Title: Writing The Winning Business Plan
1Writing The Winning Business Plan
- Jack DerbyDerby Management
2Why create a Business Plan?
- Most importantly, for you your team
- You need one for a startup
- You need one for a corporation
- The actual process of planning is the key.
- It consolidates management direction.
- It provides debate finally consensus.
- Its used as a guide when speed bumps happen.
- Its your company your personal scorecard.
3Why else?
- No Business PlanNo money.
- The Six Stages of Successful Sources
- FFA Friends, Family Acquaintances
- Private angels
- Venture capitalists
- Corporate investors
- Strategic partners
- Banks
4Writing a plan is tough work
- It requires disciplined balance
- Its visionary, but logical.
- Its financially perfect, but flexible.
- Its for today, but also for 3-5 years out
- Its a formal Plan, but its easy to read.
- Its creative, but it follows The Rules.
5How do you start?
- Pay attention to The Dos Donts.
- Above all else
- Be compelling
- Be brief, focused, deliberate
- Focus on customers how you will sell them.
- Provide market research hard data
- Be innovative describe barriers to others.
- Create an experienced management team
6The 25 Dos
- Be brief direct detailed.
- Get to the bottom line quickly.
- Identify what the business is immediately
- Identify the business model immediately.
- Focus on your customers.
- Define whats compelling.
- Define whats unique.
7The 25 Dos
- Be realistic with yourself.
- Remember, you're investing your career.
- Define long term objectives for 3 to 5 years.
- Describe the 3 to 4 primary strategies.
- Focus on your sales model channel strategies.
- Include your ecommerce strategies.
- Make realistic, but exciting, projections.
8The 25 Dos
- Support strategies with detailed tactics.
- Substantiate with accepted market research.
- Discuss very objectively your risks.
- Answer the question of why customers buy.
- Describe the barriers to entry for others
- Convince your reader about success.
9The 25 Dos
- State how much money you will need.
- Define exactly how the funds will be used.
- State clearly your exit strategy.
- Stick with proven and accepted plan formats.
- Don't try to be cute!
10The 15 Donts
- Write about history. Focus on the future.
- Focus only on you your technology.
- Use highly technical buzz descriptions.
- Forget about objective customer research.
- Make unsubstantiated statements or claims.
- Create revenues that you wont make.
- Include detailed budgets.
11The 15 Donts
- Forget what makes your plan different
- Experienced management
- Large and growing markets
- Proven sales models channels
- Experienced sales penetration tactics.
- Innovative technologies
12The 15 Donts
- Assume anything.
- Forget what your reader wants.
- Define valuations in the actual plan.
- Attempt to write the business plan alone.
- Extend the process more than two months.
- Include copies of resumes technical papers.
- Forget to proofread, proofread proofread.
13Dont just start writing
- PreparationThe Key to Success.
- Whats my Vision?
- Can I say it so that anyone understands it?
- What business are we in today?
- What about in 3 years?
- Are we really innovative?
- What about in 3 years?
14Dont just start writing
- PreparationThe Key to Success.
- What do we really know about
- Our future product roadmap
- What our service offerings could be.
- The market data, trends, forecasts.
- The new technologies in development
- The competition
- Who are our customers will be in 3 years?
15One more preparation task
- Think about your starting assumptions.
- Externally, what do I think will happen about
- Economic trends
- Markets that I am entering
- Technology changes
- Regulations
16One more preparation task
- Define your starting assumptions
- Internally, what do I want expect for
- Sales revenue growth rates
- Product costs and margins
- Sales expense percentages
- GA expense percentages
- Receivables, payables, financing, capital
models.
17Now, you can finally start writing.
- What you need
- A quiet place and time.
- All of your data easily available.
- Start working by yourself.
- Get the content down quickly.
- Send a first rough draft to others quickly.
- Write draft after draft after draft after..
18You have two options today
- The Traditional Business Plan
- 7-8 sections
- 20-30 pages with financials
- More detail markets, products technologies
- Business Plan Lite
- 2 sections
- 8-10 pages with financials
- An extended Executive Summary
19The traditional plan
- Certainly preferred by us
- Provides an opportunity to provide clear details
- Brings out the richness of the business idea.
- Details the business and sales models
- What follows here is the traditional format
- 7-8 sections
- 20-30 pages
20Business Plan Lite
- A result of the times
- Today, time to read is the driver.
- Requires you to
- Be an excellent writer
- Provide great detail with very well chosen words
- Get your points across succinctly with clarity.
- Sections 1 2 7 create the BP Lite
21Whats included?
Vision Strategies Tactics Operations
Actions
22Whats included?
- 7-8 Sections
- Executive Summary
- Introduction to the business
- Definition of your products services
- Overview of your markets
- Overview of your sales marketing plans
These become the Business Plan Lite.
23Whats included?
- Overview of product development roadmap
- Summary of manufacturing operations
- Bios of your management team
- Four pages of financials
- Brief appendices if necessary
24Section 1 The Executive Summary
- 2-3 pages
- Make it compelling
- Your Idea
- Your Markets
- Your business and sales models
- Your competitive advantages
- Your management team
- Your use of the funds
25Section 2. Whats the Business?
- This section is focused on
- The Business Opportunity
- The Markets
- The Technology
- The Products
26Section 2. Whats the Business?
- This section must define
- a clear Vision
- clear strategies
- a well defined business model
- a dedicated, believable Mission
- a strong sense of management experience
27Section 2. Whats the Business?
- The products their value add services
- features benefits, innovation, technology
- The markets
- research data
- competition
- The customers
- who they are their needs
28Section 3 Sales Marketing
- The most important section
- 3.1 Whats the Market?
- Customer analysis their needs
- Worldwide market size trends
- Competitive strengths weaknesses
- Value creation for your products services
29Section 3 Sales Marketing
- 3.2 The Marketing Plan
- What are your marketing strategies?
- What are the data points to measure success?
- What is your price positioning why?
- What are your primary tactics in years 1 2?
- What are your primary events in year 1?
30Section 3 Sales Marketing
- 3.3 The Sales Plan
- Whats your Sales strategy?
- What standard channels will you use?
- Is there an innovative channel?
- What are your penetration tactics?
- Whats your sales model?
- Whats your hiring training plan?
- Whats your measurement reporting?
31Section 4 Engineering and RD
- What are your core technologies?
- Provide sufficient, but not numbing, detail.
- What is your development status?
- Describe your primary milestones.
- Be conservative.
- Assume development will be late.
- Detail the technical teams background.
32Section 4 Engineering and RD
- What is your strategy for future products?
- Define in text with graphics your roadmap
- Define common platforms and architectures.
- What your IP patent strategy?
- What is your IP strategy?
- If you have patents, provide a status table.
- If not, define why not in a positive manner.
33Section 5 Operations/Manufacturing
- Whats your Manufacturing strategy?
- Outsource or not?
- Why why not?
- What is core in Manufacturing?
- What are your unique capabilities
- What are your unique processes?
34Section 5 Operations/Manufacturing
- Focus on your customers in your
- Distribution strategy
- Quality strategy
- Value added services that you will employ
35Section 5 Operations/Manufacturing
- What is your Customer Support strategy?
- Customer order fulfillment tactics
- Primary objectives
- Delivery
- Response time
- Primary policies
- Outsource or not?
- Future services that you will provide?
36Section 6 Senior Management
- Management
- The 1 reason that investors do not invest.
- Experience counts first.
- Dedication counts second.
- Ability to rapidly learn is third
- Too strong an ego is a negative.
37Section 7 The Financials
- The Rule Everything Must Hang Together
- Your vision and strategies in text must tie in.
- Your market growth objectives must tie in.
- Your business and sales models must tie in.
- Your margin percentages must tie in.
- Your cost of goods must tie in.
- Your expenses must reflect standard percentages.
38Section 7 The Financials
- You need
- PLs
- 1st year by month
- 2nd year by quarter
- 3rd year by year
- Balance Sheets for each year
- Cash Flows for each year
- 3-4 pieces of paper only
39Section 7 The Financials
- You need to list your
- Primary assumptions
- Primary categories for the use of the funds
- What are the primary risks?
- Other than the normal of early stage companies
- If nothing specific, do not list any.
- Whats your exit strategy?
40Section 8 The appendices
- Provide only the compelling things
- Product data sheets for primary products
- Any critical publication.
- Do not provide resumes.
- Do not include patents.
41Where do I go for help?
- Good textbooks
- Rich, Gumpert
- Anything from HBS Press
- Anything from Inc.
- Inc Magazine inc.com
- Startup.wsj.com
- MIT Enterprise Forum workshops
42Where do I go for help?
- MIT Enterprise Forum TCN seminars
- The best local entrepreneurship schools
- MIT Sloan , Babson, HBS, Bentley
- Professional Mentors Coaches
- Venture capital investors
- The big CPA firms
- PWC, Deloitte, Ernst, Andersen.
- The big law firms
- Testa,
- INC, Fortune Small Business
43Derby Management
- Coaching
- One on One senior management
- One on Team senior management
- Strategic Planning
- Business Plan writing editing
- Fundraising
- Recruiting and replacing players
44How to find us
- Derby Management
- 20 Park Plaza
- Boston, MA 02116
- Office 617-266-9266
- Cell 617-504-4222
- jack_at_derbymanagement.com