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Site Home –› Business & Commerce –› Business Planning & Strategy
 

Business Plans - Have You Ever Seen One That Worked?

 
Author: Jim Stewart

Well have you? Personally, Id say Yes, but But what you may ask? Well, firstly the business plan wasnt written from the back forwards. In other words it wasnt written as a result of a statement like We need to get $X thousand/million from the bank/lenders. Secondly, it wasnt written because someone (I hope it wasnt a consultant) said A small business of our size should have one. Thirdly, once written it wasnt put on the shelf and forgotten for the rest of the year. And, finally, no one expected things to happen exactly, and I mean exactly, the way the plan predicted.

A business plan that starts with a look at whats going to happen in the industry and then at how the competition are positioned, helps highlight opportunities and threats. Combine this with an honest assessment of the small businesss own strengths and weaknesses and youre on the way to developing a fairly logical strategy. Using that to develop three financial forecasts -- a best case, a worst case and a most likely case helps keep peoples feet on the ground. It also helps if the assumptions made in each case are carefully recorded. Compare this approach to starting to write a plan knowing what the final financial numbers have to look like and you can figure out, fairly quickly, which of the two plans is most likely to work.

A good reason to write a business plan is to figure out the answer to a question - like What would we have to do to increase our profits in each of the next 3 years? People will be more motivated to approach the process in a logical, thoughtful way than if were doing it because we should have one. Part of the answer is working out what the small business will have to do -- for example buy plant and equipment, add people, and change the way things are done. Those things would probably be written down somewhere anyway -- with, once again, all of the assumptions made -- so why not put them in a plan? If the money well have to spend and the people well have to hire are related to the increases in profits theyll help to generate, it becomes easier to see them as investments instead of expenses.

Plans that work are dog eared. Why? Because theyre pulled out regularly and reviewed. During the planning sessions the big goals -- increase sales by $500K -- are broken down into smaller actions -- introduce a new product, hire new sales people. Action plans -- with SMART (specific, measurable, attainable, realistic and time related) objectives -- are developed and written right into the business plan. Someone is designated as the champion for each action. She/he is responsible for getting it done. Its easy to check, for example once a quarter, whether well defined actions like these have been completed. At the same time actual developments in the economy, industry and marketplace are compared to the assumptions and the strategy updated. Financial results are compared with the forecasts and adjusted if necessary. These are no blame sessions -- if there are performance problems with some individuals theyre dealt with separately -- just an opportunity to update some projections with reality.

Why arent these guilt filled, finger pointing sessions? Because the people who did the planning know that they cant predict what the weather will be tomorrow, what the stock market will do next week or how their favorite sports team will finish the season. They measure how well their business plan has worked by how close their estimates came to reality. If any of us could exactly predict the future -- well, I wouldnt be writing this and you wouldnt be reading it.

I tell myself that one of the advantages of getting older (there have to be some surely) is that you gain a lot of practical experience both good and bad. A couple of the things Ive noticed, along the way, are related to business plans. Firstly, the companies that Ive been involved with which had good business plans always made more profit than those which didnt. Secondly, those small businesses hadnt written their plans to meet some predetermined outcome; theyd written them to help answer key questions affecting the future of the company. Finally the owners had a realistic approach to forecasting the future and, most importantly, they made their plan come to life.

Copyright ProfitPATH, a division of JDS & Associates Inc., 2006

Author Bio:
Jim Stewart is a well-known scripter. Jim likes to create articles about this industry.
You can search for this article using: strategic business planning, business strategy, small business planning
 
 
 

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