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Should you write your own business plan?
by: Jan B. King
If you are just starting a company and looking for funding, or looking
for additional funding for growth, you will need to develop a traditional
business plan. Creating a business plan is a business hurdle that entrepreneurs
seem to dread. Do you do it yourself? Do you hire someone to do it? How
do you get it done quickly, but without spending too much money on it?
Will what you do yourself be adequate to get funding?
In this article I will discuss the pros and cons of do-it-yourself business
planning versus having a business planning consultant do it for you or
with you.
The Do It Yourself Business Plan
Particularly if you are seeking capital of less than $200,000, consider
creating the plan yourself after taking a class or reading some books
or getting some coaching for someone who has written successful business
plans.
Consider taking a three-hour business planning class through SCORE or
the local Small Business Development Center. Even if you decide afterwards
not to write your own plan, you will have a much better idea of what you
want out of the process and what to expect.
There are some good reasons for an entrepreneur to do the business plan:
First of all, because you can. If you’ve read sample business
plans and find their accounting jargon intimidating, you are not alone.
But as long as you can clearly get your message across and have other
people such as you accountant look at the plan before it goes to lenders
or others, you can do this work yourself.
- It is in learning the business planning process that you develop analytical
thinking skills necessary to run your business with an intimate understanding
of your own business model. Going through the planning process is an
invaluable business experience.
- You need to know the plan inside and out and really understand the
variables involved. You are the one who will be asked the tough questions
by potential investors or lenders, such as “What will you do if
only half your expected revenue comes in?” or “What will
you do if you find out that direct mail is not working for you as your
primary marketing tool?”
Outsourcing the Business Plan Process
Entrepreneurs are fire fighters. One of the most important jobs of an
entrepreneur is to manage time, and do those things that you are best
skilled to do. Many entrepreneurs decide to hire someone else to do their
business plans, often because they have an urgent need for the funding
and can’t afford the learning curve to be able to develop a high-quality
plan that will meet the needs of lenders or investors.
In addition, if your funding requirements are more than $500,000 my recommendation
is to get some professional help with this project, even if you do some
of it yourself.
Some reasons to consider hiring a consultant:
- It will get done! Business planning is done much faster with someone
who knows the process. Every entrepreneur has good intentions about
getting plans completed, but months later they still haven’t done
all the work. Planning should be high priority work, but it is hard
to get to when customer calls and employee problems require immediate
attention. The sooner the plan is completed, the sooner funding can
be attained. And the price of hiring the consultant will be small in
comparison with the increases in growth and profitability of the business.
- It will get done in a way financial professionals will respect. Business
planning is done better by someone who knows how finance people look
at plans and what they will and won’t question. Once you’ve
been through the business plan process many times, you know what it
takes to get funding - what to emphasize and what to play down.
- The consultant’s objectivity will allow for non-emotionally-based
projections and expectations for the business. A consultant will be
much more objective in the process and question your assumptions, making
it less likely that the business will have problems after the funding
comes in.
No matter what, don’t let a business planning consultant talk you
into putting any information into your plan that you aren’t comfortable
with. If it doesn’t look right to you, it probably isn’t.
It is your business, and you will be stuck with the plan long after you’ve
paid the consultant’s bill. Make sure it is the plan that you want,
one that matches your goals and objectives, and captures the way you look
at business and the spirit of your company.
If you do decide to hire a business planning consultant, here are some
of the important questions to ask to make sure you get the greatest value
from your investment:
- How many business plans have you written for my type of business?
How many of them were funded?
- How much time will you need of mine during the planning process?
- When will the plan be completed, and how many drafts should I expect
to see and have the opportunity to comment on?
- Will you be writing the plan yourself or do you have associates who
do the work with you?
- Will there be an opportunity for you to present the plan or for me
to present the plan to my other advisors before the final draft is done?
- How do you work in collaboration with my partners and advisors so
their input is taken into consideration during the writing of the plan?
- Do you do the market research and the financial spreadsheets, or
are those things done separately (and charged for separately)?
- Does your price include revisions or customization for certain types
of funding (to include different information needed by investors versus
lenders)?
- Does your price include coaching to prepare me to talk with lenders
or make financing presentations?
- Will I have an electronic version as well as a hard copy version of
the final plan (so I can make changes later if I need to)?
The Optimum Solution: A Blended Approach
At best, the planning process should not be at either end of the spectrum,
but squarely in the middle. In my experience, plans that win funding come
from a true collaboration between a skilled consultant/facilitator and
the entrepreneur’s team of employees and advisors.
A business planning consultant can act as a coach, first assessing the
job to be done, and then recommending who is best to do it. The business
plan should be a compilation of work between the vision and goals of the
entrepreneur, the technical understanding and expertise of his or her
accountant and other professionals, a consensus of employees or others,
and the research and writing abilities of the business planning consultant.
The consultant should meet with all parties involved, talk about what
is needed for the plan, and use all the resources available to get the
work done as quickly and cost effectively as possible. It is the consultant’s
responsibility in the process to take all the pieces and make the final
plan into a readable, accessible document that will stand up to investor/lender
scrutiny. My final caveats:
- Don’t pay more than a few thousand dollars for a plan unless
you are looking for capital of well over $1 million. I have heard more
than a few horror stories by people who have hired university professors
assuming they are the experts (they aren’t) and paying tens of
thousand of dollars for a poorly written or incomplete plan. Ask your
banker for business planning consultant recommendations, or better yet,
talk with someone who had a good experience having a business plan written
for them. It is reasonable for a consultant to expect you to pay half
of the fee up front and the other half at the completion of the plan.
And you can’t hold the consultant responsible if you don’t
get funding based on the plan – too much is based on your own
credit and management skills.
- Don’t expect to get a finished plan that is a roadmap of everything
you need to do to have a successful business. That isn’t the purpose
of the business planning process. A traditional business plan is intended
only to document your strategies for the business very briefly –
but well enough to get funding. If you are hoping for something that
will tell you how to market or how many people you need to hire, you
will have to start with a deep strategic planning process, and probably
buy lots of consulting time to get you going.
- Don’t expect a great a business plan from a poor business model.
If your costs are too high to make your business profitable, the business
planning process will help you discover that. Then it will be up to
you to make the hard decisions about changing your costs structure to
make the business work. The business planning consultant is a skilled
professional, not a miracle worker. A good business plan can help you
highlight your strengths and minimize your weaknesses, but it cannot
make an unworkable business model into a thriving business.
And one final thought: Don’t go on to start a business or make
changes in your current business if everything in the business planning
process tells you it won’t work. Things don’t get better out
in the real world if they don’t work on paper. Deal with the weaknesses
– get more training, consider product redevelopment, or have a home-based
business to reduce costs until you can sustain the rent for an office.
Businesses fail finally because they’ve run out of money. If your
plan tells you that you can’t make enough money to make the business
work for the long run, pay attention to that reality.
About the author
Jan B. King is the former President & CEO of Merritt Publishing,
a top 50 woman-owned and run business in Los Angeles and the author
of Business Plans to Game Plans: A Practical System for Turning Strategies
into Action (John Wiley & Sons, 2004). She has helped hundreds
of businesses with her book and her ebooks, The Do-It-Yourself Business
Plan Workbook, and The Do-It-Yourself Game Plan Workbook. See www.janbking.com
for more information.
jan@janbking.com |
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