The Business Plan
A Resume.
The business plan is essential to obtaining financing. Like a resume,
it doesn't get you the job/money but it may get you an interview.
Not An Offering.
The plan should focus on the business and the opportunity. For a
variety of reasons, including securities laws, it should not offer a
specific deal-that is for negotiation and the formal offering documents.
Again, think of the resume-you put down your qualifications; in a resume
you don't say "I am willing to work for you for $x and y weeks
vacation."
Executive Summary.
You need an Executive Summary of not more than 2 pages. It must be
crisp so that the reader can quickly grasp what the business is. It must
entice the reader to want to read on. Put in a summary chart giving a
thumbnail sketch of projected 5 year revenue, margins and profits.
Develop an "elevator speech" which ties to the executive summary- e.g.
you get into an elevator with a venture capitalist in a high-rise
building in the financial district, she turns to you and says "what line
of business are you in"- you have thirty seconds to respond before she
reaches her floor, what do you say?
Operating Plan.
The Business Plan should be the core of your operating plan. It
should state the vision for the company and function as a roadmap that
you actually try to follow.
Everything Must Tie Together.
The Business Plan should be internally consistent and tie to any
presentation you will make. This seems obvious, but I can't tell you how
many times I have seen plans which present a cluttered, inconsistent
message. We all have difficulty critiquing our own work, so have your
plan reviewed by several people who haven't been involved in putting it
together and ask them for frank feedback.
Field of Dreams.
The marketing section is usually the weakest section of the plan.
Many marketing sections should be entitled "Field of Dreams" because
they assume that if "I build the product, they will buy it". Don't do
"top down" market analysis- e.g., there are 60 million personal
computers, 1% of the pc owners will buy our product at a price of $50 so
we will have sales of $30 million. Instead do "bottom up" analysis-
exactly who will buy the product and why? What is the compelling need
that your product or service fills? Show that you have actually talked
to potential customers.
Sales and Marketing.
Once you have done the marketing analysis correctly make sure the
sales strategy ties in. The sales section of many business plans
basically say "we will sell through every known channel". This just
isn't convincing. Demonstrate that you understand why a particular
channel strategy makes sense given your market analysis.
Financial Projections.
The financial needs of the business will depend greatly on the
marketing and sales strategies. It all has to fit together in a coherent
way. Remember: projections are just that- projections; they will never
turn out to be correct. However projections do have to show an
understanding of how all of the variables of the business interact. In
the plan and in any presentation you make you must demonstrate that you
"own" the numbers, that you really understand the financial implications
of your strategy. Because they are projections, don't present the
numbers to the penny; five significant digit accuracy may be critical in
the engineering of your product but it has no place in business plan
financials. Don't be creative in your presentation of the numbers- there
is an accepted format. Help your reader out by calculating key
percentages like gross margins.
Team is Critical.
Some investors look at the product/market opportunity first and then
the team, but most put the emphasis on the team. I have heard more than
once from investors that they would rather put money into a "Mediocre
business with a great management team" than a "Mediocre management team
with a great business plan." The general consensus was that a first rate
team will figure out how to make the business a success. It's much
easier to raise money if you have a few "success notches" in your gun.
If you are new at the game surround yourself with experienced advisers
with good reputations. A well thought out and written business plan is
critical in attracting those advisers.
Important Practical Points.
Plan length should be 20 to 30 pages max. Put the details in separate
volumes which you make available upon request. Professional investors
see hundreds of plans a year and often read them on airplanes or on the
train home. Moral: don't put the plan in a large 3-ring binder- it's too
big to fit in a briefcase. Preferences vary but many people seem to like
a plastic spiral bound plan because it lays flat, which makes it easier
to write notes on. First impressions are important so run the spell
checker on your word-processing program and have someone check your plan
over for obvious grammar errors and for internal consistency. Finally,
if you have followed all of this advice and you have the most
interesting plan and business opportunity in the recorded history of
entrepreneurial ventures and the investor is all set to give you the
interview, make sure that you can be reached- put in your name, address,
telephone, fax, e-mail etc. information. It seems obvious but you would
be surprised how often this information is missing from business plans.
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