Business Plan
Business Plan
Business Plan
Entrepreneurship Program
Center for Entrepreneurship & Innovation
University of Florida
http://warrington.ufl.edu/centers/cei/
Revised and Updated January 2019
2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015,
2016, 2017, 2019 Michael H. Morris
1
Table of Contents
Page
Prof. M. Morris
A business plan is not a checklist, where you address sections one by one. It is a living,
breathing document. You are telling a story, and bringing a venture to life. It is about a
company, not a product or an idea. It is about how that company can become a viable ongoing
entity. A viable company has many facets, and these are reflected in the various sections of the
plan. Most critically, the sections are highly interdependent. They must be internally consistent
and “hang together”. As you subsequently make changes to one section, you will find yourself
having to go back and make adjustments to a number of other sections.
Your ideas have flaws. It is the discipline of the plan that will help you see critical flaws in your
idea, in your target market, how you plan to price, your cost requirements, your operational
approach, your marketing methods, and so forth. And no matter what you think, there are
critical flaws. You will have to continually adapt as you learn more about this business and the
industry within which it will operate. Using the plan as a framework, it will help you to ‘tweak’
or adjust aspects of what you propose to do in ways that make the venture more viable.
A business plan is also an objective and fact-based document. Address the upside and the
downside. Make clear you understand what can go wrong. Be conservative. And importantly,
the plan is not written in first person, so be sure to eliminate all use of ‘I’, ‘We’, ‘Our’, and ‘Us’.
Use your company name to refer to the business.
It is critical that you organize your team (or yourself if doing it alone) in a logical fashion. If you
divide sections among team members, some sections require multiple people or a lot more effort
for a number of weeks, others might only require a single person and can be accomplished in a
shorter time period. Complete the financials last, but finish the economics fairly early in the
process. The market section will be the hardest and take the longest. You should start on it right
away. A logical approach is to break the overall plan down into THREE STAGES.
First, attack four key sections: the Industry, the Company/Concept/Products, the Market,
and Economics (think of this as stage one); These sections will lay out the nature of the
opportunity and how you are going to capitalize on it;
Then, go after the Marketing, Design and Development, Operations, and Management
Team sections (stage two); These sections really get at the nitty-gritty of how you will
make things operational;
Finally, address the Risks and Assumptions, Timetable, Financials and the Offering or
Deal (stage three). Here you focus on implementation, what can go wrong, how the
business will perform, and how much money is needed.
Be sure that you have someone assigned to ensure the internal consistency among sections in the
final document.
Ultimately, write the plan for yourself, not for a course, an instructor, or a competition. It will be
an invaluable part of your professional portfolio, and will give you a skill set that you can use for
the rest of your professional life. You will refer back to it more often than you might think no
matter whether you start your venture.
http://warrington.ufl.edu/centers/cei/businessPlan/
and
http://businesslibrary.uflib.ufl.edu/cei
If you limit your search to looking on the web through Google or some other search engine, you
will miss much of the best research that will support your venture. In addition to the sites
above, it is vital that you use the library and do a search using ABI-Inform (on UF website, click
Research, then Library, then Databases, then Business and Management, then ABI-Inform. Then
enter key words that relate to your venture. There are many rich information sources, from
Mintel Reports and IBISWorld to government publications such as County Business Patterns.
The librarians can be extremely helpful. You are especially encouraged to seek help from the
business librarian. It is also vital that you get out in the field and talk to suppliers, trade
associations, customers, competitors, and potential investors. They will open your eyes to
things that you simply had not considered. Remember that a business plan is not a term paper, so
references should be used sparingly, but are needed to support claims. A section called
‘references’ or ‘key sources’ must appear at the back of the plan. Always provide citations for
key numbers or research that support your case. When conducting interviews, cite the date and
place of the interview in your ‘references’ section.
Contact Dr. Kristin Joos, coordinator of CEI's Social Entrepreneurship & Sustainability Initiative
(kristin.joos@warrington.ufl.edu), for more information on social ventures.
REQUIRED STRUCTURE:
AN OUTLINE OF YOUR BUSINESS PLAN
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
Opportunity Statement
Business Concept and Product or Service
Description of the Target Market
Competitive Advantage
Essence of Marketing Approach
Economics and Breakeven
Technology and Operational Issues
The Team
Financial Highlights
Financing Needs and How the Entrepreneur or Team Proposes to Raise the Money
I. THE INDUSTRY
A. Define Industry, Its Size and Growth Rate
B. Industry Structure
C. Industry Trends
D. Key Success Factors
Please note: As a general rule, plans are much longer with the first draft, and then are edited
down to a content-rich but streamlined final version. Page length is determined by the audience
for the plan, but generally ranges from 25-35 pages, excluding appendices. For the UF Big Ideas
Competition, plans should not exceed 35 pages plus 15 pages of appendices (total of 50 pages).
Plans over 60 pages will not be read (at least past page 60).
Bring the plan alive. One of the worst things you can do is to write a plan that consists of page
after page of unbroken text. Use headings, sub-headings, and sub-sub-heading to break up the
text. Just as critically, use tables and figures (exhibits) to break up the text, to illustrate key
points, and to bring the plan to life. It is often possible to significantly shorten the text in a given
section by using a couple of tables and figures. A picture or diagram can tell a vivid story. Be
sure every table and figure is numbered, titled, and referred to in the text.
Although this is the first section of the plan, the Executive Summary is the last section that you write. The
Executive Summary concisely summarizes the essence of the business and the key decisions made by
the entrepreneurial team in ten key areas from your plan. It is not merely an abbreviated business
plan. The reader should get a clear, basic picture of the business, and be enticed to want to read more.
Many entrepreneurs or teams fail to consider adequately their markets, their customers and a business
model that will enable them to achieve success. Instead they often get wrapped up in an interesting
technology or product, which is not the same thing as an attractive business. The questions below will
help you focus on the aspects of your executive summary that are relevant to the business plan. These are
some initial considerations that first time readers (venture capitalists, banks, business plan judges, etc.)
look at before going on to evaluate the members of the team and the soundness of your financial
projections. Make sure that your executive summary provides answers to these questions in addition to
giving the reader an overview of the highlights from your business plan for the new venture.
Opportunity Statement:
What is the nature and size of the opportunity or problem? (the underlying need )
What forces are creating the opportunity?
Why is the opportunity now?
How would you describe the business to a potential investor, team member, or customer if you
had only a short elevator ride to share together? Make sure you have a succinct and powerful way
to express your business concept.
What is unique about this venture?
Develop a brief concept statement for the product or service that can be shown to potential
customers.
How will the product be used? What are some unique features? What existing problem(s) will
you solve with your service or product offering? What are the primary benefits to customers?
How does your solution improve or replace current offerings?
Competitive Advantage:
What special knowledge or technology do you possess and how will you protect it?
What are the barriers to entry? Who will the competitors be?
How will your service or product compare to those of your competitors in terms of usefulness,
cost, styling, ergonomics, time-to-market, strategic alliances, technological innovations,
compatibility with related product, etc?
The Team:
Economics:
Financial Highlights:
Financial Need:
GENERAL NOTE: From here onwards, we cover everything that could go into each section of
the plan in a perfect world. As the sections are written to describe any and all types of ventures,
some issues may not fit your plan, and others may be more complex given the data and resources
you have at hand. Nonetheless, do your best to address all the issues that apply.
The “industry” refers to the larger landscape, as in the “computer hardware wholesale industry” or the “card and gift
retail industry” or the “architectural services industry”. The focus here is on what is happening in, and the relative
attractiveness of, the industry as a whole. You are looking at the entire industry in the U.S. or globally. As such, this
section does not involve any description of your company or your local market. This section needs to include the
following information:
Summarize the industry in which the proposed business will operate. Give the relevant SIC / NAICS code
for the industry. What are the key components of segments of the industry?
Discuss briefly industry size (in dollars) and annual growth rate (%); Where is the industry in its life cycle--
-emerging, early growth, rapid growth, early maturity, maturity, decline?
Discuss the structure of the industry at present. How concentrated or fragmented is the industry? How
many players are there, and how many are large versus small? Who are the largest and most important
players in the industry? Outline Porter’s 5 forces (barriers to entry, bargaining power of suppliers,
bargaining power of distributors and customers, effective substitutes and intensity of competitive rivalry)
and draw conclusions. If appropriate (when there are different kinds of firms that contribute to how the
industry operates), describe the value chain.
Highlight key trends in the industry. These can be found in the trade literature. Are costs going down or
up? What about prices? Discuss any new products or developments, the rate of new product development,
new markets and customers, new selling approaches, new pricing methods, new requirements or
regulations, new entrants and exits, new technologies, and any other national or economic trends and
factors that could affect the venture’s business positively or negatively.
Determine the key success factors for the industry and draw conclusions. What are the winners able to do
consistently that the losers or also-rans to not do?
Find standard financial ratios for the industry and summarize key ones.
Now the focus turns to your own venture. First outline the nature of the entity you plan to create and where you are
in that process, then capture the essence of your business concept, then detail the products and services you
anticipate selling, and then talk about your entry approach and your vision for growth over the next five years.
What form will the company take (e.g., partnership, S-corporation, LLC, etc.), where will it be based, and
when will it commence operations?
Briefly summarize the company history, how the concept was discovered, as well as the current status of
the company. Spell out the mission and main objectives of the company:
Describe specifically the concept behind the business (i.e. your unique value proposition…the core
benefits you will provide to a user, the need or pain you will address)
Describe each product or service you will be selling (what it is and isn’t – describe the product fully and
provide pictures or graphics if you can). Begin to sell your idea here by generating some excitement about
your product or service.
Discuss the application (what it does) of the product or service and describe the primary end use as well as
any significant secondary applications (who will use it and why).
Provide a diagram of the intended depth and breadth of your product/service mix and which products will
likely generate the lion’s share of the revenue
Emphasize any unique features of the product or service and how these will create or add significant value;
also, highlight any differences between what is currently on the market and what you will offer that will
account for your market penetration. Be sure to describe how value will be added and the payback period to
the customer. More specifically, discuss how many months it will take for the customer to cover the initial
purchase price of the product or service as a result of its time, cost or productivity improvements. Describe
the competitive strengths and how it differentiates you from competitors.
Include a description of any possible drawbacks (including obsolescence or ease of someone else copying
the product or service.
Discuss any head start you might have that would enable you to achieve a favored or entrenched position in
the industry e.g. proprietary rights (patents, copyrights, trade secrets or non-compete agreements. Describe
the key factors that dictate the success of your product/service. Describe any features of the product or
service that give it an “unfair” advantage over the competition e.g. proprietary knowledge or skills.
Discuss any opportunities for the expansion of the product line or the development of related products or
services. Emphasize opportunities and explain how you will take advantage of them.
This section of the business plan is one of the most difficult to prepare, yet it is arguably the most important. Other
sections of the business plan depend on the market research and analysis presented here. Because of the importance
of market analysis and the critical dependence of other parts of the plan on the information, prepare this section of
the business plan with great attention to detail. Take enough time to do this section thoroughly and check alternative
sources of market data.
This section should convince the reader or investor that you truly know your customers. It should convince the
reader that your product or service a) will have a substantial market opportunity; and b) can achieve sales in the face
of competition. For example, the predicted sales levels directly influence such factors as the size of the production
operation, the marketing plan, and the amount of debt and equity capital you will require. Yet most entrepreneurs
seem to have great difficulty preparing and presenting market research and analyses that show that their ventures’
sales estimates are sound and attainable. You must talk with prospective customers. Also, consult industry
publications, trade associations, and articles in trade magazines to understand how the industry defines, identifies
and segments its customers. Then apply yourself creatively by integrating the information in a unique way.
Provide a very specific definition of your relevant market. Where will 90% of your customers come from?
What are the parameters or boundaries that you are using to define the market in which you will operate?
Discuss who the customers for the product(s) or service(s) are or will be. Provide general demographics for
the customer base in your defined market (note: below you will get into segmentation of this market and
descriptors of segments).
Make it clear if you must serve more than one market (e.g., a website that must sell both to advertisers and
to customers). Include separate discussions of the issues below for each market.
For your defined market, estimate market size and potential in dollars and units. You will need to “invent a
methodology” for making these estimates based on the kinds of data you are able to fine.
Note the key assumptions that your projections are based upon.
If relevant, estimate the size of the primary and selective demand gaps.
Describe the potential annual growth rate for at least three years of the total market for your product(s) or
service(s) for each major customer group, region, or country, as appropriate.
Discuss the major factors affecting customer sales growth (e.g., changing needs, socioeconomic trends,
government policy, interest rates, population shifts) and review previous trends in the market.
C. Buyer Behavior:
Here you want to get into who buys, when, why, where, what and how they buy.
Who is the actual purchase decision-maker? Does anyone else get involved in the buying decision-process?
What are the key stages or steps in the customer’s buying process and what happens in each stage?
Describe customers’ purchase decision processes, including the bases on which they make buying decisions
(e.g., price, quality, comfort, styles, timing, delivery, training, service, personal recommendations, political
pressures, etc.) and why they might change from current suppliers.
How long is the customer’s buying process (starting from when they have never heard of your product and
ending with a purchase and then a satisfactory consumption experience).
Who are the major purchasers of the products or services in each market segment? Where are they located?
Indicate whether this is a high, medium or low involvement purchase and draw implications.
Indicate whether customers are difficult to reach and how strong their loyalties and switching costs are
likely to be toward existing solutions.
Discuss interviews you have had with users of this product or service category.
List any orders, contracts, or letters of commitment that you have in hand. These are the most powerful data
you can provide. List any potential customers who have expressed an interest in the product(s) or service(s)
and indicate why. Indicate how quickly you believe your product or service will be accepted in the market.
Which are the twenty percent of customers likely to account for eighty percent of your revenue? List and
describe your five potentially largest customers. What percentage of your sales do they represent?
In what way are customers dissatisfied with current offerings in the market place or what emerging
customer groups are being ignored?
Discuss how your defined market can be further broken down into specific market segments. Be creative
and insightful in describing the existing segments.
Note that potential customers need to be classified by relatively homogeneous groups having common
needs and/or buying behaviors. What characteristics define your target customers (demographics,
psychographics, benefits sought, information sources utilized, product usage rate, etc.).
Which segments represent the greatest sales potential?
Include a table summarizing the various segments. Indicate which segments you will be prioritizing.
Identify direct and indirect (and potential) competitors. DO NOT INDICATE THAT THERE IS NO
COMPETITION. Make a realistic assessment of their strengths and weaknesses. Discuss the 3 or 4 key
competitors and why customers buy from them, and determine why customers might leave them.
Discuss the current advantages and disadvantages of competitor products and the extent to which they are
not meeting customer needs. IN A TABLE, compare also important attributes such as quality, price,
performance, delivery, timing, service, warranties, and pertinent features of your product/service with those
of competitors. Indicate who are the service, pricing, performance, cost, and quality leaders.
Are there any substitute and/or alternative products/ services that compete for the same share of the
customer’s wallet? What are they and why will be customers buy from you instead?
Compare competing and substitute products or services on the basis of production cost advantages, scale
advantages, distribution channel advantages, and resources.
Compare the fundamental value that is added or created by your product or service, in terms of economic
benefits to the customer and to your competitors.
Why aren’t competitors or other firms doing what you will be doing? Discuss whether competitors are
simply sluggish or non-responsive, lacking key capabilities, or are asleep at the wheel.
Discuss why any companies have entered or dropped out of the market in recent years.
From what you know about competitors’ operations, explain why they are vulnerable and why you can
capture a share of their business. What makes you think it will be possible to compete with them.
Put together a sales forecast (month to month for first year and then annual for next two years). Based on
a) the advantages of your product or service, b) the market size and potential, c) the competition and their
strengths, d) the general trends in industry sales in recent years, and e) the aggressiveness of your
marketing efforts, estimate your sales in units and dollars and the share of the market you will acquire in
each of the next three years. Show assumptions used in your calculations. DO NOT INDICATE THAT IT
IS A $100 MILLION MARKET AND THAT YOU ONLY HAVE TO CAPTURE EIGHT TENTHS OF
ONE PERCENT TO BREAK EVEN--NO ONE WILL BELIEVE YOU!
Remember, the assumptions used to estimate market share and sales need to be clearly stated.
Explain how you will continue to evaluate your target markets so as to assess customer needs and service
requirements and to guide product-improvement and new-product development, plan for expansion of your
facilities, and guide pricing decisions. Explain how you make the necessary strategic changes in your plan.
This section addresses the basic logic of how profits are earned in your business as well as the sales level required to
breakeven. . Two companies in the same industry might make profit in very different ways. Will this be a high
margin, low volume business with low fixed costs? Will it be a low margin, high volume business where the cost
structure is predominantly variable? The relative attractiveness of your economic model is determined. Hence, a
business with low volumes, low margins, high fixed costs (operating leverage) and a single revenue driver having
fixed pricing is a very unattractive venture. It cannot likely make money. The story begins, however, by identifying
your sources of revenue and how much margin you make on each of them.
Summarize the major revenue drivers (major products and service categories or lines) of the business and
proportionately where you expect to make your money.
Describe the size of the overall gross margins (i.e., selling price less cost of goods sold or variable costs)
and margins the for each of the major revenue drivers in the business. Where you have multiple products
in a given revenue driver category, calculate the contribution margin for each product and take an average
(or just use the margin for the most typical product that falls within that revenue driver). Then determine
the weighted average contribution margins by weighting the individual contribution margins of each
revenue driver based on the percentage of total sales expected to come from that revenue driver. Include
results of your overall contribution analysis.
In a table, provide a detailed summary of fixed and variable costs, in dollars and as a percentage of total
costs, for the venture. To get variable costs, you must identify a “unit of analysis”. Fixed costs assume a
given range of volume or capacity. For analysis purposes, classify semi-variable costs as either fixed or
variable.
Where appropriate, show relevant industry benchmarks for costs.
Characterize whether your cost structure is predominantly fixed or variable and then indicate the
implications. For example, if you have a high fixed cost structure, you have high operating leverage which
means it takes longer to reach breakeven, but once there, much more of your revenue flows straight to the
bottom line. High operating leverage (high fixed costs) suggests a riskier venture, at least initially.
D. Start Up Costs
Distinguish the one-time start-up costs of the business (put into a table). These are distinct from the ongoing
operating costs.
Put the pieces above together. Indicate how you will make money in terms of the combination of margins,
volumes, operating leverage and revenue source flexibility. How attractive is this combination?
Make clear what your unit of analysis is for the purpose of calculating breakeven.
Calculate breakeven and prepare a chart that shows when breakeven will be reached and any stepwise
changes in breakeven that may occur (as fixed costs go up).
Discuss whether it will be easy or difficult to achieve the breakeven level of sales and the projected
margins, and how the break-even point might be lowered in case the venture falls short of sales projections.
G. Profit Durability:
Address the issue of how solid or vulnerable the profit stream appears to be. Provide reasons why your
profit stream is solid or vulnerable, such as barriers to entry you can create, your technological and market
lead time, and so on.
The Marketing Plan describes how your projected sales will actually be attained. How will you make sales actually
happen? A great idea is meaningless if you cannot find customers. Thus, this section builds on the earlier Market
Section, where you defined your market and outlined market segments and their buyer behavior. The marketing plan
needs to provide detail on the overall marketing strategy that will exploit the opportunity and your competitive
advantages. Include a discussion of sales and service policies, pricing, distribution, promotion and advertising
strategies, and sales projections. The marketing plan needs to describe what is to be done, how it will be done, when
it will be done, and who will do it. If you are growing rapidly, it should also give a picture of how marketing will be
scaled up (e.g., expansion of your sales force).
B. Pricing:
Discuss pricing strategy, including the prices to be charged for your product and service, and compare your
pricing policy with those of your major competitors. You might include, where appropriate such as in
business-to-business markets, a brief discussion of payback (in months) to the buyer.
Explain how the price you set will enable you to (1) get the product or service accepted, (2) continue to
penetrate the market in the face of competition, and (3) produce profits.
Justify your pricing strategy and differences between your prices and those for competitive or substitute
products or services in terms of economic payback to the customer and value added through newness,
quality, warranty, timing performance, service, cost savings, efficiency, and the like.
Entrepreneurs and students often tend to price too low. If your product is to be priced lower than that of the
competition, explain how you will do this and maintain profitability (e.g., through greater effectiveness in
manufacturing and distribution, lower labor costs, lower material costs, lower overhead, or other
components of cost).
Discuss pricing structure, or how your prices may differ by aspect of the product or service, by customer
group, or by time and form of payment (e.g., the discount structure).
Discuss the use of special price offers, rebates, coupons, and so forth. This can be done under price or
under sales promotion.
In the MARKET section you described the customer’s buying process. Now, map out a selling cycle or
sales process that reflects that buying process. How do you plan to move a customer from never having
heard of you to being a loyal user? Show the reader how a sale will be accomplished.
Make it vividly clear how your overall use of personal selling, advertising, and publicity will reflect a blend
of tools that moves your target customer through their buying process. So, if you have identified four key
stages in the selling process (e.g., create awareness, generate understanding and interest, close the sale,
build the relationship) then specify which marketing tools will be used to accomplish each of these stages.
D. Sales Tactics
Describe the methods (e.g., own sales force, sales representatives, ready-made manufacturers’ sales
organizations, direct mail, or distributors) that will be used to make sales and distribute the product or
service. Also include both the initial plans and longer-range plans for a sales force. Include a discussion of
any special requirements (e.g., refrigeration).
Describe how distributors or sales representatives, if they are used, will be selected when they will start to
represent you, the areas they will cover and the build-up (a head count) of dealers and representatives by
month, and the expected sales to be made by each.
If a direct sales force is to be used, indicate how it will be structured and at what rate (a head count) it will
be built up; indicate if it is to replace a dealer or representative organization and, if so, when and how. How
will you recruit, train and compensate the sales force?
Show the sales expected per salesperson per year and what commission, incentive, and/or salary they are
slated to receive, and compare these figures to the average for your industry.
Present a selling schedule and a sales budget that includes all marketing promotion and service costs.
Discuss any seasonal trends that underlie the cash conversion cycle in the industry and what can be done to
promote sales out of season.
E. Advertising and Sales Promotions (Note: You should tie this section to Section C above)
Describe the media approaches the company will use to bring its product or service to the attention of
prospective purchasers. How will you inform your target market about the availability of your
product/service and continue to communicate the benefits you are offering to that market
If direct mail, magazine, newspaper, or other media, telemarketing, or catalog sales are to be used, indicate
the specific channels or vehicles, costs (per 1,000), and expected response rates and yield (as percentage)
from the various media, and so on, used. Discuss how these will be built up.
For original equipment manufacturers and for manufacturers of industrial products, indicate the plans for
trade show participation, trade magazine advertisements, direct mailings, the preparation of product sheets
and promotional literature, and use of advertising agencies.
For consumer products, indicate what kind of advertising and promotional campaign is planned to
introduce the product. Specify types of media to be employed and what kinds of sales aids will be provided
to dealers, what trade shows, and so forth, are required.
Present a schedule and approximate costs of promotion and advertising (direct mail, telemarketing, banner
ads, catalogs, etc.). Determine the total marketing budget required.
Note any viral or buzz marketing efforts you plan to employ.
F. Publicity
What methods will you use to get free publicity for your business?
What sort of guerrilla publicity tactics will you employ?
How might you ‘create news’ about your business?
G. Distribution Strategy (needed if you are selling through a middleman such as a wholesaler or retailer):
If your company will offer a product that will require service, warranties, or training, indicate the
importance of these to the customers’ purchasing decisions and discuss your method of handling service
problems.
Describe the type and terms of any warranties to be offered, whether company service people, agencies,
dealers and distributors will handle service, or simply return to the factory.
Indicate the proposed charge for service calls and whether service will be a profitable or loss operation.
Compare your service, warranty, and customer training practices to those of principal competitors.
SECTION VI: DESIGN AND DEVELOPMENT PLAN (Needed if you have a technology
development or complex product design aspect to your business)
This is a very important section for those teams developing a non-existent product, doing research and development,
having technical obstacles to overcome, or seeking patent or copyright protection. However, if you are in a business
where research and development is not a major issue (e.g., retailing or many consumer services), then you can leave
this section out and just address and technologies you plan to employ in the OPERATIONS section.
The nature and extent of any design and development work on your product or service, and the time and money
required before the product/service is ready for the market, need to be described in this section. (Note that design
and development costs are often underestimated). Design and development might be the engineering work
necessary to convert a laboratory concept into a workable prototype or a finished product; the writing of software
that is critical for your product/service, the testing of the product (e.g., with animals or people), the work of an
industrial designer to make a product more attractive and saleable; the design of special tools or equipment used in
the business; or the design of a unique logistics or routing system that is central to service delivery. This section
also addresses patents, copyrights, or other intellectual property that you have developed.
Define the present state of development of the product or service and explain what remains to be done to
make the product fully useable and ready for sale. Provide a list of tasks.
Indicate how much time & money will be required to fully develop, test, and introduce the product/service.
If appropriate provide a drawing, or a summary of the functional specifications and photographs of the
product, if available (without giving away any proprietary information) .
Describe briefly the competence or expertise that the venture has or will require to complete development.
List any customers or end users who are participating in the development, design, and/or testing of the
product or service. Indicate results to date or when results are expected.
Identify any major anticipated design and development challenges and approaches to resolving them.
Discuss possible effect on cost of design & development and time to market introduction of such problems.
In addition to describing the development of the initial products, discuss any ongoing design and
development work that is planned to keep product(s) or service(s) competitive and to develop new related
product(s) or service(s) that can be sold to the same group of customers. Discuss customers who have
participated in these efforts and their reactions, and include any evidence that you may have.
D. Costs:
Discuss the design & development budget, including costs of labor, materials, consulting fees, etc.
Discuss the impact on cash flow projections of underestimating this budget, including the impact of a 15 to
30 percent contingency.
Describe any patent, trademark, copyright, or intellectual property rights you own or are seeking.
Do you have any trade secrets?
Describe any contractual rights or agreements that give you exclusive or proprietary rights.
Discuss the impact of any unresolved issues or existing or possible actions pending, such as disputed rights
of ownership, regulated to proprietary rights on timing and on any competitive edge you have assumed.
The operations section is vital, for it outlines how you will actually create value. It is a day in the life of the
business---how you do what you do. Operations is concerned with your production process (for products) or service
delivery process (for services). It addresses inputs, throughputs and outputs. In addition to how you produce, it
includes such factors as location, the type of facilities needed, space requirements, the actual process of producing
the product or service, capital equipment requirements, and labor (both full- and part-time) requirements.
For a manufacturing business or business that produces a product, the manufacturing and operations plan needs to
include policies on inventory control, purchasing, production control, and which parts of the product will be
purchased, which functions will be outsourced, and which operations will be performed by your workforce.
A service business or a retail business may require particular attention to location (proximity to customers is
generally a must), the service delivery or merchandising system, minimizing overhead, and obtaining competitive
productivity from a labor force. In many cases, up to 80% of your expenses will be for operations, 80% of your
employees will be involved in operations and 80% of your time will be spent worrying about operating problems.
You probably will make trade-offs within operations ---it is impossible to have the lowest costs, highest quality, best
on-time delivery and most flexibility at the same time. What trade-off decisions are you willing to make?
Outline the operations process for your business. Identify the inputs, operations (key steps or stages) and
outputs (present a flow diagram). This is a day in the life of actually producing your product or creating and
delivering your service---walk us through the mechanics of doing so.
If relevant, you may want to distinguish your model for managing ‘front stage’ vs ‘back stage’ operations.
Where are you likely to have bottlenecks in your service delivery or manufacturing process and how will
these be anticipated and addressed.
Describe the lead/lag times that characterize the fundamental operating cycle in your business.
Explain how any seasonal production loads will be handled without severe dislocation (e.g., by building to
inventory using part-time help in peak periods).
What quality consistency issues exist and how will consistency of quality be ensured? What controls exist,
for instance, to ensure every burger is cooked exactly the same?
B. Operations Strategy:
Describe the management of the manufacturing processes or service delivery processes – what will you do
in-house and what will you purchase (i.e. make versus buy decisions) or outsource?
Explain the required labor skills and the availability of the necessary labor, as well as any other required
capabilities you will need and where these capabilities will come from.
Discuss who potential subcontractors and suppliers are likely to be and any information about, or any
surveys that have been made of, these subcontractors and suppliers. Discuss relationships with them.
Describe your approach to quality control, production control, inventory control, and explain what quality
control and inspection procedures the company will use to minimize service problems and associated
customer dissatisfaction. How will you win in the market place on cost, quality, timeliness or flexibility?
C. Geographic Location:
Describe the planned geographic location of the business. Include any location analysis, site selection etc.
that you have done.
Discuss any advantages or disadvantages of your location in terms of such factors as labor (including labor
available, whether workers are unionized, and wage rate), closeness to customer and/or suppliers, access to
transportation, state and local taxes and laws (including zoning regulations), access to utilities, and so forth.
Describe the facilities, including plant and office space, storage and land areas, special tooling, machinery,
and other equipment needed to conduct business. Discuss any scale economies to be acheived.
Provide a schematic diagram of the layout of your facility.
Describe how and when the necessary facilities to start production will be acquired.
Discuss whether equipment and space will be leased or acquired (new or used) and indicate costs and
timing of such actions and how much of the proposed financing will be devoted to plant/equipment.
Discuss how and when, in the next three years, office/ retail site/ plant space and equipment will be
expanded to the capacities required by future sales projections and any plans to improve or add to existing
space or move the facility; indicate the timing and cost of such acquisitions.
Discuss your capacity (total volume that you can handle in a day or week).
Explain your approach to managing inventory levels of key products.
If applicable, provide a summary that shows, for a given anticipated level of volume, total requirements in
terms of material, labor, purchased components, and overhead, and that describes the inventory level
required at this sales level.
F. Logistics
For businesses involving products, describe how you will handle shipping to middlemen or customers, in-
transit storage or warehousing, and product returns.
Describe any particular legal issues affecting your operations. As examples, in a food service operation,
certain permits and venting are required; in a production operation with outsourced production, there are
legal issues governing the outsourcing agreement; when selling through a manufacturers rep or a retail
channel there are legal issues affecting the distribution agreement; when setting up a franchise system there
are legal issues tied to the franchising agreement; when selling something on a university campus there are
legal constraints in operating on the campus; when operating in certain countries there may be some legal
or regulatory issues that require attention, and so forth. Note that legal issues affecting intellectual property
are handled in the ‘Design and Development’ section.
This section of the business plan includes a description of the management functions that will need to be filled, a
description of the key management personnel and their primary duties, an outline of the organizational structure for
the venture, a description of the board of directors and key advisors, a description of the ownership position of any
other investors, and so forth. You need to present indications of commitment, such as the willingness of team
members to initially accept modest salaries, and of the existence of the proper balance of technical, managerial, and
business skills and experience in doing what is proposed.
A. Organization:
For each key person, describe career highlights, particularly relevant know-how, skills, and track record of
accomplishments that demonstrate his or her ability to perform the assigned role. Include in your
description sales and profitability achievements (budget size, numbers of subordinates, new product
introductions, etc.) and other prior entrepreneurial or general management results.
Describe the exact duties and responsibilities of each of the key members of the management team.
Complete resumes for each key management member need to be included in the appendices and need to
stress relevant training, experience, any concrete accomplishments, such as profit and sales improvement,
labor management success, manufacturing or technical achievements, and meeting of budgets & schedules.
State the salary to be paid, the stock ownership planned, and the amount of their equity investment (if any)
of each key member of the management team.
Describe here any other investors in your venture, the number and percentage of outstanding shares they
own, when they were acquired, and at what price.
Describe any existing or contemplated employment or other agreements with key members.
Indicate any restrictions on stock and vesting that affect ownership and disposition of stock.
Summarize incentive stock option or other stock ownership plans planned for key people and employees.
Discuss the company’s philosophy about the size and composition of the board.
Identify any proposed board members and include a one or two sentence statement of the member’s
background that shows what he or she can bring to the company.
Indicate any other shareholders in the company and any rights, restrictions or obligations, such as notes or
guarantees, associated with them. (If they have been accounted for above, simply note there are no others)
Indicate the names and affiliations of the legal, accounting, advertising, consulting, and banking advisors
selected for your venture and the services each will provide.
A graphical schedule that shows the timing and interrelationship of the major events necessary to launch the venture
and realize its objectives is an essential part of a plan. The underlying operating cycle of the business will provide
key inputs for the schedule. In addition to being a planning aid by showing deadlines critical to a venture’s success,
a well-presented schedule can be valuable in convincing potential investors that the management team is able to plan
for venture growth in a way that recognizes obstacles and minimizes investor risk. Since the time necessary to do
things tends to be underestimated in most business plans, it is important to demonstrate that you have correctly
estimated these amounts in determining the schedule.
Step 1: Prepare a month-by-month schedule that shows the timing of such activities as product
development, market planning, sales programs, production, and operations, and that includes
sufficient detail to show the timing of the primary tasks required to accomplish an activity.
Step 2: Show on the schedule the deadlines or milestones critical to the venture’s success, such as:
Step 3: Show on the schedule the “ramp up” of the number of management personnel, the number
of production and operations personnel, and plant or equipment and their relation to the
development of the business.
Step 4: Discuss in a general way the activities most likely to cause a schedule slippage, what steps
will be taken to correct such slippages, and the impact of schedule slippages of the venture’s
operation, especially its potential viability and capital needs.
Note: You want to be fairly detailed for the first six months to a year, and then just hit key developments or
benchmarks beyond that. The time period covered is typically the first 18 months to 2 years.
The development of any business has risks --- and problems always arise. The business plan invariably reflects a set
of assumptions that are being made about these issues. You need to include a description of the risks and the
consequences of adverse outcomes relating to your industry, your company and its personnel, your product’s market
appeal, and the timing and financing of your startup. Be sure to discuss assumptions concerning sales projections,
customer orders, technology, and so forth. If the venture has anything that could be considered a fatal flaw, make it
clear that you recognize the flaw, and why it is not fatal and how you intend to overcome it. The discovery of any
unstated negative factors by potential investors can undermine the credibility of the venture and endanger its
financing. Be aware that many investors will read the section describing the management team first and then this
section. It is therefore recommended that you not omit or discount this section. If you do, the reader will most
likely come to one or more of the following conclusions:
Identifying and discussing the risks in your venture demonstrate your skills as a manager and increase credibility of
you and your venture with a venture capital investor or a private investor. Taking the initiative on the identification
and discussion of risks helps you to demonstrate to the investor that you have thought about them and can handle
them. Risks then tend not to loom as large black clouds in the investor’s thinking about your venture.
1. Discuss assumptions implicit in your plan. Examples of key assumptions might include:
2. Identify and discuss any major problems and other risks, such as:
3. Indicate what assumptions or potential problems and risks are most critical to the success of the venture,
and describe your plans for minimizing the impact of unfavorable developments in each case. What is the
worst-case scenario and how will you respond? Focus on risks that are important and critical to your
business, not the ordinary operating risks faced by any business.
In the write up of this section, discuss the highlights of your financial statements. The section lays out a picture of
the financial performance of the firm as it is started, stabilizes and grows. The financial plan is basic to the
evaluation of an investment opportunity and needs to represent your best estimates of financial requirements. The
purpose of the financial plan is to indicate the venture’s potential and to present a timetable for financial viability. It
also can serve as an operating plan for financial management using financial benchmarks. In preparing the financial
plan, look creatively at the venture and think about bootstrapping techniques, especially in the early days.
Highlight the important conclusions, such as what is the maximum amount of cash required is and when it will be
required, the amount of debt and equity needed, how fast any debts can be repaid, start-up costs, etc. Given the
earlier discussed strategies and assumptions, show when the venture will attain a positive cash flow. Show if and
when you will run out of cash. Note any significant changes in cash flow that will occur as you grow and add
capacity. Given your entry strategy, marketing plan, and proposed financing, how long it will take to reach the unit
breakeven sales level. How many months to breakeven? Highlight sales and profit performance patterns over time.
To help validate your financials, it may help to compare critical financial ratios from your plan with those of your
industry. Explain and justify significant differences.
Pro forma income statements capture your financial model for the venture and indicate the financial feasibility of the
business. Usually the level of profits, particularly during the start-up years of a venture, will not be sufficient to
finance operating asset needs, and since actual cash inflows do not always match the actual cash outflows on a short-
term basis, a cash flow forecast that will indicate these conditions and enable management to plan cash needs is
needed. Further, pro forma balance sheets are used to detail the assets required to support the projected level of
operations and through liabilities, to show how these assets are to be financed. The projected balance sheets can
indicate if debt-to-equity ratios, working capital, current ratios, inventory turnover and the like are within the
acceptable limits required to justify future financing that are projected for the venture.
B. Cost Controls:
Describe how you will obtain information about and monitor costs and how often, who will be responsible for the
control of various cost elements, and how you will take action on budget overruns. Explain any unusual items not
identified in the financial statement.
As part of the financial plan, financial exhibits need to be prepared. Be sure to give the investors the columns and
rows that they want to see. The more detail you give them, the more difficult it will be for them to challenge your
assumptions. You need to prepare: i) Pro forma income statements (3-5 years, done monthly for at least the first 1-2
years); ii) Pro forma balance sheets (3-5 years), and iii) Pro forma cash flow analysis (3-5 years, done monthly for
at least the first 1-2 years). To estimate cash flow needs, use cash-based, rather than an accrual-based, accounting
(i.e., use a real-time cash flow analysis of expected receipts and disbursements).
On the appropriate exhibits, in the Assumptions section, or in an appendix, specify assumptions behind such items
as sales levels and growth, collections and payables periods, inventory requirements, cash balances, cost of goods,
and so forth. Your analysis of the operating and cash conversion cycle in the business will enable you to identify
these critical assumptions.
Using sales forecasts and the accompanying operating costs, prepare pro forma income statements
for at least the first three years. Be sure these numbers are consistent with what is being proposed in
all the earlier sections of the plan (marketing, operations, management team, etc.)
Fully discuss assumptions (e.g., the amount allowed for bad debts and discounts, or any assumptions
made with respect to sales expenses or general and administrative costs being a fixed percentage of
costs or sales) made in preparing the pro forma income statement and document them.
Draw on Section X of the business plan and highlight any major risks, such as the effect of a 20%
reduction in sales from those projected or the adverse impact of having to climb a learning curve on
the level of productivity over time, that could prevent the venture’s sales and profit goals from being
attained, plus the sensitivity of profits to these risks.
Prepare pro forma balance sheets semi-annually in the first year and for the end of each of the first
three years.
Project cash flows monthly for the first year of operation and quarterly for at least the next two
years, detailing the amount and timing of expected cash inflows and outflows. Remember this is
based on cash, not accrual, accounting. The cash flow analysis will effectively determine how much
money you need. It will also make clear the need for and timing of additional financing and indicate
peak requirements for working capital. Discuss assumptions, such as those made on the timing of
collection of receivables, trade discounts given, terms of payments to vendors, planned salary and
wage increases, anticipated increases in key operating expenses, or seasonality of the business as
they affect inventory requirements, inventory turnovers per year, capital equipment purchases, etc.
Discuss cash flow sensitivity to a variety of assumptions about business factors (e.g., possible
changes in such crucial assumptions as an increase in the receivable collection period or sales levels
lower than forecasted).
The purpose of this section is to indicate the amount of any money being sought, how much of it is debt versus
equity financing, types of loans you anticipate relying upon (e.g., bank term loan, line of credit, SBA loan), terms of
any loans (collateral required, interest rate, time for repayment, special terms),the nature and amount of equity
offered to the investor, terms surrounding equity, a brief description of the uses that will be made of the money
received, and a summary of how the investor is expected to achieve the targeted rate of return. It is important to
realize the terms for financing your company proposed here are only the first step in the negotiation process with
those interested in investing, and your financing will involve different kinds of securities than originally proposed.
A. Desired Financing:
Review the monthly cash flow projections and your estimate of how much money is required over
the next three years to carry out the launch and/or expansion of your business as described.
Determine the amount and timing of cash infusions required to prevent cash balances from going
negative. Add a cash safety cushion (~25% as a good “guesstimate”) to the anticipated cash needs to
protect against unexpected expenses or delayed income.
Determine the type of funding that will suit your business: debt, equity or non-traditional financing.
Indicate how this capital requirement will be obtained -- from whom and how much will be obtained
via loans, lines of credit, equity investments, etc.
If you have decided to seek equity capital, then you need to describe the type of security being
offered (e.g., common stock, convertible debentures, debt with warrants, debt plus stock), the unit
price, and the total amount of securities to be sold in this offering. If securities are not just common
stock, indicate by type, interest, maturity, and conversion conditions.
Show the percentage of the company that the investor in this offering will hold after it is completed
or after exercise of any stock conversion or purchase rights in the case of convertible debentures or
warrants i.e. what share of your company does the investor get for a specified investment.
Securities sold through a private placement (and therefore exempt from SEC registration) should
include the following statement in this section: “The shares being sold pursuant to this offering are
restricted securities and may not be resold readily. The prospective investor should recognize that
such securities might be restricted as to resale for indefinite period of time. Each purchaser will be
required to execute a Non-Distribution Agreement satisfactory in form to corporate counsel”.
If you are seeking a loan, then you need to indicate to the potential lender how the loan will be
repaid and what the interest rate is. What is the collateral for the loan?
C. Capitalization:
Present in tabular form the current and proposed (post-offering) number of outstanding shares of
common stock. Indicate any shares offered by key management people and show the number of
shares that they will hold after completion of the proposed financing.
Indicate how many shares of your company’s common stock will remain authorize debut un-issued
after the offering and how many of these will be reserved for stock options for future key employees.
Identify any other terms that you are willing to negotiate as part of the deal e.g. right of first refusal,
seat on board, voting rights, and other rights and preferences.
D. Use of Funds:
Investors like to know how their money is going to be spent. Provide a brief description of how the
capital raised will be used. Summarize as specifically as possible what amount will be used for such
things as product design and development, capital equipment, marketing, and general working
capital needs. This dictates the level of risk of the investment. Investors generally feel that
expenditures for R&D and marketing are riskier than are expenditures for capital acquisitions.
1. Define the industry and characterize it in terms of size and the life cycle and draw implications. If it
has an SIC or NAICS industry code, indicate so.
2. Develop a diagram of the value-added chain and the approximate number of firms at each level, and
indicate the proportion that are large firms or chains.
3. Evaluate the attractiveness of the industry in terms of Porter’s 5-factor model.
4. Identify at least three ways that companies are differentiating themselves in this industry.
5. Specify other leading trends in the industry (e.g., in costs, prices, marketing approaches, new products
or services, use of technology, etc.) and identify the three most critical success factors in this industry.
6. Summarize key industry financial norms for companies in this industry.
7. Identify the principal components of the business concept. Be sure you are defining the concept in
terms of customer value and customer benefits. Apply the five key criteria for a good business concept.
8. What is the need that the business exists to satisfy? How well satisfied is that need already? How high
are the customer’s switching costs from whatever they are currently using or doing?
9. What is the set of forces creating the opportunity? What is the likely window of opportunity?
10. How is the market defined? What is the size of the market opportunity in dollars, units or both?
Distinguish current market size from market potential and estimate the size of the primary and selective
demand gaps. What is the growth rate of the market?
11. How are you segmenting the market? Are the key segments homogenous, sizeable, reachable, and
responsive? Provide descriptors of the customers who make up the key segments. Which segments
will you be targeting (provide a prioritization)? Who will be your early adopters? Are their segments
with different price elasticities?
12. Develop a simple model of customer buying behavior for this product or service. How long is the
buying process? Who is the decision-maker? Why do they buy? It is a high or low involvement
purchase? How loyal are customers to existing vendors/products?
13. What are the key factors affecting sales in the market? Will there be patterns to the company’s sales.
Is seasonality an issue? Is the business cyclical? Do interest rates have an impact?
14. Who are the direct competitors? Identify the strengths and weaknesses of each. How is each
differentiating itself? Who are the indirect competitors? As a group, how much of a threat are they and
why?
15. Be sure that you have developed a price list. Do prices adequately reflect: a) overall marketing strategy,
b) costs, c) competition, d) customer demand, and e) legal issues?
16. Explain whether the company will be set up as a sole proprietorship, a partnership, an S corporation, a
C corporation, or a limited liability company.
17. Describe the economics of the business. What is your average price, average cost per unit and average
margin? How much of your cost structure is fixed versus variable? How much operating leverage do
you have, and what are the implications of this? Calculate your contribution margin and breakeven
levels in dollars and units. Make it clear where you will be making your money (for instance, in a bar,
how much of profit will come from drinks versus food, in a copier business how much will come from
selling machines versus selling service?)
18. Have you formulated measurable objectives? Are you certain you’ve established objectives in all the
appropriate performance areas?
19. How will you ensure that the company has a strong market-orientation?
20. What will be the principal or core competencies of the company? Is strategy built around these
competencies.
21. Separately from the business concept, define the company’s product mix. Assess the company’s
principal offering to customers in terms of the core, tangible and augmented product. Be sure to include
such product-related issues as hours, facility layout, parking, etc.
22. How will the company’s products be positioned?
23. If it is a service business, develop a diagram of the visible and non-visible aspects of the service delivery
system.
24. How will operations be organized? If it is a manufacturing or assembly operation, what is the overall
layout. Provide a schematic as well as a diagram of the workflow. If it’s a service business, again
describe the operational layout, and then how the service will be delivered.
25. Are any product policies needed (warrantees, returns policies)? If so, what will they be?
26. What is the company’s unique selling proposition?
27. Have you developed an integrated communications mix that matches your selling process to the
customer’s buying process. Summarize the company’s complete mix of customer communications,
including personal selling, advertising, sales promotion and publicity. Explain how they will be
coordinated and managed as a mix.
28. What will the distribution channel look like? How much market coverage will this give you? What
key approaches will be used to achieve cooperation among channel members?
29. How is customer service to be defined, measured and managed? What are the key components of
customer service? Construct a comprehensive list of the points of customer contact involving any
personnel, paperwork or facilities of the company.
30. What is the current stage of product development? Is a prototype completed? What further R&D work
is needed and by when will it be completed? What’s the ongoing plan for R&D?
31. Provide a detailed cash flow statement for each of the first 3-5 years of operation. Provide pro forma
income statements and balance sheets for the first three years.
32. Have you identified all of the resources (human, financial, channels, customer base, information) the
company will require to start up and achieve success over the first 3 years?
33. Identify the major direct competitors and assess the strengths, weaknesses, strategy and source of
differentiation relied upon by each of them.
34. How will the firm’s logistical arrangements work (inventory policies, physically getting products to
customers, warehousing/storage)? What is the intended order cycle time?
35. Who will be the key members of the management team? Provide a resume of each of these individuals
in an appendix. Briefly describe the role of each in the firm and how it fits their background and
experience. Also, will there be a board of directors or advisors?
36. What are your staffing needs beyond the management team? What kind of people are you looking for
and what is your plan for getting them?
37. Identify the major technology, legal/regulatory, economic and social developments that are likely to
impact on this business in the next two years, and indicate the likely impact.
38. How much money are you asking for, from which sources, how will investors earn their return, and
when? Will funding come in stages?
39. Identify the five major downside risks or things that could go wrong, and indicate your contingencies
for dealing with each of them.
40. Is there internal consistency in your plan? For example, can one see the logical fit and consistency
between you target market, the product/service you are selling, your marketing approach, and the
budget you have put together?
Please provide a rigorous evaluation of this final draft of the team’s written plan. Could you rate the
written plan first on each of the ten content areas listed in Part I below, and then rate the written document
in the five areas noted in Part II. Parts I and II involve rating on 5-point scales. Finally, provide a separate
overall score out of 100 on the plan. Your written comments are also very much appreciated and will be
shared with the team. It is critical that we give them tangible help on how to improve.
II. Written Document Mechanics (again, please rate each area below on a 5-point scale where
1 = poor, 5 = excellent)
a. Pragmatism/Realism __________
b. Completeness/Comprehensiveness __________
c. Internal Consistency __________
d. Writing Style __________
e. Professionalism of the Document __________
III. Separate Overall Recommended Score (out of 100 points, where 100 = outstanding and
you absolutely want to invest. This is separate from the scores above---it is an overall assessment)
_______
IV. Particular Feedback on the Written Business Plan (Please provide detailed suggestions to
the team on how they can improve the plan):
(use reverse of form or attach comment sheets)
Please rate the presentation of the business plan first on each of the eight content areas listed in Part I
below, and then rate the presentation itself in Part II. In Part III, please give the presentation an overall
rating from 0 to 100. Your written comments are very much appreciated and will be shared with the
team.
II. Professional Assessment of Oral Presentation (again, please rate each area below on
a 5-point scale where 1 = poor, 5 = excellent)
III. Separate Overall Recommended Score (out of 100 where 100= Outstanding, I want to invest!)
__________
Written Comments on the Presentation of the Venture (Continue on reverse side if you need more
space):