|
Business Plan
Mistakes
By Palo
Alto Software, Inc.
Often you may hear about what a business plan consists of. While
including the necessary items is very important, you also want to
make sure you don't commit any of the following common business plan
mistakes:
1. Putting it
off.
Don't wait to write a plan until you absolutely have to. Too many
businesses make business plans only when they have no choice in the
matter. Unless the bank or the investors want a plan, there is no
plan.
Don't wait to
write your plan until you think you'll have enough time.
"There's not enough time for a plan," business people say.
"I can't plan. I'm too busy getting things done." The
busier you are, the more you need to plan. If you are always putting
out fires, you should build firebreaks or a sprinkler system. You
can lose the whole forest for paying too much attention to the
individual burning trees.
2. Cash flow
casualness.
Cash flow is more important than sales, profits, or anything else in
the business plan, but most people think in terms of profits instead
of cash. When you and your friends imagine a new business, you think
of what it would cost to make the product, what you could sell it
for, and what the profits per unit might be. We are trained to think
of business as sales minus costs and expenses, which equal profits.
Unfortunately, we don't spend the profits in a business. We spend
cash. So understanding cash flow is critical. If you have only one
table in your business plan, make it the cash flow table.
3. Idea
inflation.
Plans don't sell new business ideas to investors. People do. The
plan, though necessary, is only a way to present information.
Investors invest in people, not ideas.
Don't
overestimate the importance of the idea, particularly the importance
of the uniqueness of the idea. You don't need a great idea to start
a business; you need time, money, perseverance, common sense, and so
forth. Very few successful businesses are based entirely on new
ideas. A new idea is much harder to sell than an existing one,
because people don't understand a new idea and they are often unsure
if it will work.
4. Fear and
dread.
Doing a business plan isn't as hard as you think. You don't have to
write a doctoral thesis or a novel. There are good books to help,
many advisors among the Small Business Development Centers (SBDCs),
business schools, and there is software available to help you (such
as Business Plan Pro, and others).
5. Spongy,
vague goals.
Leave out the vague and the meaningless babble of business phrases
(such as "being the best") because they are simply hype.
Remember that the objective of a plan is its results, and for
results, you need tracking and follow up. You need specific dates,
management responsibilities, budgets, and milestones. Then you can
follow up. No matter how well thought out or brilliantly presented,
it means nothing unless it produces results.
6. One size
fits all
Tailor your business plan to its real business purpose. Business
plans can be different things: they are often just sales documents
to sell an idea for a new business. They can be detailed action
plans, financial plans, marketing plans, and even personnel plans.
They can be used to start a business, or just run a business better.
7. Diluted
priorities.
Remember, strategy is focus. A priority list with 3-4 items is
focus. A priority list with 20 items is something else, certainly
not strategic, and rarely if ever effective. The more items on the
list, the less the importance of each.
8.
Hockey-stick shaped growth projections.
Have projections that are conservative so you can defend them. When
in doubt, be less optimistic.
|