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A Simpler Plan for Start-ups

June 29, 2004  www.bplans.com

Business advisors, experienced entrepreneurs, bankers, and investors generally agree that you should develop a business plan before you start a business. A plan can help you move forward, make decisions, and make your business successful. However, not all business plans are the same, not every business needs the same level of detail. You might develop a fairly simple plan first as you start a small business, and that might be enough for you. You can also start simple and then elaborate as you prepare to approach bankers or investors.

For a simple example, imagine a woman making jewelry at home and selling it at a local flea market on the weekend. A business plan could give her a chance to step back from the normal flow and look at ways to develop and improve the business. The planning process should help her understand her business. It should help her define what she wants from the business, understand what her customers want, and decide how to optimize her business on her own terms. She might benefit from developing a simple sales and expense forecast, maybe even a profit and loss, so she can plan how to use and develop her resources. She might not need to create detailed cash flow, balance sheet, and business ratios. A simple plan may be just what she needs to get going.

This first stage of a plan, that we call the Concept Kick-start, focuses only on a few starter elements. The Mission Statement, Keys to Success, Market Analysis, and Break-even Analysis give you a critical head start toward understanding your business.

However, not all start-ups are that simple. Many of them need product development, packaging, retail fittings and signage, office equipment, websites, and sometimes months or even years of payroll before the sales start. Unless you're wealthy enough to finance these expenditures on your own, then you'll need to deal with bank loans or investors or both; and for that you'll need a more extensive business plan. Start-up company or not, the plan has to meet expectations.

One suggestion for getting started is to develop your plan in stages that meet your real business needs. A few key text topics might be enough to discuss the plan with potential partners and team members, as a first phase. You may well want to add a basic sales and expense forecast, leading to profit and loss, as next phase. Adding business numbers helps you predict business flow and match spending to income.

 
This might be an intermediate plan, incorporating a more extensive outline and business analysis:
Outline Topic Table Chart
1.0 Executive Summary   Highlights
1.1 Objectives    
1.2 Mission    
1.3 Keys to Success    
2.0 Company Summary Start-up Start-up
3.0 Product Description    
4.0 Market Analysis Summary Market Analysis Market Forecast
4.1 Market Segmentation    
4.2 Target Market Segment Strategy    
4.3 Market Needs    
4.4 Competitions and Buying Patterns    
5.0 Strategy and Implementation Summary   Annual Sales
5.1 Competitive Edge    
5.2 Sales Strategy Sales Forecast Monthly Sales
6.0 Management Summary    
7.0 Financial Plan    
7.1 Break-even Analysis Break-even Break-even
7.2 Projected Profit and Loss Profit and Loss  
7.3 Projected Cash Flow Cash Flow Cash Flow

Ultimately, the choice of plan isn't based as much on the stage of business as it is on the type of business, financing requirements, and business objective. Here are some important indicators of the level of plan you'll need, even as a start-up:

So, however you cut it, your business plan is very important, even at the early start-up stage, and even if you can keep it in your head. Before you purchase business stationery, telephones, or rent a location, you should do a business plan.

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