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How to Prepare a Business Plan – Nitty Gritty Explained

<p>If you are raising money a business plan will be required from you&period; Many books and indeed the internet give lots of good advice on their preparation&period; Business plans tend to have a fairly formal layout and people get used to reading a standardized format&comma; so I advise that you stick to it&period; You need to start with what is called an executive summary&comma; more commonly known in the USA as the elevator pitch&period; In other words make your pitch as though passing someone in an elevator&period; This means get to the point quickly&comma; winning first their attention&comma; then their interest and then their desire to know more&period; Detail can be kept in an appendix for reference&period; The key aspect is the accounts&period; Usually three years of projected profit and loss account&comma; cash flow and balance sheet will be required&comma; possibly more&period; If you are already trading your results to date need to be included&period;<br &sol;>&NewLine;The next most important area is the qualities and appropriateness of the management team&period; The plan needs to pre-empt any question that a potential investor reading through your plan may ask&period; Ideally&comma; if you are asked a question at a meeting your answer should be in the plan&period; If it is not in there I&comma; for one&comma; would consider your proposition no further&period; You clearly are not fully prepared for every eventuality&period; That might seem a bit harsh&comma; but if you receive a hundred plans a day you have to be&period; Questions you will probably be asked to include&colon; What would happen if &&num;8230&semi;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<ul>&NewLine;<li>a recession suddenly happened&quest;<&sol;li>&NewLine;<li>your three key employees resigned and took your top client with them&quest;<&sol;li>&NewLine;<li>you were ill for six weeks&quest;<&sol;li>&NewLine;<li>the government gave you a tax audit&quest;<&sol;li>&NewLine;<li>your bank called in the overdraft&quest;<&sol;li>&NewLine;<li>your landlord wanted their premises back&quest;<&sol;li>&NewLine;<li>your largest customer went into liquidation&comma; owing you a small fortune&quest;<&sol;li>&NewLine;<li>the sales budget did not happen&quest;<&sol;li>&NewLine;<&sol;ul>&NewLine;<p>Are you prepared for these eventualities&quest; Would you know how to turn them to advantage&quest; So many plans that I receive seem to assume that if you throw a big enough cheque book at marketing&comma; sales will follow&period; Venture after venture goes down because of this thinking&period; Sometimes venture capitalists will continue their support&comma; as in the case of Amazon where they funded extremely large losses for a long period&comma; but only when they continue to see something with real long-term potential&period;<br &sol;>&NewLine;Part of your plan will include what is called a SWOT analysis&comma; which covers key Strengths&comma; Weaknesses&comma; Opportunities and Threats&period; It gives a potential investor a quick synopsis of the opportunity&period; Type &&num;8216&semi;business plans&&num;8217&semi; into an internet search engine and you will be able to access various examples&comma; which are useful as a checklist for your own enterprise&period; Small-firm entrepreneurs who I meet seem to be always dismissive of their competitors&comma; coming out with arrogant statements about how and why they are so much better than them&period; In practice&comma; I think it is always prudent not to overestimate yourself and underestimate your competitors&period; That is definitely a habit of winners&period;<br &sol;>&NewLine;Jake has written this article on preparing a business plan&period; Jake is a business consultant and religiously follows business ethics of William Lauder President &amp&semi; CEO&comma; Estée Lauder Companies&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;

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