Business Plan Contents
Business Plan Contents
Business Plan Contents
1. Executive Summary
2. Business Description
a. Vision and Mission Statement
b. Business Concept
c. Business Model
3. Marketing Plan
a. Target Market
b. Market Size and Market Trends
c. Competitor Analysis
d. Competitive Advantage
e. Marketing Strategy
4. Operational Plan
a. Location
b. Operational Scope
c. Operational Procedure
d. Supplier
e. Manpower Requirement
5. Management
a. Management Team
b. Organizational Structure
c. Legal Structure
6. Financial Plan
a. Profit and Loss
b. Cash Flow Statement
c. Break Even Analysis
d. Initial Investment or Source of Financing
e. Return of Investment
7. Implementation
8. Appendices
a. Resumes for all members
b. Sample Permits (BIR, Application for Registration, DTI Permit, Permit to
Engage in Business, Certificate of Registration, and Fire safety Inspection)
c. Mandatory Benefit Forms (SSS, Philhealth, and PAGIBIG)
Executive Summary
The executive summary is probably the most critical part of the business plan
format. Many business plan readers will read the executive summary and then decide
whether to proceed further or discard the plan.
The executive summary should be written last, once all the other sections are complete.
It should not exceed two pages and should eloquently summarise the most important
aspects of the plan.
Business Description
The general company description section usually follows the executive summary in the
started business plan format. It is used to give a high level overview of the company and
the business that it engages in.
This introductory section of the plan section should include:
Rather focus on the description of the industry. Is the business retail, wholesale, food
service, manufacturing or service-oriented? Provide an indication of how big the
industry is and why it has become so popular. You can also highlight some of the trends
currently influencing the growth of the industry. Try as much as possible to prove how
much opportunity there is in the industry – do so with statistics and anecdotal
information.
You should also explain the target market and how your product will be distributed to
the market, as well as the support systems including advertising, promotions and
customer service strategies. In the description you can include the unique features
setting your product or company apart from others in the industry.
The business description should also answer the questions about how your business is
going to make a profit. If you are using the plan to apply for funding, explain why the
money is going to make your business more profitable.
The length of the description will depend on the complexity of your plan, if your plan isn’t
complicated, keep the description short by describing the industry in one paragraph, the
product in another and the business in three of four paragraphs.
Your business model must include information on what your company offers in terms of
products or services; what makes your offering unique; who you sell them to; and how
you make your money.
The important aspects of a business model that should be presented in a consolidated
framework include: The sources of revenue
They also avoid three things that can derail a business, namely difficulties in satisfying
customers, trouble maintaining market position, and problems generating funding for
growth.
a) The Opportunity
Describe the gap that exists in the market and explain what has given rise to this gap,
how it was identified and how it can be filled. Answer the following questions:
This requires a description and explanation of the strategic choices that you have made
as a business, including:
Operational Plan
Explain the daily operation of the business, its location, equipment, people, processes,
and surrounding environment. The operational plan in a standard business plan format
describes how the business functions on a continuing basis, as well as the capital and
expense requirements related to the operations of the business.
This section will vary depending on the nature of the business but some the more
generic items that can be presented include:
A description of the operating cycle that describes what the organisation will do to
deliver its service or create and sell its product
A description of where all the necessary skills and materials will be sourced
What will be outsourced, what relationships are in place and how those
relationships will be managed
The cash receipts and cash payment cycle of the business
You can include a number of financial tables in the plan, including the operating
expense table, the capital requirements table and the cost of goods table.
You should also highlight any potential benefits or pitfalls to the community such as new
job creation, economic growth and possible effects on the environment from
manufacturing and how they will be handled to conform with regulations._
Don’t include too much financial detail in the body of the business plan. If you have
detailed projections and supporting calculations, place them in the appendix.
The following are the most important financial documents to include in the financial plan:
The three most important financial statements to include in your business are the
income statement, cash flow statement and balance sheet. Of these three, the income
statement is the best place to start. It is a simple and straightforward report on the
proposed business’s cash-generating ability. It’s a score card on the financial
performance of your business reflecting when sales are made and when expenses are
incurred.
In the business plan, the income statement should be generated on a monthly basis
during the first year, quarterly for the second and annually for each year thereafter. The
information included is your financial projections of income, cost of goods, gross profit
margin, operating expenses, total expenses, net profit, depreciation, net profit before
interest, interest, net profit before taxes, taxes and profit after taxes. After the income
state, include a short note analysing the statement, emphasising key points.
The cash flow statement shows how much cash is needed to meet obligations, when it
is going to be required, and where it will come from. It should show a schedule of the
money coming into the business and expenses that need to be paid. The result is the
profit or loss at the end of the month or year.
Profits and losses are carried over to the next column to show the cumulative amount. If
you run a loss on your cash flow statement, it is a strong indicator that you will need
additional cash in order to meet expenses. You will also need to analyse the cash flow
statement in a short summary.
The balance sheet is generated only on an annual basis for the business plan and is
basically a summary of all the preceding financial information broken down into three
areas: Assets, liabilities and equity. Investors might require a personal financial
statement or balance sheet instead of one that describes the business. Again, you will
need to create an analysis statement for the balance sheet covering the key points.
Implementation
To determine how realistic your implementation plan is, each task must be paired with
an appropriate time frame for completion. Some tasks will naturally take more time than
others, so do your best to set realistic estimates. If you're treading into unknown territory
with any part of your plan, it's your responsibility to do the research, track down
instructional resources that'll help you through implementation, or find a partner, mentor
or contractor with more direct experience to help execute.
You should be aggressive but reasonable with your time allocation to ensure not just
completion, but also competent work. For assistance in framing this timescale, use a
program such as Microsoft Project, or create your own Gantt chart – a helpful tool that
shows how long it will take to complete different tasks and in which order the tasks
should be finished.
Appendix
The appendix includes additional documents that the reader of the business plan may
want to refer to.
All of these sections combine to create what is hopefully an exciting and viable story of
a business that is to be launched or a growth path that will take an existing business to
new levels of impact and success.
There are some important things to remember when writing your business plan. You
need to be as realistic as possible with all projections. The small details are important,
so have the plan proof read by someone with a good command of the English language
to check for any spelling or grammatical errors.