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What Is a Business Plan?
A business plan is a written statement that
describes and analyzes your business and
gives detailed projections about its future.
A business plan also covers the financial
aspects of starting or expanding your
business—how much money you need and
how you’ll pay it back.
Writing a business plan is a lot of work.
So why take the time to write one? The
best answer is the wisdom gained by
literally millions of business owners just
like you. Almost without exception, each
business owner with a plan is pleased she
has one, and each owner without a plan
wishes he had written one.
Why Write a Business Plan?
Here are some of the specific and
immediate benefits you will derive from
writing your business plan
Helps You Get Money
Most lenders or investors require a written
business plan before they will consider your proposal seriously. Even some
landlords require a sound business plan
before they will lease you space. Before
making a commitment to you, they want to
see that you have thought through critical
issues facing you as a business owner and
that you really understand your business.
They also want to make sure your business
has a good chance of succeeding.
In my experience, about 35% to 40%
of the people currently in business do
not know how money flows through their
business. Writing a business plan with this
book teaches you where money comes
from and where it goes. Is it any wonder
that your backers want to see your plan
before they consider your financial request?
There are as many potential lenders and
investors as there are prospective business
owners. If you have a thoroughly thought out business and financial plan that
demonstrates a good likelihood of success
and you are persistent, you will find
the money you need. Of course, it may
take longer than you expect and require
more work than you expect, but you will
ultimately be successful if you believe in
your business.
Helps You Decide to Proceed or Stop
here serves a dual purpose. It is designed
to provide answers to all the questions that
prospective lenders and investors will ask.
But it will also teach you how money flows
through your business, what the strengths
and weaknesses in your business concept
are, and what your realistic chances of
success are.
The detailed planning process described
in this book is not infallible—nothing is
in a small business—but it should help you
uncover and correct flaws in your business
concept.
If this analysis demonstrates that
your idea won’t work, you’ll be able to avoid
starting or expanding your business. This is
extremely important. It should go without
saying that a great many businesspeople
owe their ultimate success to an earlier
decision not to start a business with built-in
problems.
Lets You Improve Your
Business Concept
Writing a plan allows you to see how
changing parts of the plan increases profits
or accomplishes other goals. You can tinker
with individual parts of your business with
no cash outlay. If you’re using a computer
spreadsheet to make financial projections,
you can try out different alternatives even
more quickly. This ability to fine-tune your
plans and business design increases your
chances of success.
For example, let’s say that your idea is to
start a business importing Korean leather
jackets. Everything looks great on the first pass through your plan. Then you read an
article about the declining exchange ratio
of U.S. dollars to Korean currency. After
doing some homework about exchange
rate fluctuations, you decide to increase
your profit margin on the jackets to cover
anticipated declines in dollar purchasing
power. This change shows you that your
prices are still competitive with other
jackets and that your average profits will
increase. And you are now covered for any
likely decline in exchange rates.
Improves Your Odds of Success
One way of looking at business is that
it’s a gamble. You open or expand a
business and gamble your and the bank’s
or investor’s money. If you’re right, you
make a profit and pay back the loans and
everyone’s happy. But if your estimate is
wrong, you and the bank or investors can
lose money and experience the discomfort
that comes from failure. (Of course, a bank
probably is protected because it has title
to the collateral you put up to get the loan.
See Chapter 4 for a complete discussion.)
Writing a business plan helps beat the
odds. Most new, small businesses don’t
last very long. And, most small businesses
don’t have a business plan. Is that only
a coincidence, or is there a connection
between these two seemingly unconnected
facts? My suggestion is this: Let someone
else prove the connection wrong. Why
not be prudent and improve your odds by
writing a plan?
Helps You Keep on Track
Many business owners spend countless
hours handling emergencies, simply
because they haven’t learned how to plan
ahead. This book helps you anticipate
problems and solve them before they
become disasters.
A written business plan gives you a clear
course toward the future and makes your
decision making easier. Some problems
and opportunities may represent a change
of direction worth following, while others
may be distractions that referring to your
business plan will enable you to avoid.
The
black and white of your written business
plan will help you face facts if things don’t
work out as expected. For example, if
you planned to be making a living three
months after start-up, and six months later
you’re going into the hole at the rate of
$100 per day, your business plan should
help you see that changes are necessary.
It’s all too easy to delude yourself into
keeping a business going that will never
meet its goals if you approach things with
a “just another month or two and I’ll be
there” attitude, rather than comparing your
results to your goals.
Bookkeeping and Accounting
This book discusses the numbers and
concepts you as the business owner need
in order to open and manage your small
business. You have the responsibility
to create bookkeeping and accounting
systems and make sure they function
adequately. (Some suggestions for setting
up a system are contained in Chapter 6.)
One of the items generated by your
accounting system will be a balance
sheet. A balance sheet is a snapshot at a
particular moment in time that lists the
money value of everything you own and
everything you owe to someone else.
Taxes
While there are a few mentions of tax
issues throughout the book, most of the
planning information doesn’t discuss how
taxes will be calculated or paid. The book
focuses its efforts on making a profit and
a positive cash flow. If you make a profit,
you’ll pay taxes and if you don’t make a
profit, you’ll pay fewer taxes. A CPA or tax
advisor can help you with tax strategies.
Securities Laws
If you plan to raise money by selling
shares in a corporation or limited
partnership, you’ll fall under state or
federal securities regulations. You can,
however, borrow money or take in a
general partner without being affected by
securities laws. A complete discussion of
these issues is beyond the scope of this
book. For now, take note that you must
comply with securities regulations after you
complete your plan and before you take
any money into your business from selling
shares or partnership interests.
Your Management Skill
This book shows you how to write a very
good business plan and loan application.
However, your ultimate success rests on
your ability to implement your plans—on your management skills. If you have any
doubts about your management ability,
check out the resources in Chapter 12. Also
see Chapter 11 for a thought-stimulating
discussion of management.
Issues Specific to Your Business
How successfully your business relates
to the market, the business environment,
and the competition may be affected by
patents, franchises, foreign competition,
location, and the like. Of necessity, this
book focuses on principles common
to all businesses and does not discuss
the specific items that distinguish your
business from other businesses.
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