The Best Business Plan for Your Business

A well-conceived business plan does much more than merely describe what will become your business.  Your business plan must sell you first and foremost,  along with the products or services you’ll offer,  the business model you will follow,  the marketplace in which you’ll compete,  plus reasonable estimates of start-up and monthly operating expenses.  If outside funding is required,  then the plan must convince lenders or investors that you are prepared and qualified to build a significantly profitable enterprise.  A good business plan will do the following:

  • Define the business mission
  • Describe the products and services
  • Identify target customers
  • Identify and evaluate major competitors
  • Describe the business environment
  • Detail the business model
  • Describe the business strategy
  • Detail the marketing plan
  • Demonstrate how a profit will be made
  • Provide an exit strategy

Here are business plan options for three scenarios:

The Executive Summary

An Executive Summary is a condensed version of a full-dress business plan and often runs to about 5-10 pages in length.  When written well,  the Executive Summary nevertheless functions as effectively as a traditional business plan.

It is a useful tool for Freelancers who will open a consultancy and will have relatively modest start-up costs and monthly operating expenses and are savvy enough to appreciate the value of a road map to launch their venture.  It is not a business plan option for those who will approach lending institutions or investors.

The Executive Summary states the business mission,  describes the products/services,  describes the primary clients and competitors and details the business strategy,  business model,  marketing plan and relevant financial data.  To be useful,  the document must fully integrate that information and demonstrate how the business will become profitable.

The Operational Business Plan

An Operational Business Plan is produced by an existing business with several years’ performance history,  usually with a goal to either apply for business expansion capital or prepare for the sale of the company.  Operational Business Plans may also be used to upgrade and streamline how a business runs,  functioning as a guide for the management team.

The Operational Business Plan delves into great detail about production,  customers,  competitors,  the marketplace and business environment,  sales distribution channels,  management and staffing.  Historical data are available and five years of financial statements are typically included,  along with financial projections that forecast the company’s expected performance over the next three years.

The business plan to attract investors

When outside investment is sought,  it goes without saying that the potential for strong profits must be demonstrated.  The more money that is requested,  the bigger the promised profits must be and the more quickly realized.  The break-even statement,  which shows at what point in time the business will go into the black,  along with credible financial assumptions and projections,  are critical in this scenario.

If the business is an existing one,  the financial projections must appear to be attainable,  based on the five year financial history given.  Make sure that your business and personal credit scores are 700+,  or you won’t see a dime from a bank.

Venture capitalists and angel investors may be somewhat more forgiving of a less than perfect credit rating if your business concept and model are extraordinary.  Beta test the product/service and business model with target customers to verify demand for what you intend to sell and your ability to efficiently deliver the goods to the marketplace.

For VCs, the potential for big profits is king.  They are in it for the pot of gold that comes when the company goes public and stock is offered.  Angels are not totally dissimilar to VCs,  but they are drawn to an entrepreneur’s vision and passion in addition to the pay-off.  That’s why they’re called angels!

Thanks for reading,

Kim

What’s Up With Your Strategy?

“The most serious mistakes are not made as a result of wrong answers.  The truly dangerous thing is asking the wrong questions”.

–Peter Drucker

Freelancer Friend,  if you are not familiar with Peter Drucker (1909-2005),  please allow me to introduce you to but a small serving of his genius.  Peter Drucker was considered the father of modern management.  In 1971,  he launched one of the nation’s first executive MBA programs for working professionals,  located at Claremont Graduate University in Claremont, CA.  From the 1940s until about 2002,  Drucker produced groundbreaking work on business practice and strategy.  He was the Big Kahuna and he wrote several Holy Grails. 

Drucker was also known to be a serious skeptic of macroeconomic theory,  believing that economists of all stripes failed to explain significant aspects of modern economies (housing bubble, anyone?).  In other words,  if the folks at the Federal Reserve had followed Drucker’s wisdom and reined in the Wall Street masters of the universe,  the world’s economy would be in much better shape today.

Recently,  I found the above quotation plus a list of reality-checking questions that every Freelancer and business owner is advised to ponder and answer at least once a year.  The questions are quite simple and would appear to be no-brainers,  yet they are surprisingly effective at revealing the business strategies that your management team would be wise to develop and implement.

The first two questions require your team to set priorities and the last two require that you assess the organization’s ability to focus on those priorities by choosing meaningful performance measurements.

1.   Who is your primary customer?

It always comes around to identifying the customer,  does it not?  Identifying the natural customers for your products and services is the ultimate make-or-break realization for all business entities,  whether one makes a few hundred dollars during winter by shoveling snow from front stairs and driveways,  or a few million dollars from running a multinational corporation.  Only when the ideal customers have been identified is it possible to develop a marketing strategy that is a guide for resource allocation (e.g., equipment or PR campaigns),  sales distribution channels,  product positioning and branding strategies,  pricing,  creation of a sales pitch,  the networking strategy,  and so on.

2.   What business performance variables are you tracking?

Whatever yardsticks you select to measure business performance,  make sure they provide an accurate assessment of what is happening.  A sharp bookkeeper or accountant,  one with a background in financial analysis,  can tell you which numbers on your profit & loss statement and balance sheet make sense for you to watch and why that is so.  Freelancers probably want to pay attention to net revenue generated,  new business,  repeat business and the number of projects contracted.

3.   What strategic boundaries have you set?

Implementing a strategy involves risk.  Any strategy could lead the business to a place where you’d rather not go.  Know your core values,  priorities and preferences.  Think about what your customers expect and will accept from your organization.  It may be that you decide to take a pass on a golden opportunity because you just don’t want to offer that service or work that hard.  As the late,  great fashion arbiter Diana Vreeland said,  elegance is refusal.

4.   What strategic uncertainties are keeping you awake at night?

The game is all about whether your strategies work and for how many quarters will they work.  Unfortunately,  there is no silver bullet that can zero in on the weaknesses of your business strategies.  At some point,  customer needs and preferences change,  technology marches forward,  or some other event compels you and your management team to reboot dearly held business assumptions and approaches.  In order to adapt successfully,  it is necessary to constantly monitor the yardsticks established in Question 2.

Thanks for reading,

Kim

Seven Resolutions for 2011 Part 2 of 2

Here are the remaining four resolutions that should help you construct the framework for a prosperous year.  Nothing especially novel or profound is being suggested.  To the contrary,  I’ve presented nothing that you don’t already know.  Consider these resolutions to be  a gentle reminder.  You decide which deserve follow-up. 

4.   Revisit your networking  strategy

Get the most out of networking by following a basic agenda,  one that keeps you focused on the real purpose for being there and takes the experience beyond just a random meet & greet.  This agenda works best face to face,  but it can also be used when engaging in online social networking.  The recipe is:  Get a clientGet a referralGet educated.  In other words,  when you’re out there networking,  do your best to get something tangible.  At the very least,  get some information that might help you land a client or receive a referral.  Sweeten the pot for those whom you’d like to know better by offering them something of similar value,  to make helping you worth their while.  Networking flows best on a two-way street.  With this criteria  as a guide,  consider which social networking platforms you use and why you use them.  Is the ROI worth the time spent to keep up?  Next,  consider if you are participating in the right amount of face to face networking and assess the quality of your usual haunts.  How much time and money have you spent at these events and how has being in those rooms impacted your billable hours?

5.   Review your client list

Which clients pay you the most money?  Can you make that happen again this year?  From which clients might you be able to get more money?  Can you dare to raise your hourly rate or project fee for any of them?  Conversely,  which clients are more trouble than they are worth,  high maintenance headaches who do not pay enough to make up for the misery incurred?  Are there clients you should fire?

6.   Develop a prospect list

Who is your dream client?  It’s time to devise a strategy to reel in that big fish.  Identify your decision maker,  or key influencers who might get you in the door.  Maybe you know a colleague who can either make an introduction to the right person or tell you at which networking activities you could meet whom you need to meet?  Make a plan.

7.   Review professional development needs

Will enrolling in graduate school,  taking a seminar or earning a certification increase your credibility and make your services more marketable?  Is there a professional organization that would benefit you,  one that offers good peer networking and useful skills updates? Ask around.

Thanks for reading,

Kim

Seven Resolutions for 2011 Part 1 of 2

Happy New Year!  You had to see this coming,  so here we go with the resolutions.  We’re at the top of the year and it’s a time-honored tradition to look forward and plan to succeed.  I hope the list that I’ve pulled together inspires you to get busy.

1.   Set financial goals  

Whether you’re 35 or 55,  financial goals are a must.  Establishing these goals as a Freelancer presents a  unique challenge,  because our incomes are often neither predictable nor secure.  A fickle revenue stream makes adequate planning even more of an imperative.  We must get our arms around the money thing and take as much control as possible.  Our ability to live a comfortable life throughout our lives depends on it.  The idea is to avoid going broke,  especially in the elder years.  Those with a  steadily employed spouse have a huge financial advantage,  while those who are single or married to a fellow Freelancer have more variables and hence  a more challenging mountain to climb.  Consider what you want your balance sheet to look like in five years and make an appointment to discuss your financial wish list with your accountant.

2.   Develop a budget  

You may be expert at monitoring and tracking expenses,  but developing a budget encourages one to anticipate the year’s fixed and variable financial obligations,  as well as revenue that is likely to be generated.  One budgeting objective can be to prepare for the inevitable peaks and valleys in a Freelancer’s revenue stream.  When do you typically bill the most hours and when the least?  Which annual conferences do you like to attend,  when and where are they held and what is the cost?  Where and when is it (or might it be) advantageous to advertise?  Have you been mulling over the idea of making upgrades in certain of your marketing materials?  What about your credit needs—do you need to apply for another card to help float strategic expenses,  or can you cancel one?  When can you make contributions to your retirement fund and what should that amount be?  Can you take a vacation this year,  when can you take it and how much can you spend?  The idea is to figure out how to pay for what you must do and also cover a couple of items from your wish list,  to reward yourself.

3.   Review business priorities  

Should you form a strategic partnership,  to give your business entrée to a new segment of your market?  Should you aim to sign more new clients,  or focus on obtaining repeat business from previous clients?  Or would it be wiser to try wringing more billable hours out of your current roster?  Which clients might be most amenable to which strategy?  Also,  should you do more teaching and/or speaking this year? Which institutions will benefit your reputation and client list the most?

I’ll be back to complete the list of resolutions next week. 

Thanks for reading,

Kim