learn the true secrets behind Walt Disney's business success factors & grow your company! Video produced by Phanta Media |
|
|
![]() |
| Have you written articles that would be of value to entrepreneurs? Become an expert on our site by publishing them! Expose yourself to a wide audience, drive more traffic to your website and get more sales! Click Here for details. |
|
|
![]() | ||
|
| ||
|
|
|
Get advice & tips from famous business owners, new articles by entrepreneur experts, my latest website updates, & special sneak peaks at what's to come!
|
![]() |
|
|
![]() | ||
|
Choose A PR Topic
Press Release Builder | ||
|
Top 50 Marketing Blogs
Top Blogs To Watch In 2008 | ||
![]() | ||
|
|
|
|
|
|||||||||||||||||||||
|
|
||||||||||||
























