Business Plan
When venture capitalists are asked what they consider most carefully when
deciding whether or not to fund a new venture, they consistently respond: “We
are most concerned with the quality of the management team and the quality of
the business plan.”
The business plan is an important component of a business start-up. It forces
the business owner and his/her management team to reflect seriously on the
goals of their venture and the steps necessary to launch and maintain it
successfully. The very act of constructing a business plan offers an important
learning experience to the business owner, because it requires him/her to take a
comprehensive view of all aspects of the new venture: organizational, financial,
marketing/sales, legal, operational, and IT.
Outside investors find the business plan to be important because it offers
them a revealing picture of how the new venture will be organized and what it will
achieve. Of equal importance, the business plan enables them to determine how
effective the owner and his/her management team will be in launching and
maintaining the venture. If the business plan is poorly written, inconsistent, and
unrealistic, then the investors will not fund the venture, because they know that it
will likely fail. If you cannot write a compelling business plan, then it is unlikely
that you will be able to establish a viable business. On the other hand, a wellcrafted,
compelling, and realistic business clan suggests that the owner and
his/her management team know what they are doing.
This assignment has you put together a short business plan. In constructing
it, follow the outline provided later in this guide. As you organize and write it,
keep reminding yourself that the point of the document is to force you to think
through the most significant issues needed to launch and maintain the business
successfully, and to convince investors to provide you with funds because you
have a good money-making idea and know what you are doing.
Selecting a business venture
Write a business plan for one of the two following ventures:
· Option A. Expanding a one-store operation to a two-store operation
Assume you currently run a small retailing business in the lobby of a
large office building. Your store occupies 1000 square feet of space. You
spend fifty hours a week at the store and hire two employees, each of
whom spends thirty hours a week at the store. Your annual revenues are
between $150,000 – $300,000 a year. The products you sell are a mixed
bag of items. Basically, you stock up with items that occupants of the
office building will want, including snacks, pre-wrapped sandwiches,
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bottled/canned beverages, greeting cards, newspapers, paperback books,
and small gift items that the building’s tenants might find attractive.
A new office building will open two blocks away from the building you
now occupy. You would like to expand your business to that building. In
fact, you begin to dream that you can establish a chain of such stores in
large buildings downtown. You have even cooked up a name for the
potential chain, “Buster’s” (named after your pet Labrador retriever).
At this point, you are not sure how you want to fund the expansion. You
need to put together a business plan to develop a sense of the financial
requirements of the new operation. You may decide to fund it using your
savings and by taking out a second mortgage on your house. Three other
options are to borrow money from the bank, borrow money from friends
and family, or to have friends/family assume an equity role in your
business as investors. In any event, your business case would be used to
borrow the money or to attract investors.
Write a business plan that describes this proposed venture.
Outline of the Business Plan Document
In the world of real business, business plans can take on a variety of shapes
and sizes. They may range in length from a few pages to hundreds of pages,
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depending on the nature of the venture. They can be filled with detailed financial
and marketing data, or simply a brief sketch of financial and marketing
requirements – depending on how much data are available. They can be highly
structured or casual. There is no one best way to structure a business plan.
In this assignment, you should keep the business plan short: 10-15 pages of
text, typed single-spaced, using 12-point font. Charts and tables are extra. You
should also employ the following outline, which captures the chief elements of
typical business plans:
1) Introduction and brief description of the venture
a) Introduction (e.g., “This business plan describes a proposed venture to
expand Buster’s from a one-store to two-store operation.”)
b) Description of the business (“Buster’s is a small store located in the lobby
of a large office building …”)
c) Business aspirations (e.g., “Ultimately, we hope to expand Buster’s so that
it becomes a chain of 10-15 stores situated in downtown office buildings.”)
2) Organization of the business and key players (e.g., “Marsha Jones is
owner and principal manager of Buster’s. The current store employees two
people, each of whom works at the store 30 hours a week … The proposed
store will be managed by Ms. Jones …”)
a) Owner(s) – role(s) and qualifications
b) Company legal structure (e.g., sole proprietorship, partnership, LLP, SCorporation,
C-corporation)
c) Management team – roles and qualifications
d) Employees – roles and qualifications
e) Contractors/vendors (as appropriate) – roles and qualifications
3) Financials
a) Anticipated operating costs of the new business (e.g.,What are the
anticipated expenses of operating the business in a typical month?)
b) Anticipated investment requirements to launch the new venture (e.g.,
furnishing facilities, inventory purchases, meeting payroll during the first
six months of operation)
c) Anticipated revenue
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d) Pro-forma cash flow projection for the first year of operation
REVENUES Month 1 Month 2 Month 3 Month 4 Etc.
Rev source A
Rev source B
Etc.
TOTAL REV
COSTS
Rent
Payroll
Materials
Etc.
TOTAL COST
NETCASH
FLOW
e) Payback point (taken from the pro forma cash flow statement)
f) Anticipated return on investment from the perspective of three years into
the venture
4) Marketing/Sales
a) Summary of a marketing/sales strategy
b) Marketing/sales requirements for the business
i) Price of goods/services
ii) Product
iii) Promotion
iv) Place
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c) Competition
5) Operations
a) Location of the business
b) How the business will be operated (e.g., hours of operation, procedures to
produce goods/services, special operations issues)
6) Legal and sundry issues
a) Legal and related issues that need to be addressed (e.g., Liability,
intellectual property, structuring the business, commercial law issues, etc.)
b) How legal issues will be handled (e.g., in-house attorney, use of outside
legal services)
7) Major challenges
a) A realistic assessment of the challenges facing the new venture
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