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Archive for ◊ July, 2009 ◊

Author: admin
• Sunday, July 26th, 2009

1) Rome Wasn’t Planned, Funded, and Built in One Day

The process of putting together a coherent business plan will probably take longer that you estimate (an incoherent business plan on the other hand can take as little as 20 minutes). Along the way you will probably stop and say, “you know, we haven’t really thought our strategies out very well, have we?” or “we don’t really know our competition as well as we thought we did,” and you will take the time to hone your strategies and get up to speed on the competition before you finish the plan and present it. more…

Author: admin
• Monday, July 20th, 2009

I am often asked to assist with writing business plans. While a business plan is often needed when you are getting financing for your business, I find that most business owners don’t find them very useful. Why not? Because usually they are written from a very long term frame (typically five years) and once they are written, they are put on a shelf and never looked at again. I’m going to suggest some ways that you can get more out of your business plan. more…

Author: admin
• Tuesday, July 14th, 2009

There are many important steps to consider when developing a business plan for your company, but the first step is to fully understand the main uses of a business-plan. The four main uses of a business-plan are as follows: more…

Author: admin
• Wednesday, July 08th, 2009

How To Write Killer Business Plans – Part 2

Word Count:
575

Summary:
Keep your eye on the Executive Summary

The first thing your potential funding audience needs to be reading is your executive summary. There is a saying in the film industry that no great script is written, only rewritten, and in a way that’s how you need to treat your executive summary. It’s the most essential part of your plan because it acts like a shop window to the plan inside, and it needs to draw the potential investor in.

Why use 5 words when you can use 3? Why b…

Keywords:
business plans, business planning, business plan, business, planning

Article Body:
Keep your eye on the Executive Summary

The first thing your potential funding audience needs to be reading is your executive summary. There is a saying in the film industry that no great script is written, only rewritten, and in a way that’s how you need to treat your executive summary. It’s the most essential part of your plan because it acts like a shop window to the plan inside, and it needs to draw the potential investor in.

Why use 5 words when you can use 3? Why be vague when you can be direct? It’s got to punch above its weight class and have impact, so don’t be afraid of rewriting it until you know it off by heart.

Start with a paragraph about each important part of the overall plan, and avoid repetition. In the very first paragraphs, spell out what it is that your business does, who does it, and why it does it, and how it makes money doing it, along with the funding requirements and repayment / exit plan.

The more exact you can be, the better.

To Finish first, first you’ve got to Finish.

Knowing when to end your plan is almost an art form in itself, and whilst it’s no bad idea to have a living breathing document for internal purposes, failure to bring things to a conclusion is a real turnoff for external investors. Over half think that business plans are too long, and therefore lose interest, or simply have other pressing engagements they must deal with before they’ll ever get to the end of yours.

The flip side of this is also true: Too short and the investor will be given the impression that you haven’t given this enough thought or done enough research, or worst case scenario will have insufficient information to form a sensible investment decision. Uncertainty is the seed of doubt, and doubt is definitely not a basis for risking investment dollars.

Like the tale of Goldilocks the plan needs to be “just right”, and while each business will vary significantly, some where between 12 and 25 pages seems to be the plan porridge that gets eaten all up!

Demonstrate a Need not Greed.

Somewhere along the way you have to show that you’ve done some market research, and that you’ve thought about what this truly means in respect of your business.

The point here is to think about the niche or zone or subsector you operate in. For example the world car market is billions of dollars, but if you’re setting up a hand car-wash in your local town then this is not the size of your market.

Think about relevance and about the customer’s reality. While you might have the ambition for hand car-wash world domination, take the first step first, then the second. Show how the customer has a need or desire for your product. Don’t assume the investor will know. Spell it out.

Explain how you will fulfil that need with your products and services. Cover how the customer will find you, or how you will get your message across to them. Discuss the frequency of that need. Some sales people call this the itch cycle. Every so often you’ve just got to scratch it.

For example, everyone who has a car has a need to have it serviced at least once a year. Everyone who likes ketchup will want some more when it runs out.

Factor these buy cycles into your research.

Author: admin
• Thursday, July 02nd, 2009

Plan For Online Business Success

Word Count:
355

Summary:
“It’s not the plan that is important, it’s the planning”.
Dr Graeme Edwards

There are over 25 million small businesses in the United States. Most of them would benefit from doing business online. The Internet becoming an ever more ingrained part of our lives, and business is becoming unimaginable without it. Yet, many business owners are unsure about how to succeed online.

Proper preparation does not guarantee success, but the lack of it almost certainly will resu…

Keywords:
web site design, web design, web designer, seo, search marketing, sem

Article Body:
“It’s not the plan that is important, it’s the planning”.
Dr Graeme Edwards

There are over 25 million small businesses in the United States. Most of them would benefit from doing business online. The Internet becoming an ever more ingrained part of our lives, and business is becoming unimaginable without it. Yet, many business owners are unsure about how to succeed online.

Proper preparation does not guarantee success, but the lack of it almost certainly will result in failure. We all want to succeed when we start a business, but we often disregard the need for proper planning. The keyword is proper, not planning. If you do everything in your power to properly plan your business, you increase your chances for success.

Even if you have an existing business, your business plan should have an online business strategy. Succeeding online will require a new way of looking at your business. If you had a marketing plan for your brick and mortar business, your online presence is going to demand that you update your overall marketing strategy.

Treat you online business seriously. Many online businesses fail because people treat them like hobbies. If you only plan to work in your online business a couple of hours a week, you can’t expect great success. Doing business on the Internet requires dedication. You have to educate yourself about the many different options and technologies available. Just like with a brick and mortar business, you are only going to get out of your business what you put into it. If you are only willing to put in a few hours a week, expect to get a few hours a week of income. There are no shortcuts to earning a living online.

The biggest mistake many entrepreneurs make when starting an online business is that they don’t sit down and write up a business plan. Don’t think that writing a business plan is an exercise for first year business majors only. You should never start a business based on a great idea. An idea is just that, an idea. It is not going to help you succeed in business.