5 Reasons Why You Need a Business Plan
5 Reasons Why You Need a Business PlanWhen I am asked to explain why business planning is so important, my first inclination is to quote Lewis Carroll. In Alice's Adventures in Wonderland, Alice comes to a fork in the road and asks:
Would you tell me, please, which way I ought to go from here?
That depends a good deal on where you want to get to, said the Cat.
I don't much care where-- said Alice.
Then it doesn't matter which way you go, said the Cat.
For me this scene encapsulates perfectly the problems of not having an over-arching goal and plan for your business. Without a plan, a business is essentially rudderless, and day-to-day activities are likely to be haphazard and reactive, in stark contrast to those businesses implementing a well thought out business plan.
The following represents a list of my top five reasons a firm needs a business plan.
1. To Map the Future
A business plan is not just required to secure funding at the start-up phase, but is a vital aid to help you manage your business more effectively. By committing your thoughts to paper, you can understand your business better and also chart specific courses of action that need to be taken to improve your business. A plan can detail alternative future scenarios and set specific objectives and goals along with the resources required to achieve these goals.
By understanding your business and the market a little better and planning how best to operate within this environment, you will be well placed to ensure your long-term success.
2. To Support Growth and Secure Funding
Most businesses face investment decisions during the course of their lifetime. Often, these opportunities cannot be funded by free cash flows alone, and the business must seek external funding. However, despite the fact that the market for funding is highly competitive, all prospective lenders will require access to the company's recent Income Statements/Profit and Loss Statements, along with an up-to-date business plan. In essence the former helps investors understand the past, whereas the business plan helps give them a window on the future.
When seeking investment in your business, it is important to clearly describe the opportunity, as investors will want to know:
o Why they would be better off investing in your business, rather than leaving money in a bank account or investing in another business?
o What the Unique Selling Proposition (USP) for the business arising from the opportunity is?
o Why people will part with their cash to buy from your business?
A well-written business plan can help you convey these points to prospective investors, helping them feel confident in you and in the thoroughness with which you have considered future scenarios. The most crucial component for them will be clear evidence of the company's future ability to generate sufficient cash flows to meet debt obligations, while enabling the business to operate effectively.
3. To Develop and Communicate a Course of Action
A business plan helps a company assess future opportunities and commit to a particular course of action. By committing the plan to paper, all other options are effectively marginalized and the company is aligned to focus on key activities. The plan can assign milestones to specific individuals and ultimately help management to monitor progress. Once written, a plan can be disseminated quickly and will also prompt further questions and feedback by the readers helping to ensure a more collaborative plan is produced.
4. To Help Manage Cash flow
Careful management of cash flow is a fundamental requirement for all businesses. The reason is quite simple--many businesses fail, not because they are unprofitable, but because they ultimately become insolvent (i.e., are unable to pay their debts as they fall due). While the break-even point--where total revenue equals total costs--is a highly important figure for start-ups, once a business is up and running profitably, it becomes less important.
Cash flow management then becomes more vital when businesses pursue investment opportunities where there are significant cash out flows, in advance of the cash flows coming in. These opportunities need to be assessed against any seasonal variations in the business and the timing of the flows. If you are a 'cash-only' business, you can bank the income immediately; however, if you sell on credit, you receive the cash in the future and hence may need to pay some of your own expenses before that income hits your account. This will put a further strain on the company's solvency and hence a well structured business plan will help you manage funding requirements in advance.
5. To Support a Strategic Exit
Finally, at some point, the owners of the firm will decide it is time to exit. Considering the likely exit strategy in advance can help inform and direct present day decisions. The aim is to liquidate the investment, so the owner/current investors have the option of cashing out when they want. Common exit strategies include;
o Initial Public Offering of stock (IPO's)
o Acquisition by competitors
o Mergers
o Family succession
o Management buy-outs
Investment decisions can be taken in the present with one eye on the future via a well-thought-out business plan. For example, if the most attractive exit route appeared to be selling to a competitor, present day management and investment decisions could focus on activities that would increase the company's attractiveness to that competitor.
Given that valuing firms is notoriously difficult and subjective, a well-written plan will clearly highlight the opportunity for the incoming investors, the value of it and increase the likelihood of a successful exit by the current owner.
Alan Gleeson is the Managing Director of Palo Alto Software, Ltd., creators of Business Plan Pro? 2006. He holds an MBA from Oxford University and is a graduate of University College, Cork, Ireland.
If you would like further information on business planning visit www.bplans.co.uk and www.paloalto.co.uk
This article is free for republishing Source: http://www.articlealley.com/article_38020_15.html
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