Getting Started
The hardest part of creating a business plan is
getting the energy together to get started. At first it seems like a daunting
task. But once you get going you'll find that writing the plan is not as tough
as it seems. Start with some of the easy steps first. Describe your business and
your product or services. Talk about the market you are targeting. And explain
what stage of development your company is in. If you get hung up on a particular
part of the plan--skip it for now--and come back and fill it in later. Don't
worry about making a perfect first draft--just get some thoughts down to get the
process going and you can always come back and polish it up later.
Keep in mind your audience
Throughout the writing of your business
plan you want to keep in mind your intended audience and why you are writing the
plan. For example if you are trying to attract equity investors you will want to
emphasize the big upside profit potential. At the same time you need to be
especially careful to adequately disclose the risks and uncertainties in your
business, because investors often look for someone to blame (read `s-u-e`) if
their investment disappears. If you are trying to get debt financing you want to
emphasize not the huge upside profit potential--but the certainty that the debt
can be repaid. In fact talk of big profits may scare away debt financiers
because high profit potential usually means high risks. If you are writing a
plan to help you run the business better you may skip or write very simple
sections with general background information on the company and the industry,
and instead focus in more depth on the areas of your plan that are currently
most important to you.
Strategy is the core of your business plan
Basically the first half
of the business plan is geared towards helping develop and support and solid
business strategy. You look at the market, the industry, customers and
competitors. You look at customer needs and the benefits of current products and
services. You evaluate the strengths and weaknesses of each competing firm and
look for opportunities in the marketplace. All of these steps are largely aimed
at helping you create a strategy for your business. The second half of the
business plan is largely to execute your selected business strategy. Your
products and services, your marketing and your operations should all closely tie
in with your strategy. So while it may be easy to select a smart-sounding
strategy for your plan, I recommend you give a lot of thought to the strategy
that will set the course for your business.
Think competitively throughout your plan
In today's crowded
marketplace, you're probably going to have serious competition no matter how
creative your business concept is. That is why you need to think competitively
throughout your business plan. You need to realistically identify where you will
do things in similar manner as your competitors, where you will do things
differently, where you have real strengths and where you have real weaknesses.
To try to run a major aspect of your business significantly better than your
competitors may be a very difficult challenge. Hence, you are often better to
focus in planning on being different than your competition and competing with
them less directly. Can you find a particular market niche to focus on? Can you
find a unique strategy? Can you position your products differently? Can you use
different sales or marketing vehicles?
Don't overreach with your business plan
A lot of business plans
sound good on paper, but don't work in the real world marketplace. It's
difficult to attract people to a new product or service. Just because it's
better doesn't mean people are going to switch to it! People or companies have
established buying patterns and are currently doing business with someone else.
To get them to do business with you, you need to do more than to attract them to
your business. You've got to steal them away from someone else's business. It's
also quite possible that when you enter the marketplace, that your competitors
may react with their own new products or services or by cutting their prices.
And while it's easy to overestimate sales projections it's just as easy to
underestimate costs--especially for a start-up. There are always going to be a
hefty amount of cost overruns, expensive problems, and items that you simply
overlooked. So forecast conservatively and try to have an extra cushion of cash
tucked in reserve.