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Entre-U Class #7 – Business Plan Templates

Posted: March 9th, 2011 | Author: | Filed under: Entre-U | Tags: , , , , , , , , , | 3 Comments »

<< How To Write a Business PlanBuilding Quality Financial Projections >>

Just because you need a business plan doesn’t mean you need to write a 100 page tome.  Depending on the type of business you are starting and the purpose for writing the plan there are four different types of business plans you could write.  Click on the picture below to view templates for each of the different types.

One Page Plan

Three Sheet Strategy

Summary Business Plan

Comprehensive Business Plan

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

  1. The One Page Plan – Popularized by Jim Horan’s book of the same name, this business planning model is intended mainly as a strategic planning tool the one page plan gives entrepreneurs a 10,000 foot view of their opportunity.  It focuses mainly on the mission, vision and objectives of the company at the expense of the marketing and operations plan.  If you aren’t looking for capital then this just might be the ticket for you.
  2. The Three Sheet Strategy – Also based on a book but this one is by Mike Michalowicz call The Toilet Paper Entrepreneur.  The three sheet strategy takes the one page plan and adds two more components (and therefore pages…smart huh?), the SMART goals page and a paper version of a financial dash board.  This model is also designed for strategy but uses a 10,000 foot view, a 90 day goaling window and a historical look back at the metrics.
  3. Summary Business Plan – A summary business plan is a comprehensive business plan with the operations plan ripped out.  This plan usually has a business description, market analysis and full financial projections but is designed for businesses that are don’t have overly complex operations.  A couple examples are e-commerce companies, consulting companies and service companies.   Another version of this is the Company Acquisition Proposal.  Since companies being purchased are usually in operation the operations planning can be minimized.
  4. The Comprehensive Business Plan – And then there is the grand daddy of them all.  There are literally hundreds of different comprehensive business plan templates but they all pretty much boil down to the following six sections: Executive Summary, Business Description, Market Opportunity, Marketing Plan, Operations Plan and Management Plan.  Tack on 3 or 5 year financial projections and you’ve got yourself a business plan.  Software such as Business Plan Pro and Ultimate Business Planner reign supreme in this area but if you want to try it out without a financial commitment you can always try out Capital Business Plan’s free online business planning software (shameless plug…I know). 

Entre-U Class #6 – How To Write a Business Plan

Posted: March 2nd, 2011 | Author: | Filed under: Entre-U | Tags: , , , , , , , , , | No Comments »

 

<< Why Write A Business Plan  -  Business Plan Templates >>

Now that we have established why you need a business plan we have to discuss how to write a business plan and who you are writing the plan for.  Considering who you are writing the business plan for is almost as important as understanding why you are writing the plan. Ideally the answer would be that you are writing the plan for yourself…but…most people find they are writing the plan because someone asked them to write one. 

Below is a list of unique things you need to consider when writing a business plan for one of four different groups: yourself, a lender, an investor or an economic development agency.

  

  1. Yourself – Most entrepreneurs who find themselves in the fortunate position of not needing to borrow money should still write a business plan. The number one reason is to complete market research, plan operations and try to forecast profitability before you make a large investment and a potentially life changing decision. When writing the plan for yourself, concentrate on the sections that make up the “meat” of the plan: the Business Description, Market Potential, and the Operations Plan. Because this is a condensed version of a plan the executive summary is not necessary.  Marketing and promotion should still be explored and media purchases based on your target market / demographics.  For most start-ups the owner is the management (and staff) and therefore, you may not need to outline your own background in a management section. Understanding your strengths and weaknesses is still an important exercise. Educate yourself on the skills necessary to run your venture and find opportunities to hone your skills.
       

  2. Commercial Lender – A good place to start would be to read our article Getting a Business Loan so that you understand how lenders analyze a business loan. From that we understand that cash flow is very important to lenders. Before they give you the loan they will look to see that you have done the necessary research to accurately project your sales. They will also look at your operations plan to determine if your expenses are reasonable for the type and size of business you are planning on opening. From there they determine if there is an appropriate amount of collateral to secure the loan and a sufficient investment (equity) from the owners personal funds for working capital needs. To some extent the business plan is a sales document as much as it is a feasibility study…but be careful. Too much selling and your plan will come off as having something to hide or not believable. Too little and they might feel that you are not confident enough in your own idea or the data supporting your financial projections. For commercial lenders it is all about reducing exposure and making prudent loans to well thought out and researched business ideas.
     
  3. Investors – Understand that investors are looking for a different type of business than your typical start-up. Investors look for high risk high potential return ideas with Nationwide or Worldwide market potential. If your idea is still on paper and not currently in the marketplace most seasoned investors will pass on the investment until the business venture is on the cusp of explosive growth. The timing of an investment is crucial.  Invest too early and they could suffer the same cash burn as the business without growth in valuation.  Future rounds of investing will dilute their ownership and potential return. Too late and the deal will become too expensive (because the company is more valuable now) making it difficult to get the necessary return on their investment to make the deal.
    Utilize your executive summary as a “hot sheet” and dress it up with key financial information. Give hypothetical investment amounts and the potential return on investment (assuming you have filed the correct paperwork with your state’s securities department to make such an offering). Add graphs and charts and use the document to make it more of a sales document to peek interest. Once a potential investor is interested, give them the full plan after they have signed a non-disclosure agreement. The management section is a key area for investors. Your experience, education, and character will be scrutinized in a process called “due diligence”. Think of it as an extreme version of a background check. Most investors leave no stone unturned so be prepared to explain any potential bumps in your history.  Also, for obvious reasons the financial projections and Market Potential sections are key components for investors.  

  4. Economic Developers – Economic developers are looking for three things: Job Creation, Primary Sector Sales, and Targeted Industries. Because job creation is the key, the personelle plan is going to be scrutinized. Most agencies have limits on the amount of money they can provide based on the number of jobs created (a common metric is $10,000-$30,000 per full time job). Further, your historical sales will be looked at to see if you are truly creating wealth (this is called Primary Sector which means bringing in sales dollars from out of state) and if that trend can reasonably continue. 
    Don’t forget, most economic development money does not come in the form of a grant, so to some extent they will have similar criteria as a commercial lender although economic development agencies commonly are more liberal in their underwriting if the three above criteria are met. The Business History, Market Potential and Operations Plan will be eyed closely to ensure they are making a wise investment for their community.
     

From the above four categories we can see that there are wide and varied priorities depending on who you are writing the plan for. Notice though that the Market Potential section is a key component in every one. The number on reason why businesses fail is because they failed to understand or they overestimated their potential market. The number two reason is lack of sufficient cash on hand. Clearly, if a company projected that it would have more sales than actually occurred, it makes sense that they also would have underestimated the amount of cash needed to stay in business. This author would argue that the above two reasons for business failure are one in the same.


 

Bonus – Five Considerations Before Your Start Writing Your Plan 

  1. Realize that there is no one correct way to write a business plan.  Each business is unique and each has different characteristics that should be identified, described, and explored.  No one business plan template can serve the needs of every business out there.  If one were developed, it would be thousands of pages long and contain hundreds of sections which may be relevant to only a minority of the business ideas out there. If there is a section in the outline or software that you don’t think applies to your business idea, simply omit it from your business plan.  Be careful though, there are some sections that every business plan should not be without…it is up to you to customize the information to fit what is relevant to your project.
     
  2. DO NOT worry about the length of your plan.  Again, each business plan is unique and businesses have varying levels of complexity, even for companies within the same industry.  A manufacturer of apparel will have a longer and more complex plan than a designer and distributor of apparel who will outsource production.  The point is that your specific business idea will determine the length of a plan. 
     
  3. Be as clear and concise as you possibly can.  Do not use flowery language – you are not writing a novel.  There will be no awards for literary ability.  Also, stay away from industry jargon or slang terms.  Write your plan in a manner that anyone with an eighth grade reading level can understand. 
     
  4. The entire document will not be read from front to back.  Your plan should be written so that the reader can get a general idea from the Executive Summary, a detailed description from the first paragraph or two of each section and technical detail from the remaining paragraphs in each section or the appendices. For example, if a person reads your executive summary and wants more detailed information on the target market they would page back to the “Market Potential” section to get more detailed information from the first couple of paragraphs.  If they want further breakdown of the target market or physical data of that market they should be able to read further beyond the first paragraph to find selected technical data on the size and growth of your potential market.
     
  5. Back up assumptions with hard data and information that can be inferred from research completed in your exploration of the idea.  Do not just say you will be the best, fastest, or cheapest… explain how you will achieve more sales, better service, lower costs, etc.   This will help you when it is time to project sales and expenses while providing justification for your expectations.  It is important that you describe why a feature of your business is important and explain the benefit it will provide you or the customer.  Finally, providing assumptions will make your financing organization confident that your financial projections are based on solid data rather than just a best guess.   


Entre-U Class #5 – Why Write A Business Plan

Posted: February 28th, 2011 | Author: | Filed under: Entre-U | Tags: , , , , , , , , | No Comments »


<< Successful New Business Ideas - How To Write a Business Plan  >>

 The first thing you should do is come to grips with the fact that you need a business plan.  In a study completed by the Small Business Administration entrepreneurs who had a written plan had a significantly lower failure rate than those who started without a written plan.  But if our litmus test for characteristics is true for entrepreneurs then planning itself is counterintuitive.  If entrepreneurs are mavrics, if they are risk takers and they follow their gut then why would then plan?  And, to be honest there is a lot of wisdom to hitting the pavement and just getting going.  We have to be careful that the plan does not become the business because planning is all that gets done.  In the end we still need a plan because a well written, well researched business plan serves four main functions:

1.      Raising Capital – Most people find themselves writing a business plan to borrow or raise capital.  The simple fact is that if you had the money you may have started your business already…confident in the potential profitability of your venture.  Big mistake.  It makes very little sense not to plan even if you have the money.  Lenders, Venture Capitalists, Angel Investors and Economic Developers all want to know the same basic thing – will this make money.  Each looks for specific characteristics of a business that they are interest in, so be sure to consider who you are writing the plan for before you start writing it.  A plan written to raise Angel Capital is different than one that is going in front of a local lender. 

 2.      Strategic Plan – A good business plan also serves as a strategic plan.  A well written strategic plan identifies the mission of an organization, internal/external driving forces, and identifies Strengths, Weaknesses, Opportunities and Threats (SWOT).  While all of these may not be specifically present in the business plan, the reader should be able to identify these items from the different sections of the narrative.  We need to determine how you are going to compete in the marketplace.  What is your niche?  Who is your target market?  What does your customer value?  Then once you are in business these strategies need to be reviewed and changed as the market changes or as new information is available. 

3.      Feasibility Test – The business plan serves as a feasibility test for your business. As you complete a plan for your business it will become clear whether or not your initial assumptions about the idea hold true.  You need to justify your assumptions.  It is easy to make an idea work in your head…every entrepreneur can imagine finding the best location, creating the best marketing campaign, you can even make your business as profitable as you wish…in your head.  But, something magical happens when you put that idea down on paper in black and white and are forced to justify your assumptions in determining profitability. 

Why we business plan – a short video explaination

 Every section of your plan holds valuable information that will help frame your expectations for a reasonable range of sales, cost of sales and daily operating expenses (often called business overhead).  Your marketing plan will help you in determining a reasonable range of sales and your operations plan will help you determine both startup expenses and ongoing expenses.  Sales minus Expenses equals profitability…therefore feasibility.  Your business plan feeds information into your financial projections and backs the numbers with realistic assumptions.  The business plan and financial projections act in tandem creating a feasibility study as to weather this idea will be profitable or not.

4.      Opportunity Discovery – So, what if you complete your plan and find that it is not feasible?  Don’t give up!  Take a hard honest look at your plan and determine if there are changes that could be made to your idea to make it profitable.  Don’t get locked down thinking that things have to be a specific way. Some of your best ideas will come out of the discovery of new markets, new processes, new ways of distributing or producing and finding a niche to compete in.  

Let the writing of your business plan guide your business model as opposed to reflecting what you think your business model should be.  In addition, don’t be afraid to change your idea completely.  Many people discover that there are better opportunities elsewhere, usually within the same industry somewhere up or down the supply chain. 

Last but not least, don’t be afraid to ask for help.  Contact your local Small Business Development Center or SCORE office for assistance in writing your business plan.

 


Entre-U Class #2 – Are You An Entrepreneur?

Posted: February 22nd, 2011 | Author: | Filed under: Entre-U | Tags: , , , , , , , , , | No Comments »

<<  Small Business America  –  Know Your Entrepreneurial Strengths  >>

What does an entrepreneur look like?  Can you spot one on the street?  What do you think of when you picture an entrepreneur or a small business owner? 

Perhaps they are the quintessential tech geek.   

   

Or maybe they are the globetrotting Maverick.   

   

You may think of the youthful (or perhaps not so youthful) visionary. 

   

   

   

   

   

   

   

But the truth is these are the exceptions…not the rule.  Most entrepreneurs look, well…just like you and me.  Joe and Jane Average.  They are not a certain age, sex, or race.  They are typically not smarter, wealthier, luckier or holier than the rest.  They just decided to take a leap of faith in to small business ownership.   

However a quick Google search will bring up another image.  Myriads of sites and blog posts propose a litmus test for characteristics of people who are entrepreneurial including: 

Characteristics 

◦      Risk Taker 

◦      Follow Their Gut 

◦      Independent  

◦      Problem Solvers 

◦      Big Picture Thinkers 

◦      Competitive 

◦      Dreamer  

◦      Driven / Tenacious  

In my experience the last one is the only one that counts.  You have to be driven.  I have meet with over 1,000 entrepreneurs in the last decade and I can tell within 15 minutes of meeting if a person is going to go into business.  I can tell because they look me in the eye and say: “I don’t care what you say. I don’t care what you think. I don’t care if I have good credit or money or resources…I AM GOING TO START THIS BUSINESS!”  

Now, I can’t claim to know who will be successful in business. Nobody can.  If they could pick successful ideas on a lark why would they waste their time in anything bust picking single stocks in the lottery we can an efficient stock market.   

You Have To Ask Yourself…Do You Like These Words? 

 

We all like and aspire to the words above in black but rarely does an entrepreneur think about the words in red.  That’s what makes entrepreneurs special.  According to the SBA office of Advocacy about 1 in 12 adults in the United States are actively involved in either starting or owning a business.  On the flip side that means that about 11 out of 12 people are probably not very entrepreneurial and therefore are probably pretty risk adverse.  Herein lies the problem.  When you go to tell people about your new business idea 90%+ are not going to have the mental capacity, risk acceptance or vision to see the opportunity…to see what you see.   

When Twitter fist came out I thought it was the bane of our social existence.  After all, what can you possibly say with 140 characters.  Until the river in my city filled it’s banks and Twitter became an invaluable communication tool to know where to go to sandbag to save our town, not to mention a tool to topple governments by connecting the people.   Talk about short sighted.  And, this was with years of experience talking to thousands of entrepreneurs about new ideas for infinite markets.   

So who knows if you are an capital “E” Entrepreneur…the truth is only you know.  The truth is that most entrepreneurs are made not born.  While you may not be a risk taker you can become one by taking a small risk, realizing that it’s not so bad and then taking ever bigger risks on ever better business opportunities.  So go out there are live your dreams of starting your company and getting your piece of the small business pie.  

 
 
 
 
 
 

 


 

Bonus Material  

Starting a business isn’t a decision to make overnight. You need to take a few weeks to think about whether or not you really want to start a business. Here are questions to ask yourself before starting a business.  

1. What are you passionate about?  

2. What tasks do you not like to do?  

3. What do you do on your day off?  

4. How well do you plan and organize?  

5. What skills do other people compliment you on?  

6. Do you have the physical & emotional stamina to run a business? 

7. What have you always wanted to try but never had the time

8. Are you determined to be successful in business? 

9. Can you afford to advertise your business all year? 

10. How good are you at making decisions under pressure

11. How well do you get along with different personalities? 

12. Are you able to hire an employee or get a helper every once in a while

13. Are you willing to spend hours working late and early in the morning each day? 

14. Can you save enough money in advance to pay for six months of business expenses? 

15. Are you ready to be the receptionist, salesperson, bookkeeper and the product guru

16. Do you and your loved ones understand how business ownership will affect your family life?


Entre-U Class #1 – Small Business America

Posted: February 21st, 2011 | Author: | Filed under: Entre-U | Tags: , , , , , , , , , , | No Comments »

This is the first installment of a series called Entre-U (or Entrepreneurship University). Other installments and future videos of each installment will follow. Think of this as the most straight to the point Entrepreneurship degree you can get without the $20,000 price tag. Most entrepreneurs learn by the school of hard knocks anyway so save yourself the time, energy and money and get started!


Next: Entre-U Class #2 – Are You An Entrepreneur? >>

Between 2008 and 2010 The United States GDP hovered around $15 Trillion Dollars.  Small Business has been responsible for about 50% of that economic impact here in the U.S or about $7.5 Trillion Dollars.  The World’s second largest economy is tied between China and Japan at around 5 Trillion dollars.  In effect, this makes Small Businesses in the United States the world’s second largest economy.   

   

Further, Over the last 30 years from 1980 to 2010 big businesses have experienced a net loss in employment while small businesses have been the driver of our economic growth.  A Kauffman Foundation March 2010 study entitled High Growth Firms and the Future of the American Economy supports this view.  One of its key findings is: “…the top-performing 1 percent of firms generate roughly 40 percent of all new jobs.”  The study also found that high growth young firms – or firms that are less than 10 years old – create most of the new jobs.  

   

Clearly changes in technology have brought this revolution in entrepreneurship to the forefront.  What only five or six years ago cost millions of dollars to start can be done with $10, some open source software and a few hours of work.   

But also changes in social norms have affected the entrepreneurial landscape.  According to a Center For Women’s Business Research from 2008-2009:

Key Facts about Women-Owned Businesses

The Overall Picture: 2008-2009 

  • 10.1 million firms are owned by women (50% or more), employing more than 13 million people, and generating $1.9 trillion in sales as of 2008.
  • Three quarters of all women-owned businesses are majority owned by women (51% or more), for a total of 7.2 million firms, employing 7.3 million people, and generating $1.1 trillion in sales.
  • Women-owned firms (50% or more) account for 40% of all privately held firms.

Businesses Owned by Women of Color  

  • 1.9 million firms are majority-owned (51% or more) by women of color in the U.S.
  • These firms employ 1.2 million people and generate $165 billion in revenues annually.  

A major shift in societal norms has made women owned businesses, minority owned businesses, and (the super growth combination of) minority owned women businesses the fastest growing segments amongst entrepreneurs in the United States.  

If we look at the stock market as a proxy for economic growth we can see more clearly the stages of the United States Economy in the past and future:   

   

Ignoring the 200 years before World War II when the economy was dominated by agriculture we can see clear parabolic economic growth cycles that are spanning time periods that are smaller by half or less.  The Ag economy was 200 years, followed by a 50 year Industrial Revolution, a 20 year Technology Bubble and a 10 Year Housing Bubble.   

It is my opinion that the Age of the Entrepreneur is upon us.  One could argue that the entrepreneur has been present since the dawn of the Industrial Revolution with Innovation leading the way.  However, it was the vast changes of the Technology Revolution that brought affordable, powerful technology to the forefront. 

The massive unemployment and economic hardship brought on by the Housing Crisis has also brought with it great opportunities for those with an entrepreneurial spirit.  The unemployed and underemployed can be a boon to Small Business America if they would apply their creativity with collaboration and new technologies to become the job creation of tomorrow.  I believe in this country’s economic future because I believe that our citizens are the brightest most innovative people on the planet.  I believe in the American Entrepreneur.