Remember Me
forgot your password?

What is a Business Plan? and Why Do I Need One?

For many entrepreneurs the creation of a business plan is the biggest hurdle in the development process of their fledgling enterprise. There is a mystery, almost a dread in many people when discussion of a business plan requirement is first broached. They conceptualize a boring, dry, painful experience and many would like to avoid this step if at all possible.


What is a Business Plan?

business plan is a document that qualifies, quantifies and narrates a commercial opportunity. It is that simple to state, more difficult to execute, but anyone can customize a business plan that gets results. The plan must have an exciting Executive Summary. Like the opening scenes of a movie, or the first chapter of a book, the writer must set a hook.


Typically, active investors, angels, venture capital groups and investment bankers are deluged with business plans. Screeners typically read the document before passing along to decision-makers within the firm. However, very few move a business plan along the decision making food chain precisely because the Executive Summary lacks excitement, punch or sets a high level of anticipation about what is inside the document.

Having written hundreds of business plans for clients I can attest that creating a plan that works is, well, work. No two plans are alike. The plan must be customized, well researched, structured and direct. I receive more than 500 business plan submissions annually in my consulting firm. Less than 1% have commercial potential as written. Many describe products, services, retail or new business development ideas that otherwise might be exciting. However, the plan does not convey that potential.

One of the worst things to evolve from the arrival of the internet is the ability to download a business plan template and write the document by filling in the blanks. The template itself is not problematic, I use a self-developed template when I customize plans. The problem is that many entrepreneurs do not have the writing skills, the research in hand, know the keys that turn on investors and thus, take shortcuts. Filling in the blanks without sweating the details and doing comprehensive research results in a document that will not be read and an opportunity that will never launch.

Rule number one in the development of any commercial opportunity: shortcuts equal failure!

I am a self-taught business plan writer. If I can do it, anyone can. In reality, however, most people just want to expose their opportunity to investors, licensees or potential partners. They don’t have writing skills, do not know the types of research necessary to support the plans sales model, need help in creating the marketing strategy, and will never be able to narrate financials. Where can they go to create and exciting business plan document?

The following are resources readily available in most communities. Many are free.

Many colleges, community colleges and universities have developed small business incubators. They attract additional state funding, as small business growth and development are keys to job creation and an increased tax base. Take advantage of this community asset. Students, graduate students and professors are often available to direct your efforts. Ten years ago there were only a handful such programs. Today, over 1000 schools have some version of an entrepreneurial program.

Many states, regional and local governments offer business development programs. They have retired business people and mentors on hand to support, guide and train prospective entrepreneurs and guide business plan creation. There is no charge for utilizing this service, after all, your tax dollar supports these programs.

SCORE, the Service Core of Retired Executives is a Federal Government sponsored initiative. Thousands of retired, experienced business people make themselves available to evaluate commercial opportunities and direct the development and launch of those deemed to have potential. They are often intimately involved in creating business plans.

The Ewing Kauffman Foundation in Kansas City, MO is devoted solely to the development of entrepreneurial development. Mr. Kauffman started, nurtured and developed Marion Labs from a tiny drug local company into a multinational, multi-billion dollar powerhouse. He also owned the Kansas City Royals baseball team. His devotion to developing and promoting the entrepreneurial base of the United States resulted in creation of the foundation that bears his name.

Seek out a consultant. Typically consultants charge a fee, just like lawyers, accountants or plumbers. The advantage of an experienced consultant is that they write business plans for a living, will be strong writers, able to properly direct or perform research, narrate financials and differentiate a commercial opportunity by creating an exciting word picture. Always seek references and talk to several before deciding on a consultant.


Why Do I Need a Business Plan?

You might not. You might not need a deeply customized business plan if you are seeking to license or sell an invention, a patent or a prototype product. In this situation, the potential licensee would take your work product and develop a plan that fits their internal organizational needs.

However, if you are attempting to fund a start-up business, self-market a product or buy a small business you will absolutely need to create a road map. That road map is your business plan. The map is not linear, there will be curves and setbacks, but by quantifying, qualifying and narrating a well- researched, customized business plan you are much closer to success.








 

 

 

 

 









 

Geoff Ficke

Geoff Ficke has been a serial entrepreneur for almost 50 years. As a small boy, earning his spending money doing odd jobs in the neighborhood, he learned the value of selling himself, offering service and value for money.

After putting himself through the University of Kentucky (B.A. Broadcast Journalism, 1969) and serving in the United States Marine Corp, Mr. Ficke commenced a career in the cosmetic industry. After rising to National Sales Manager for Vidal Sassoon Hair Care at age 28, he then launched a number of ventures, including Rubigo Cosmetics, Parfums Pierre Wulff Paris, Le Bain Couture and Fashion Fragrance.

Geoff Ficke and his consulting firm, Duquesa Marketing, Inc. (www.duquesamarketing.com) has assisted businesses large and small, domestic and international, entrepreneurs, inventors and students in new product development, capital formation, licensing, marketing, sales and business plans and successful implementation of his customized strategies. He is a Senior Fellow at the Page Center for Entrepreneurial Studies, Business School, Miami University, Oxford, Ohio.

Rate this Article: 0 / 5 stars - 0 vote(s)
Print Email Re-Publish

Add new Comment



Captcha

  • Latest Fundraising Articles
  • More from Geoff Ficke

Online Charity Auction Software & 52 Traffic Generating Tips

By: kay hebbourn | 23/12/2009
http://www.hostonlinecharityauctions.com Bargain Professional and Easy to Use Online Charity Auction Software. We take the guesswork & legwork out so you can focus on fundraising. Download Now!

How Invoice Factoring Works

By: Iris Caesar | 21/12/2009
http://www.ifgnetwork.com Invoice factoring can help the small business survive a cash crunch.

Business Banking Accounts Shouldn't Cost You Money

By: Christopher S. Norwood | 21/12/2009
Do you have a business banking account that is slowly dwindling because of all of these hidden charges and fees that you didn't know anything about? It's sad to say, but many business people are finding their business banking accounts getting smaller and smaller just because they're being held in that account. It doesn't make sense. Banks charge if there's not enough money in an account, they charge to make some transactions and they even charge if you want to add money in some cases.

Printable Youth Clothing for School Promotions

By: John Gallagher, CAS | 10/12/2009
Personalized youth clothes such as custom printed and embroidered boys polo shirts and childrens promotional sweatshirts should be used for fundraisers along with other promotional items like stadium seats and embroidered hats.

What Should You Know About Grants for Small Businesses

By: Jovana Zivanovic | 08/12/2009
In this age of recession grants and loans are required and needed more than ever. The U.S. federal, state and city financial institutions are offering very attempting and affordable grants to non profit organizations and small businesses. But, before you apply for this kind of program, you might need some extra information in order to spare some time and not get disappointed later on.

The Best Silicone Rubber Bracelets

By: Shirley | 08/12/2009
A best silicone rubber bracelets or wristbands good for all events and everybody.

Holiday Season Fundraising

By: eBoosterClub | 08/12/2009
Winter time and the holiday season can be used creatively to offer your community relevant fundraisers that they appreciate while helping to build your fundraising account.

Business Grants For Women

By: Norm Jackson | 08/12/2009
There are a growing number of successful businesses owned by women and the rate of growth is increasing. These businesses are at least as successful as businesses owned by men. Discover how you can get funding from the government to start a business, or expand an existing one.

10 Commandments You Must Follow to Define a Novel Product Marketing Niche

By: Geoff Ficke | 02/11/2009 | Entrepreneurship
Consider each of these 10 Commandments when evaluating your new product or business idea. If you can shape the idea to include one or more of these keys you will have an exponentially greater chance to successfully sell into the contemporary marketplace.

College Interns Can Be an Excellent Free or Low Cost Asset to Entrepreneurs

By: Geoff Ficke | 02/11/2009 | Entrepreneurship
An excellent win-win for entrepreneurs and students is an internship relationship. In the current economic malaise paid internships have been drastically curtailed. The need, however, for students to gain resume enhancing experience has never been greater. They will work for little, and in some cases for close to nothing, in terms of compensation in order to gain real business experience.

The Venerable Polaroid Instant Photo System Soared before It Sunk

By: Geoff Ficke | 02/11/2009 | Business Opportunities
Studebaker, Montgomery Ward, Beeman’s Gum, TWA and Polaroid are just a few examples of great brands and businesses that have gone the way of the dodo bird. Successful businesses, those with long term growth and future upside, constantly strive to reinvent themselves. New products, new channels of distribution, new product applications and novel, fresh features and benefits are essential to avoid slow demise and ultimate extinction.  

The Lesson of “I, Pencil” An Essay on Economic Freedom for the Ages

By: Geoff Ficke | 27/10/2009 | Economics
Free men, working in a system that honors private property rights, rule of law, and maximum amounts of individual freedom will always produce a quality of life superior to any that can be generated from leaden socialist states.

How an Ingenious Footwear Idea Snatched Defeat from the Jaws of Victory!

By: Geoff Ficke | 08/10/2009 | Small Business
Having a wonderful new product, service or concept that is market ready but not moving on the project is such a waste. I phoned the designer we originally consulted with and asked him if he knew about the competitive product that had beaten him to market and secured his niche. After browbeating the competitor’s product as being inferior, he could only state that he was working on a better version of his original concept. He could offer no timeline on when the brand would launch.

A Marketing Axiom: You’re Never the Greatest, Only the Latest!

By: Geoff Ficke | 08/10/2009 | Strategic Planning
The franchise that Chen Yu had painstakingly built rather quickly began to weaken and decline. Chen Yu is a classic example of a Company that fell from being among the greatest to just the latest, an also ran. Successful brands are constantly updating, refreshing and responding to current market conditions to avoid this fate.

The Flight Delay That Resulted in Launching a $100 Million Gift Business

By: Geoff Ficke | 08/10/2009 | Business Opportunities
The Vera Bradley story is distinctly American. Two ladies, stranded in an airport, utilized their powers of observation to identify an opportunity. Unlike most people, they not only identified an unfilled niche in the marketplace, but they had the drive and talent to fill that niche with product that the consumer market craves to this day.

We Plan Exact Vacation Routes But Often Start a New Business with No Road Map

By: Geoff Ficke | 08/10/2009 | Business Opportunities
There is no magic bullet or elixir that entrepreneurs can access in order to insure they will succeed. However, there are things they can do that will absolutely insure failure. A key lesson for any person seeking to launch a new product or new business is to take every precaution to minimize negatives that can be reasonably controlled by planning, research and performing due diligence.

Submit Your Articles Free: Signup
Article Categories




Use of this web site constitutes acceptance of the Terms Of Use and Privacy Policy | User published content is licensed under a Creative Commons License.
Copyright © 2005-2008 Free Articles by ArticlesBase.com, All rights reserved. (0.25, 5, w2)