19 Questions to Supercharge Your Business Plan
Whether you are seeking capital for your company or are optimizing your business strategy, the most important element - particularly for outside investors - may be your written business plan. You can tune-up and supercharge your plan using this 19-step checklist. When your written plan firmly answers yes to each of these 19 questions, your market/product strategy is in terrific shape plus you increase the odds of attracting investment capital.If you don't already have a written business plan - write one! Your business plan is a blueprint for your whole company. It describes in detail your goals, the financial and technical viability of your goals, and the strategy you will use (or are using) to reach those goals. And your business plan is a working tool - it is a yardstick to measure your progress and a compass to keep you on course.
Must a business plan be written?
Yes! A plan which is not written usually has not been thought through fully. And despite what you may have read, it is doubtful that any business ever attracted capital on the back of a napkin.
Use this checklist as a way to identify where your strategy, as spelled out in your business plan, needs work. Each of the questions below highlights an area considered critical to technology investors.
1. Can the key ideas behind your product or service be stated in one or two sentences? (y/n)
2. Does your company have at least one unique and compelling competitive advantage, which cannot quickly or easily be duplicated? (y/n) Examples are a special feature, a cost advantage, a technical refinement, a new delivery system or a special supplier.
3. Is your competitive advantage proprietary? (y/n) That is, can it be copyrighted, patented, trademarked or otherwise protected? Can you keep it exclusive to you?
4. Is your industry segment growing by 25% or more? (y/n) If not, can your new product dominate its segment? If the answer is no, you probably won't be able to generate the kind of financial returns investors look for.
5. Does your product or service create a new market? (y/n) Although generally positive, this could be a trap - in a brand new market, the potential can be slow to develop. Lotus Notes created a new category but took years to create value for investors.
6. Is your market in "early momentum" - the market growth phase where market revenues have recently taken off? (y/n) Venture investors prefer markets in this stage because the time-to-create-value is shorter and the growth potential still large.
7. Is your target market segment 1) tightly defined over a population sharing common characteristics, 2) large enough to support significant profits, 3) served by communications channels to reach that market - i.e., trade or special interest publications, response mailing lists? (y/n)
8. Is your company filling a gap in the market, or do you have a "gee-whiz" product which you think is so terrific that customers will surely want to buy it? (y/n)
9. The benefit of your product or service to users is 1) significant, 2) quantifiable and 3) cost-justified? (y/n). If you provide a benefit which is important, and you can prove it - there is a much higher probability of generating sales.
10. Is there a demonstrated market for your product? (y/n) If you have an existing product, is your customer base expanding? Investors would rather fund sales and production than product development.
11. Is there wide appeal for your product or service? (y/n) Are there enough potential customers in the target market that you can earn significant profits, for a long time? Are there follow-on products to sustain revenue and profit growth?
12. Does your company have the ability to sell your product? (y/n) Particularly in companies where the founders have technical backgrounds, a question to ask is "Who is going to sell your product or service?" What about outside distributors?
13. Is there an experienced management team? (y/n) Investors would rather fund a solid team instead of one lone genius with a great idea. The team should be highly qualified in marketing, sales, finance, and the product/service area itself. Of course, a demonstrable track record helps.
14. Can you demonstrate a likely return of 5-15 times investors' capital, over a period ranging from three to seven years? (y/n) The actual parameters used by venture investors will vary based on which stage you are in (idea, startup, development, expansion, turnaround).
15. Is there a clear exit strategy for investors? (y/n) The most common strategies for returning investors' capital are 1) going public; 2) acquisition of your company; 3) new investors; 4) founder's buyback or management buyout.
16. Have other investors already put money into the company, particularly the senior management team? (y/n) This reduces the apparent risk, reduces overall exposure, and shows that management "has its money where its mouth is."
17. Have you clearly defined a structure for the investment you seeking? (y/n) The structure should include: who is involved, how much capital is needed, what minimum investment you will accept, how much equity that will buy - and, of course, the projected return on investment.
18. Are your financial projections realistic? (y/n) Have you soundly justified your projected growth rates and other financial assumptions?
19. Have you clearly examined the risks? (y/n) Investors like to know that you have considered the risks. This is key - can you turn your risks into opportunities?
Too many no's? Remember, each "no" opens up an area for you to strengthen your business. Even if you aren't seeking capital, each question highlights a critical success factor - which, when mastered, will increase your profits, your performance, and your future success.
In order to help you discover hidden value and opportunities in your existing business, and to make it easier to spot potential problems while you are just starting out, I've created the Discover Hidden Value Business Building Guide. A remarkable aid to accelerating the growth and profitability of your business, this program of insight-provoking questions and checklists enables you to rapidly diagnose, troubleshoot and optimize every part of your business, from marketing to sales, customer service to product development and finance to production.
About The Author:
Paul Lemberg is the President of Quantum Growth Coaching: More Profits and More Life for Entrepreneurs, Guaranteed. To get your copy of our free report with detailed steps to grow your business at least 40% faster, go to www.fastergrowthnow.com
This article is free for republishing
Source: http://www.articlealley.com/article_14727_15.html
Source: http://www.articlealley.com/article_14727_15.html
Sign Up
Do you need to raise money?
Do you need between £5,000 and £250,000?
Looking to raise £250,000 to £2,000,000?
In association with
![]()
Yorkshire Association of Business Angels (YABA)
We are obliged to inform all of our visitors that we are not FSA approved.
If we suspect money laundering activities we are obliged to notify the appropriate authorities.
Business Plan
- When Do I Need To Hire A Business Plan Company
- The Importance Of A Focused Business Plan
- Being a LEARNER, not MBA business plans
- The Management Team Section of the Business Plan - Don't Just Include Resumes
- Analyzing Customers in Your Business Plan
- The Ideal Length of Your Business Plan
- Business Plans- What Consultants Dont tell You!
- In Business Planning, Competition is Good
- Five Crucial Components Of A Business Plan
- Why You Need a Business Planning System NOT a Business Plan
- Getting Started: Creating a Business Plan
- Small Business Planning -- Three Myths
- Effectively Completing the Operations Plan Section of Your Business Plan
- Describing Intellectual Property in Your Business Plan
- Developing Realistic Financial Assumptions in Your Business Plan
- Documenting the Exit Strategy in Your Business Plan
- How to Size an Emerging Market in Your Business Plan
- How to Use Graphs and Charts in Your Business Plan
- Two Types of Business Plan Executive Summaries
- Documenting Partnerships in Your Business Plan
- Becoming Wise - Wild & Free: Writing A Successful Business Plan - Part 3 - The Feasibility
- Incorporating Investor Feedback into Your Business Plan
- Realism vs. Optimism in the Business Plan
- Before the Business Plan
- Developing a Business Plan = Developing a Succesful Business.
- Keys to a Good Business Plan.
- Home Cleaning Business Plan
- Business Plan Basics
- 19 Questions to Supercharge Your Business Plan
- Using Your Business Plan
- Your Perfect Business Plan
- Writing Your Business Plan
- Business Plan Software: Do You Need It?
- Getting Started: Creating a Business Plan
- What Business Plan do you have for this Year?
- First thing you need to do when getting started with your own business - Creating a business plan!
- Investors in your Business - 10 Things They Look for in a Business Plan
- Creating A Business Plan For Your New Online Income Opportunity
- Getting Started in Business With a Created or Proven Business Plan in 24 Hours
- Getting Started:- Creating a Business Plan
- Presenting Business Plans: Why People Feel Nervous and What You Can Do About It
- Writing a Business Plan: Why It Is Worth the Time and Effort
- How to Write a 'Killer' Business Plan
- Why Business Plans Don't Work and What To Do About Yours
- Creating a Business Plan
- Should You Write Your Own Business Plan?
- Top 10 Mistakes Made in Business Plans
- Top Ten Things to do before you Write a Business Plan
- 5 Reasons Why You Need a Business Plan
- Why a business plan is not just for start-up's
