Why do you want a business plan? You already know the obvious
reasons, but there are so many other good reasons to create a business plan that many business owners don't know
about. So, just for a change, let's take a look at the less obvious reasons
first and finish with the ones you probably already know about.
15. Set specific objectives for managers. Good management requires setting specific
objectives and then tracking and following up. I'm surprised how many existing
businesses manage without a plan. How do they establish what's supposed to
happen? In truth, you're really just taking a short cut and planning in your
head--and good for you if you can do it--but as your business grows you want to
organize and plan better, and communicate the priorities better. Be strategic.
Develop a plan; don't just wing it.
14. Share your strategy, priorities and specify action points
with your spouse, partner or significant other. Your business life goes by so quickly: a rush of
answering phone calls, putting out fliers, etc. Don't the other people in your
business life need to know what's supposed to be happening? Don't you want them
to know?
13. Deal with displacement. Displacement is probably by far the most
important practical business concept you've never heard of. It goes like this:
"Whatever you do is something else you don't do." Displacement lives
at the heart of all small-business strategy. At least most people have never
heard of it.
11. Hire new people. This is another new obligation (a fixed cost)
that increases your risk. How will new people help your business grow and
prosper? What exactly are they supposed to be doing? The rationale for hiring
should be in your business plan.
10. Decide whether you need new assets, how many, and whether to
buy or lease them. Use your
business plan to help decide what's going to happen in the long term, which
should be an important input to the classic make vs. buy. How long will this
important purchase last in your plan?
9. Share and explain business objectives with your management
team, employees and new hires. Make selected portions of your business plan
part of your new employee training.
8. Develop new business alliances. Use your plan to set targets for new alliances,
and selected portions of your plan to communicate with those alliances.
7. Deal with professionals. Share selected highlights or your plans with
your attorneys and accountants, and, if this is relevant to you, consultants.
6. Sell your business. Usually the business plan is a very important
part of selling the business. Help buyers understand what you have, what it's
worth and why they want it.
5. Valuation of the business for formal transactions related to
divorce, inheritance, estate planning and tax issues. Valuation is the term for establishing how much
your business is worth. Usually that takes a business plan, as well as a
professional with experience. The plan tells the valuation expert what your
business is doing, when, why and how much that will cost and how much it will
produce.
4. Create a new business. Use a plan to establish the right steps to
starting a new business, including what you need to do, what resources will be
required, and what you expect to happen.
3. Seek investment for a business, whether it's a startup or
not. Investors need to see a business plan before they decide whether
or not to invest. They'll expect the plan to cover all the main points.
2. Back up a business loan application. Like investors, lenders want to see the plan and
will expect the plan to cover the main points.
1. Grow your existing business. Establish strategy and allocate resources
according to strategic priority. You can find more information about growing
your business with a business plan by reading "Existing Companies Need
Planning, Too"
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