Welcome to DFS Business Plan Template.
This Template is a powerful interactive tool you can use to write your own
business plan in a comfortable and easy step-by-step fashion. Simply read
the instructions and suggestions accompanying each section and then
answer the questions posed.
Writing a business plan in any mode
is a demanding process that usually takes several weeks at the least. We
suggest you write your business plan in stages, perhaps one section at a
time, saving your data after each session as described above.
1. Before You Begin
We know you're anxious to begin writing,
but we suggest you
read some useful information on the length of a business plan and what's
right for you.
2. To Save Your Data
You can post your answers right
online in the space provided here. After you complete a section, press the
apply button, and your answers will be set up in appropriate business
plan format, with the right headings accompanying your answers.
To save your data for later
use, YOU MUST COPY IT AND ENTER IT INTO YOUR OWN WORD PROCESSING PROGRAM,
OR SAVE YOUR ONLINE DATA AS AN HTML DOCUMENT. NOTHING YOU WRITE ONLINE WILL
BE STORED FOR YOU ONLINE FOR LATER ACCESS. IF YOU FAIL TO COPY YOUR DATA,
YOU WILL LOSE IT.
3. You're Ready to Begin Writing
Cover Sheet
The cover sheet needs to provide
all the necessary contact information about the business. (For Investor
version: the last thing you want to do is get prospective investors interested
in your business, and then be unable to get in touch with you because your
cover sheet is missing your phone number.)
Set priorities
Provide the foundation
of the full plan. Once you've written this summary, it makes writing
the rest of the plan much easier.
If done right, it captures readers'
attention, makes them want to read more, and conveys a flavor about the
rest of the plan.
Click here for
tips on the length of a business plan and what's right for you.
Assignment:
Now it's time to write your own initial Executive Summary. Remember, no
more than two pages. We've purposely avoided providing our usual question-and-answer
approach so that you can employ a more free-form style, and give it the
"spin" and excitement that captures your business and its plan for success.
Begin Writing:
The Company
This is the section of the business
plan that captures your strategy, identity, and philosophy. It is about
your future, past, and present.
1. Determining your strategy?
Strategy is really a buzzword for
your company's overall approach to producing and selling its products/services--and
its goals for maximizing success. What is your "business model"--its approach
to the market and sales, and how will that change?
Most important is that your strategy
be believable. Thus, there needs to be consistency between what's happened
in the past and your strategy for the future. If your business has grown
at 10% a year for each of the past four years, and you are now projecting
50% annual growth, you must have a pretty compelling explanation of what
it's doing differently to justify the change.
Assignment:In
no more than three paragraphs, summarize your company's strategy.
2. Describing the company's history.
Here's where you provide
the background of the business, answering such questions as:
How did you come
upon the idea for the business?
What forces have
helped you succeed thus far?
What principles
do you use to run your business?
What obstacles have
you overcome to succeed?
If you plan for expansion,
how will you dedicate the funds you are seeking for financing?
Assignment:
In a maximum of three paragraphs, describe your company's history. Of
course, if you are a start-up, this section of your plan will be shorter,
devoted to a brief explanation of how you came up with your idea.
3. Describe the
management team.
A key issue for any business
is whether the people running the company have what it takes to enable
the company to fulfill its strategy.
(For investor version only)
Investors, in particular, look especially closely at the management team,
and make judgments about its likely success by virtue of what the members
of the team have accomplished in the past.
The two most common management
team problems are:
The "one-man-band" syndrome.
The company doesn't really have a management team because the president
won't delegate or bring qualified senior people aboard.
Or everyone comes from same background.
Be sure you are making the most
of your resources--using everyone's experience and capabilities to their
fullest in your descriptions.
Assignment:Provide
a one-paragraph summary of your company's management team, explaining
what makes it especially qualified to execute the company's business plan.
Assignment: Next,
provide descriptions for each member of the management team, up to two
paragraphs each.
Assignment:Next, list
the consultants are you using to help run your business, with up to two
sentences to describe each individual's affiliation and qualifications.
These include:
Accountants?
Lawyers?
Personnel specialists?
Advertising firms?
Others?
Assignment: If your business
is going to have a board of directors or board or advisors, include the
names and two sentences of background information on the members of the
board here. If you are still looking for board members, describe in one
paragraph the type of person you are looking for to serve on your board.
The Market
This is the most important
single section of your business plan, and as such should be the longest
section of the plan. Here, you will present convincing evidence that your
business is likely to meet with success in the marketplace. This section
will detail the market as you see it for your business, using numbers
derived from the research you have done in developing your business idea.
First, you must realize that what
you are really selling are benefits to your customers. The best benefits
are those that help them make money, save money, or feel good. As much
as possible, try to identify as precisely as possible the prospective
buyers of your product or service and to quantify the benefits-the amount
of money made or saved. How long does it take for that money to pay for
your product or service?
Assignment: In
three paragraphs or less, summarize the market and the appeal of your
product.
The Market section of your
plan divides into several sub-sections:
Assignment:In 10 paragraphs or less, describe
your market demographics by answering the following questions/requests:
What do you estimate the
total market--in terms of total number of prospective buyers and dollars--to
be for your product or service in the United States? In foreign countries?
If your business can be
broken down into different categories, list the total market for each
of these categories.
Has the market continued
to grow over the past 5 to 10 years? What support do you have for your
conclusion?
You can state the growth
as a percentage or in total dollar volume.What do you estimate to be
the potential for future growth for your business?
Are there any demographic
trends that support your business concept?
Have there been any shifts
in the economy that will likely make your business prosper?
Assignment:Next,
provide your assessment of the competition. Write a one paragraph description
of each of your major competitors. For each competitor answer as many
of these questions as possible:
What types of profits do
they experience?
What are their sales volumes?
What are their returns
on investment?
Where they are located?
How many of them are profitable?
How many and what types
of employees do they have?
How much sales per employee
do they average?
How are they set up as
a business? (sole proprietorship, partnership, corporation)
What other information
about your prospective competitors might help a reader understand how
these businesses work?
Include any other relevant
information on major competitors that you have that gives a clear sense
of how they do business and how successful they have been.
Assignment: Provide
up to three paragraphs of your assessment of how you will counter the
competition, and how your business differs positively from the competition,
answering some or all of the following questions:
If
your business differs from the competition in any significant way, whether
financial or distribution, how do you justify this difference?
What other sources of competition
do you see in the marketplace?
How
will your prices compare with the competition?
The
Product or Service
This is the fun part of most business
plans, and entrepreneurs tend to get wrapped up in the details of the
product or service. They typically want to have as many features and options
as possible.
Assignment:In
four paragraphs or less, describe your product or service as completely
as possible. Include features and important technical specifications.
Producing the product or service. One of the worst things you
can do is announce a new product or service and then be unable to provide
it on schedule. This has been a big problem for software and computer
makers. Here you should answer these questions:
Will the product be produced
in-house or by outsiders?
What is the rationale for this
decision?
What contingencies are
available if external production should flounder?
Assignment:In
three paragraphs or less, describe how you will produce your product or
service so as to meet customer expectations for delivery.
The Pricing Dilemma This is one of the toughest
issues for any business. It's partly a function of what the market is
willing to pay and partly a function of what the competition is charging.
But it comes down to basic planning issues like margins vs. market share
and how distinct your benefits are vs. those of the competition.
Prices aren't engraved in stone.
Assignment:Describe
your pricing strategy in four paragraphs or less, taking into account
the following questions:
What do you anticipate
your gross profit margins will be for your business? (A gross profit
margin is the price you get for your product or service less the cost
of producing it.)
What particular aspect
of your business will make it unique?
Is pricing going to make
your business special?
How do your expected prices
stack up against the competition?
How price-sensitive is
your target market?
Ongoing service. It's popular to offer guarantees
and warranties to attract customers. It's essential that you work out
exactly how you will provide after-sales service--and who will pay for
it. Some companies have turned after-sales service into a separate profit
center.
Assignment: Explain in three
paragraphs or less how you plan to provide after-market service to ensure
ongoing use of your product or service. In particular, explain what warranties,
guarantees, repair service, and quality control mechanisms you will have
in place.
Sales and Promotion
The sales and promotion section
of your plan should be much different from the market section. Whereas
the market section is about identifying customer prospects, the sales
and promotion section is about how you go about convincing them to buy
from your company. You should have an overall sales and promotion strategy
that will underlie your selling and promotion techniques. For example,
you may plan to rely heavily on direct mail to generate leads for your
in-house sales force, with advertising as a supplementary "brand-building"
exercise. Such an overview should introduce this section of the plan.
Assignment:In
two paragraphs, describe your overall sales and promotion strategy.
What is your selling
approach? Chances are you have a selling
approach that works well for your company--an in-house sales force, sales
reps, direct mail.
At this point in the business plan,
you need to explain and justify your selling approach or approaches. You
should also evaluate alternative approaches to selling that you may be
considering, since selling costs in all areas are rising dramatically.
If you use an in-house sales force, may want to experiment with direct
mail. Or if you use direct mail, you may want to get into retail outlets.
Assignment:In
four paragraphs or less, describe your selling approach.
How Will You Motivate Your Sellers? Selling is probably the toughest
business task there is.
Sales people need to be trained, supported and, above all, motivated.
What are you doing in these areas and what do you plan for the future
to upgrade your selling efforts?
If you plan to use new sales approaches, the matter of motivating becomes
even more important, because it is difficult to know early on which approaches
will work best-commissions, bonuses, prizes, increased vacation time,
etc.
When you find something that works, stay with it. The best sales people
should earn more than executives because successful selling is so important
to business success.
Assignment:In
four paragraphs, describe your plans for educating and motivating your
sales representatives.
How Will You
Promote Your Product or Service? The basic choices here are
advertising, public relations, and other specialized promotions If you've
been in business for a while, you may know what works best for your company.
Public relations tends to be more cost-effective than advertising. It's
possible, using public relations, to be very small and give the impression
that you are substantial, at very low cost. You can do this by writing
articles for trade publications, positioning self as an expert and doing
interviews. Advertising is usually quite costly because it requires repeat
insertions to really be effective; the budgets necessary for the repeat
coverage are often beyond what many small businesses can afford.
Promotions can include giveaways,
special events, and discounts for referrals.
Assignment:In
six paragraphs or less, describe your planned approach for promotion--how
you will use advertising and/or public relations.
This is an additional section of
the business plan that has been made necessary in recent years by the
growing sophistication and declining costs associated with computer technology.
While this section should be brief, it should get you thinking about ways
to leverage the marvels of modern technology. For example, how might you
use computer software to increase your marketing effectiveness? How might
technology reduce the number of people you hire? How might a local area
network or intranet be used to improve internal communications at your
company?
Assignment: In
four paragraphs or less, describe how your company plans to use technology
to improve its overall efficiency and effectiveness.
Business Risks
Every small business has
risks. Your challenge in writing a business plan is to communicate those
risks with the right perspective. They should thus be described accurately,
but not in a scary way so as to potentially scare prospective investors.
In this section of the business
plan, you will try to point out key potential business risks you face
in opening or operating your small business.
Here are some questions to consider:
If your business
is a new concept, will your target market be willing to try something
new?
How will you convince
them to change their current way of thinking?
What do you plan
to do if you do not meet your projections for sales or profits?
What if your competition
tries to undermine your entry into the field?
What operating problems
might occur?
How will you deal with
them?
Assignment: Write
one paragraph that describes the nature of the most serious risks confronting
your company (i.e. gaining market acceptance, finding skilled workers,
etc.). Then, list at least six risks facing your business, describing
each risk in no more than two sentences.
Finances
Here is where you present your
company's financial history and projections. While you can be creative
in other parts of your business, here you should be "vanilla-flavored"-presenting
your finances in the formal that accountant and investors are accustomed
to. You will want to provide up to three years of past results, and two
to three years of projections.
Assignment:Summarize
your company's financial status in three paragraphs or less, including
the highlights of past results (if any) and your key financial projections.
You should have three types of financial
statements covering your history and projections:
Cash Flow Cash flow is really a record
of cash available at different points of time. It helps highlight the differences
between when a sale is made, cash comes in, and bills are paid.
(Insert a sample cash flow statement.)
The Income Statement: Profit and Loss This is the proverbial bottom
line: revenues less expenses. For small COs, it is important to differentiate
from cash flow. It's possible to run out of cash early in a quarter, even
though you are heading toward profitability at the end of the quarter.
(Show sample income statement.)
The Balance Sheet This is the financial statement
bankers like to focus on because they believe it offers the most revealing
clues about basic business health . It shows assets and liabilities. It
is most useful in evaluating product businesses, where assets easily identifiable
and can be appraised. It is less useful for service businesses.
(Show sample balance sheet.)
Assignment:Have
a financial adviser or accounting firm work with you to produce each of
the three financial statements.
Appendices
Your appendices should include any
items that you believe are relevant to your business plan and work as support
material. This might include market research data, surveys of competitors'
pricing, of the management team, a media plan, sample advertising programs,
consulting firm reports, "love letters," and so on
.
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