7 Steps to a Perfectly Written Business Plan
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Entrepreneur
and Connector
February
20, 2019 7 min read
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Every business needs to have a written business plan. Whether
it’s to provide direction or attract investors, a business plan is vital for
the success for your organization. But, how do you write a business plan?
SBA.gov recommends
that a business plan include:
- Executive
summary -- a snapshot of your business
- Company
description -- describes what you do
- Market analysis
- research on your industry, market and competitors
- Organization and
management -- your business and management structure
- Service or
product -- the products or services you’re offering
- Marketing and
sales -- how you’ll market your business and your sales strategy
- Funding request
-- how much money you’ll need for next 3 to 5 years
- Financial
projections -- supply information like balance sheets
- Appendix -- an
optional section that includes résumés and permits
However, getting started may be difficult to do. So, here
are seven steps for writing a perfect business plan.
1. Research, research,
research.
“Research and analyze your product, your market and your
objective expertise,” William Pirraglia, a now-retired senior financial
and management executive, has written. “Consider
spending twice as much time researching, evaluating and thinking as you spend
actually writing the business plan.
“To write the perfect plan, you must know your company, your
product, your competition and the market intimately.”
In other words, it’s your responsibility to know everything you
can about your business and the industry that you’re entering. Read everything
you can about your industry and talk to your audience.
2. Determine the purpose
of your plan
A business plan, as defined by Entrepreneur, is a “written
document describing the nature of the business, the sales and marketing
strategy, and the financial background, and containing a projected profit and
loss statement.” However, your business plan can serve several different
purposes.
As Entrepreneur notes, it’s “also a road map
that provides directions so a business can plan its future and helps it avoid
bumps in the road.” That’s important to keep in mind if you’re self-funding or
bootstrapping your business. But, if you want to attract investors, your plan
will have a different purpose and you’ll have to write a plan that targets them
so it will have to be as clear and concise as possible. When you define your
plan, make sure you have defined these goals personally as
well.
3. Create a company
profile.
Your company profile includes the history of your organization,
what products or services you offer, your target market and audience, your
resources, how you’re going to solve a problem and what makes your
business unique. When I crafted my company profile, I put this on our About
page.
Company profiles are often found on the company’s official
website and are used to attract possible customers and talent. However, your
profile can be used to describe your company in your business plan. It’s not
only an essential component of your business plan; it’s also one of the
first written parts of the plan.
Having your profile in place makes this step a whole lot easier
to compose.
4. Document all aspects
of your business.
Investors want to make sure that your business is going to make
them money. Because of this expectation, investors want to know everything
about your business. To help with this process, document everything from your
expenses, cash flow and industry projections. Also, don’t forget seemingly
minor details like your location strategy and licensing agreements.
5. Have a strategic
marketing plan in place.
A great business plan will always include a strategic and
aggressive marketing plan. This typically includes achieving marketing
objectives such as:
- Introducing new
products
- Extending or
regaining market for existing products
- Entering new
territories for the company
- Boosting sales
in a particular product, market or price range. Where will this business
come from? Be specific.
- Cross-selling
(or bundling) one product with another
- Entering into
long-term contracts with desirable clients
- Raising prices
without cutting into sales figures
- Refining a
product
- Having a content marketing strategy
- Enhancing
manufacturing/product delivery
“Each marketing objective should have several goals (subsets of
objectives) and tactics for achieving those goals,” states Entrepreneur.
“In the objectives section of your marketing plan, you focus on
the ‘what’ and the ‘why’ of the marketing tasks for the year ahead. In the
implementation section, you focus on the practical, sweat-and-calluses areas of
who, where, when and how. This is life in the marketing trenches.”
Of course, achieving marketing objectives will have costs. “Your
marketing plan needs to have a section in which you allocate budgets for each
activity planned," Entrepreneur says. It would be
beneficial for you to create separate budgets for for internal hours (staff
time) and external costs (out-of-pocket expenses).
6. Make it adaptable
based on your audience.
“The potential readers of a business plan are a varied bunch,
ranging from bankers and venture capitalists to employees,” states Entrepreneur. “Although this is a diverse
group, it is a finite one. And each type of reader does have certain typical
interests. If you know these interests up-front, you can be sure to take them
into account when preparing a plan for that particular audience.”
For example, bankers will be more interested in balance sheets
and cash-flow statements, while venture capitalists will be looking at the
basic business concept and your management team. The manager on your team,
however, will be using the plan to “remind themselves of objectives.”
Because of this, make sure that your plan can be modified
depending on the audience reading your plan. However, keep these alterations
limited from one plan to another. This means that when sharing financial
projections, you should keep that data the same across the board.
7. Explain why you care.
Whether you’re sharing your plan with an investor,
customer or team member, your plan needs to show that you’re passionate
and dedicated, and you actually care about your business and the plan. You
could discuss the mistakes that you've learned, list the problems that you’re
hoping to solve, describe your values, and establish what makes you stand out
from the competition.
When I started my payments company, I
set out to conquer the world. I wanted to change the way payments were made and
make it easier for anyone, anywhere in the world to pay anyone with few to no
fees. I explained why I wanted to build this. My passion shows through
everything I do.
By explaining why you care about your business you create an
emotional connection with others so that they’ll support your organization
going forward.
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