A Standard Business Plan Outline
What information needs to be in your business plan?
What is the order of information that will make the most sense to lenders and investors? You can answer these questions with the business plan outlines provided below.
What are the standard elements of a business plan?
If you do need a standard business plan to seek funding — as opposed to a plan-as-you-go approach for running your business, which I describe below — there are predictable contents of a standard business plan outline.
For example, a business plan normally starts with an Executive Summary, which should be concise and interesting. People almost always expect to see sections covering the Company, the Market, the Product, the Management Team, Strategy, Implementation, and Financial Analysis. The precise business plan format can vary.
Is the order important?
If you have the main components, the order doesn’t matter that much, but here’s the sequence I suggest for a business plan. I have provided two outlines, one simple and the other more detailed.
Read more: http://articles.bplans.com/writing-a-business-plan/A-Standard-Business-Plan-Outline#ixzz3Hl25w4RW
Simple business plan outline
- Executive Summary: Write this last. It’s just a page or two of highlights.
- Company Description: Legal establishment, history, start-up plans, etc.
- Product or Service: Describe what you’re selling. Focus on
- customer benefits.
- Market Analysis: You need to know your market, customer needs,
- where they are, how to reach them, etc.
- Strategy and Implementation: Be specific. Include management
- responsibilities with dates and budgets. Make sure you can
- track results.
- Web Plan Summary: For e-commerce, include discussion of
- website, development costs, operations, sales and marketing
- strategies.
- Management Team: Describe the organization and the key
- management team members.
- Financial Analysis: Make sure to include at the very least
- your projected Profit and Loss and Cash Flow tables.
Build your plan, then organize it. I don’t recommend developing
the plan in the same order you present it as a finished document.
For example, although the Executive Summary obviously comes
as the first section of a business plan, I recommend writing it after
everything else is done. It will appear first, but you write it last.
Standard tables and charts
There are also some business tables and charts that are
normally expected in a standard business plan.
Cash flow is the single most important numerical analysis
in a plan, and should never be missing. Most plans will also
have Sales Forecast and Profit and Loss statements.
I believe they should also have separate Personnel listings,
projected Balance Sheet, projected Business Ratios,
and Market Analysis tables.
I also believe that every plan should include bar charts and pie
charts to illustrate the numbers.
Expanded business plan outline
Here’s an expanded full business plan outline, with details
you might want to include in your own business plan.
1.0 Executive Summary
1.1 Objectives
1.2 Mission
1.3 Keys to Success
2.0 Company Summary
2.1 Company Ownership
2.2 Company History (for ongoing companies) or Start-up
Plan (for new companies)
2.3 Company Locations and Facilities
3.0 Products and Services
3.1 Product and Service Description
3.2 Competitive Comparison
3.3 Sales Literature
3.4 Sourcing and Fulfillment
3.5 Technology
3.6 Future Products and Services
4.0 Market Analysis Summary
4.1 Market Segmentation
4.2 Target Market Segment Strategy
4.2.1 Market Needs
4.2.2 Market Trends
4.2.3 Market Growth
4.3 Industry Analysis
4.3.1 Industry Participants
4.3.2 Distribution Patterns
4.3.3 Competition and Buying Patterns
4.3.4 Main Competitors
5.0 Strategy and Implementation Summary
5.1 Strategy Pyramids
5.2 Value Proposition
5.3 Competitive Edge
5.4 Marketing Strategy
5.4.1 Positioning Statements
5.4.2 Pricing Strategy
5.4.3 Promotion Strategy
5.4.4 Distribution Patterns
5.4.5 Marketing Programs
5.5 Sales Strategy
5.5.1 Sales Forecast
5.5.2 Sales Programs
5.6 Strategic Alliances
5.7 Milestones
6.0 Web Plan Summary
6.1 Website Marketing Strategy
6.2 Development Requirements
7.0 Management Summary
7.1 Organizational Structure
7.2 Management Team
7.3 Management Team Gaps
7.4 Personnel Plan
8.0 Financial Plan
8.1 Important Assumptions
8.2 Key Financial Indicators
8.3 Break-even Analysis
8.4 Projected Profit and Loss
8.5 Projected Cash Flow
8.6 Projected Balance Sheet
8.7 Business Ratios
8.8 Long-term Plan
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