![]() Date: 2025-05-01 Page is: DBtxt003.php txt00004081 | |||||||||
Management | |||||||||
Burgess COMMENTARY | |||||||||
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. Simple business plan outline
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.
Size your business plan to fit your business. Remember that your business plan should be only as big as what you need to run your business. While everybody should have planning to help run a business, not everyone needs to develop a complete formal business plan suitable for submitting to a potential investor, or bank, or venture contest. So don’t include outline points just because they are on a big list somewhere, or on this list, unless you’re developing a standard business plan that you’ll be showing to somebody else who expects a standard business plan. Consider plan-as-you-go business planning. I’ve done a lot of work on this idea lately, resulting in my new “Plan As You Go” business planning, which is a now a book published by Entrepreneur Press, available through Amazon.com, Barnes and Noble, and Borders, and bundled as an eBook with Business Plan Pro and LivePlan. More business planning resources Sometimes an outline just isn’t enough to write your business plan. Do you want to view sample business plans from real businesses? Would seeing a business plan template that banks prefer be useful to you? These valuable resources can help: Sample business plans – Over 500 free sample business plans from various industries Business plan template – This fill-in-the-blank business plan template is in the format preferred by the SBA and banks Start a business – An easy to follow six-step process for starting a new business Business Plan Pro – Step-by-step software that makes it easy to create a business plan, regardless of your business planning experience LivePlan – Easy business planning for everyone. This online software includes expert advice, built-in help and more than 500 complete sample business plans. About the author: Founder and President of Palo Alto Software and a renowned planning expert. He is listed in the index of 'Fire in the Valley', by Swaine and Freiberger, the history of the personal computer industry. Tim contributes regularly to the bplans blog, the Huffingtonpost.com as well as his own blogs, Planning, Startups, Stories, Up and Running, and others. His full biography is available at timberry.com. |