How to Write a Business Plan
The Business Plan is
an essential step for the potential entrepreneur to
help turn an idea for a product or service into a
profitable business venture. Whether you are starting
a business or wish to expand your present business,
an effective business plan will be your “road
map” to success. A well-organized business plan
will work out the details of your business on paper
first, before you invest time and money into your
venture. It is a “must” if you plan to
obtain a business loan.
An effective business
plan serves at least four useful purposes:
-
It helps entrepreneurs
focus their ideas
-
It creates a track
for management to follow in the early stages of
the business
-
It creates benchmarks
against which the entrepreneur and management can
measure progress
-
It provides a vehicle
for attracting capital to help finance the business
Business Plan Outline
There are no hard and
fast rules in formatting your business plan. However,
it should be written by the owner of the business
with outside assistance as necessary. A business plan
written by an outside consultant is someone else's
business plan. The length and content often vary depending
on such factors as the company's maturity, the nature
and complexity of the business and the market it serves.
The following outline is effective and comparatively
easy to develop.
The
Executive Summary
This section is a summary of the key elements of your
plan. The executive summary is sometimes all the potential
investor or lender will read, so it must capture his/her
attention. An effective summary will properly position
your company and help to distinguish your concept
from the competition. It should be concise, persuasive
and no more than two pages in length. If the executive
summary fails to move your potential investor into
the depths of your plan, it has failed to do its job.
The Executive Summary
should include:
-
A description of
your business and its target markets, what differentiates
your company’s product or service and your
company’s strategy for success
-
A description of
your management team, including their skills, experience
and weaknesses
-
A summary of key
financial projections over the next three years
-
A summary of funding
requirements, when the funds will be needed, where
the funding will come from and how it will be spent
The
Business
The purpose of this section is to explain in detail
who you are, what you do, what your goals are and how
you plan to get there.
This section should include:
- A general description of your business,
including: a history of the business, the concept
of the company, form of legal structure and business
organization, products and services offered, customers
sought and the competitive advantages you offer
- A list of the products and services
your company provides including an outline of your
competitive advantages, distribution methods and unique
product qualities
- An analysis of your major competitors
and product/service cycles, including who they are,
their strengths and weaknesses and how your company
compares
- Your target market and competitive
strategy — an overall description of the market
for your products/services detailing your market success
factors, customer demographics, psychographics (lifestyle
traits), present and future markets, how you will
sell to each market segment, special characteristics
of your products/services and of the overall general
market, and current and future competitive strategies
- Your marketing plan, including a
description of the marketing goals, how the company
expects to achieve those goals – promotion,
pricing and distribution plans, use of the Internet,
and associated expenses
- Your management and personnel, including
a description of the principals of the company, their
backgrounds and experience and the company structure
- The physical geography of your business,
including a description of each location and facility,
whether you lease or own, previous or planned renovations,
what zoning restrictions or permits are required and
transportation access for customers and shipping
Financial Data
The purpose of the financial
plan is to provide the reader with vital financial information
about your business. The financial plan should include
projections for two to five years minimum. Projections,
as realistic as possible, are vital for the success
of a new business. If you have not had experience in
preparing financial information, you may need to obtain
professional assistance with this section of your business
plan.
This section should include:
- Projected start-up costs that include
the cost of equipment, inventory and real estate as
well as operating expenses until the business is profitable
- A description of the type of loan/financing
you desire, including the amount, the length of the
loan, desired terms, how you will use the money, how
you are going to pay it back, available collateral
and how you will pay it back if something goes wrong
- A list of your capital equipment,
including equipment used to manufacture or deliver
your product or service (not the equipment or merchandise
you sell directly to a customer) such as manufacturing
machinery and delivery fleets, permanent fixtures
such as special lighting, air conditioning, office
equipment, computers, etc. If financing will be used
to purchase some of this equipment, list it separately
from the equipment you already own
- A balance sheet provides a snapshot
of what you own and what you owe at a particular point
in time. It contains the same categories of information
regardless of the type of business. Assets should
be ranked in a decreasing order of liquidity while
liabilities should be listed in decreasing order beginning
with the most immediate due. A balance sheet is in
balance when Total Assets = Total Liabilities + Total
Equity
- A breakeven analysis allows
you to demonstrate when your business will reach its
breakeven point — when sales will reach a level
to cover expenses. A breakeven analysis can tell you
quickly if your costs are too high or if the price
of your product or service is too low. A basic breakeven
formula is:
- BE = FC/(P-VC)
- BE = Breakeven: The point where
total costs equal total revenue
- FC = Fixed Costs: Costs that
remain constant over time such as rent insurance,
interest, salaries, etc.
- P = Price: Money received for
a product or service
- VC = Variable Costs per unit:
The per unit costs that vary directly with sales
volume such as manufacturing labor, materials,
sales costs, etc.
- Financial projections demonstrate
what your business will look like at a certain future
period of time. Projections should be prepared on
a month by month basis for the first year and by quarters
for the second and third years. They should be organized
in a summary type financial format and should cover
your company’s sales revenues, costs and income
(Income Statement) and cash flows (Statements of Cash
Flows).
- A deviation analysis recalculates
your financial projections from the aforementioned
based on changes in your income, cash flow, etc. Typically,
this analysis is performed for two situations. First,
based on a 50 percent increase in your projections,
and second based on a 50 percent decrease.
- Historical financial reports
should be included for an existing business such as
balance sheets, income statements and tax returns
for the past three years if available.
Supporting
Documents
You may include personal resumes and financial statements,
credit reports, letters of reference, letters of intent,
copies of leases, legal documents and anything else
relevant to your plan.
Suggestions
on Format and Approach
- Provide a table of contents and
tab each section.
- Type the plan on 8 1/2" x 11"
paper.
- Use charts, graphs and other visual
aids, as well as color, to add interest and improve
comprehension
- Indicate on the cover and the title
page that all information is proprietary and confidential.
- As you complete sections of the
plan, ask impartial third parties to review them and
give their perspective on the quality, clarity and
thoroughness of your plan. The SBDC would be happy
to review your business plan. Call 243-5242 for an
appointment.
- Finally, if you intend to use your
plan to attract capital, honestly ask yourself whether
you would invest in the business based on reading
the plan. If you can’t honestly answer yes,
then the plan needs more work.
Source: The Colorado Business
Resource Guide |