A business plan is a formal document that outlines a company's goals and the plan to achieve them. It includes sections on the business overview, products/services, market, operations, management team, and financial projections. The business plan is used as a management tool to guide the business over its lifespan, help address problems, and attract investors. It also forces entrepreneurs to thoroughly think through their business steps before launching. The business model describes how a company generates revenue, including aspects like customer segments, value propositions, key activities, and partnerships. There are various types of business models such as advertising, subscription, and freemium.
A business plan is a formal document that outlines a company's goals and the plan to achieve them. It includes sections on the business overview, products/services, market, operations, management team, and financial projections. The business plan is used as a management tool to guide the business over its lifespan, help address problems, and attract investors. It also forces entrepreneurs to thoroughly think through their business steps before launching. The business model describes how a company generates revenue, including aspects like customer segments, value propositions, key activities, and partnerships. There are various types of business models such as advertising, subscription, and freemium.
A business plan is a formal document that outlines a company's goals and the plan to achieve them. It includes sections on the business overview, products/services, market, operations, management team, and financial projections. The business plan is used as a management tool to guide the business over its lifespan, help address problems, and attract investors. It also forces entrepreneurs to thoroughly think through their business steps before launching. The business model describes how a company generates revenue, including aspects like customer segments, value propositions, key activities, and partnerships. There are various types of business models such as advertising, subscription, and freemium.
A business plan is a formal document that outlines a company's goals and the plan to achieve them. It includes sections on the business overview, products/services, market, operations, management team, and financial projections. The business plan is used as a management tool to guide the business over its lifespan, help address problems, and attract investors. It also forces entrepreneurs to thoroughly think through their business steps before launching. The business model describes how a company generates revenue, including aspects like customer segments, value propositions, key activities, and partnerships. There are various types of business models such as advertising, subscription, and freemium.
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BUSINESS PLAN
What is a business plan?
A written representation of where an enterprise is going, how it will get there and what it will look like when it gets there. A business plan is a formal document contains the goals of an organisation and how that organization intends to achieve those goals Purpose of a Business Plan A Management Tool • A business plan guides the entrepreneur over the entire life span of the business. • It is thus a living document that helps realize the organization’s goals. • It can be modified as the company matures and as the market evolves. Purpose of a Business Plan A Problem-Solving Document • The process of developing a business plan helps the entrepreneur address potential problems proactively. • Writing a proper business plan helps him or her anticipate and prepare for pitfalls. • The capacity of a business plan to solve or prepare the business for problems is amplified when others review the business plan. Provides Analytical Discipline Building a business plan forces the entrepreneur to think through his or her steps thoroughly before putting resources or time into the business. It is much better to fail on paper than to fail in practice. Purpose of a Business Plan Forces Industry Understanding • While building a business plan, one gains a better understanding of the industry as one explores the market. • An understanding of the industry is a critical aspect in the journey a company takes from start-up status to profitable business. Purpose of a Business Plan Helps Attract Lenders and Investors One of the most well know purposes of a business plan is to get the buy in of investors. Investors must see clearly that the entrepreneur knows what he is up to and that the business in question has promise before they commit resources. In addition, following the plan helps the entrepreneur fulfil the promise made to investors and lenders. Purpose of a Business Plan Provides Motivation to Employees • In an ideal environment the business plan is a leadership tool that helps top management keep the workforce motivated. • Sharing the business plan with employees periodically communicates that the company has a future they can be part of. Structure of a Business Plan The key elements of a business plan are: 1. Overview of the business – what the business intends to do? 2. Products and Services – what does the business offer? 3. The Market – who are the customers and competitors? What is the opportunity? 4. Marketing Plan – how will the offering be promoted? 5. Operational Plan – what routines will be involved in running the business? 6. Financial Plan – what funding is required and how much revenue is expected? 7. Credentials of the Management Team – who will steer the business? Structure of a Business Plan • Vision, Mission and Strategy • A vision is a mental picture of the future the founders of a company see. • A mission is a description of the ideology that a company is founded on. • A strategy is a stream of decisions over time which reflect the firm’s goals and how they will be achieved. Structure of a Business Plan Organizational Plan This section describes how the business will be organised, how decisions will be made.
It also describes the nature of the enterprise in terms of its form:
sole proprietorship, enterprise, or limited liability company. Management Team This section is the most important following the executive summary. Here the team that will run the company day to day is described. The credentials of the leadership team can give investors an assurance that the new company is in safe hands. Structure of a Business Plan • Industry, Market and Competition The entrepreneur must know enough about what he is getting into to describe the needs in the industry, the existing players and how the new company will fit in and succeed. Structure of a Business Plan Marketing Plan • This section details an adequate description of the target customer, the tools and tactics that will be used to reach that customer and organisation’s pricing strategy among other related concerns. • For a start-up, this is one of the most critical aspects of the business plan. Without marketing a start-up is practically invisible to the world. Structure of a Business Plan Financial Plan Once the company is described, the entrepreneur will want to state the implications of the venture in terms of money. This is the part that will tell investors what the entrepreneur is asking form. The need to have this section in a business plan reveals the need for any start-up to ensure that their books are being kept properly right from the beginning. Key financial forecasts that need to be included in the plan are the Profit & Loss Account, Cash Flow and Balance Sheet (Evans, 2015). Risk Assessment and Rewards This section is intended to describe an evaluation of unfavourable events that may occur while floating the business. What is a Business Model? • “A business model represents a cognitive schema that explains how a company creates, delivers, and captures value by exploiting business opportunities” (Massa et. al as cited in Frishammar & Parida, 2019). An organization must be very clear on what the goal of the organization is. the goal of the company is not to churn out numbers, the goal is to generate revenue (Goldratt, 1984). • A business model describes how a company is doing business. Business Model • Michael J. Skok poses the questions to entrepreneurs: • How do you create value? • How do you deliver value? • How do you harness it? • In summary, how does a business make money (Harvard Innovation Labs, 2013). Types of Business Models • Advertising • This business model depends on creates a relationship with the client and expects a third party to pay the bills. This would typically mean that those paying the business are advertisers who need access to the users of the product. Two well know examples of this are Facebook and YouTube (Valuetainment, 2020). Organizations which use this model have to be careful with the data management in view of regulations such as GDPR and HIPAA (Sabastian-Coleman, 2018). • Affiliate • The affiliate business model is like the advertising business model, but the advertisements are more subtle. An affiliate would typically embed links the supplier of the product or service in online content. This approach takes away the inconvenience to the customer of having to deal with ads while earning money for the service provider and the affiliate. Business models • Subscription A subscription-based business model allows customers to pay for using the product rather than for owning it. This is the model typically used for software and cloud services. The cost of using the product is often much lower than the cost of owning it and there is typically no need to own it per se. Microsoft and Netflix use this model to sell software and visual content, respectively. Business models Reverse Razor-Razorblade • The Reverse Razor-Razorblade model keeps the initial cost high while selling “disposables” at a very low price. • The idea of this model is that the initial cost of the base product covers the cost of the supplies and thus only marginal profit is required when selling the supplies. • Parsons (n.d.) cites Apple’s iPod and iTunes as an example of this model. • Business models Disintermediation • This business model maximizes profit by cutting off middlemen. • Michael Dell adopted this model in his quest to break into the computer hardware market. Amazon also uses this model in the deliver of its Amazon Kindle (Parsons, n.d.). Business models Razor-Razorblade This model is a well-known model which relies on keeping the initial cost of the product low but requiring the consumer to keep buying disposables. • This model is often illustrated using the shaving stick. The shaving stick manufacturer sells the shaving stick at a low price with the understanding that the consumer will always return for blades (Kenton, 2019). Another great example of the Razor-Razorblade model is the sale of printers and ink cartridges (Hammel, 2009). Business models Freemium • A freemium business model offers a version of the product with limited features for free but charges for an upgrade to a richer version. LinkedIn, Yahoo and MailChimp use this model (Valuetainment, 2020). The Business Model Canvas A business model canvas is a visual representation of a business model, highlighting all key strategic factors. The nine building blocks of a Business Model Canvas comprise • customer segment, • value proposition, • channels, • customer relationships, • revenue streams, • key resources, key activities, • key partnerships, and • cost structure. • These building blocks together describe how a business creates, delivers, and captures value through the operation of its business model Business Model canvas • Together these elements provide a pretty coherent view of a business’ key drivers– • Customer Segments: Who are the customers? What do they think? See? Feel? Do? • Value Propositions:What’s compelling about the proposition? Why do customers buy, use? • Channels:How are these propositions promoted, sold and delivered? Why? Is it working? • Customer Relationships:How do you interact with the customer through their ‘journey’? • Revenue Streams:How does the business earn revenue from the value propositions? • Key Activities:What uniquely strategic things does the business do to deliver its proposition? • Key Resources:What unique strategic assets must the business have to compete? • Key Partnerships: What can the company not do so it can focus on its Key Activities? • Cost Structure: What are the business’ major cost drivers? How are they linked to revenue? Market Analysis • Market Analysis is the effort an entrepreneur makes to understand the market he or she is developing products for. Aspects explored in such an analysis include the size of that market in terms of volume and value, regulation, cultural issues, purchasing power, trends, and the competition. • Kotler and Keller as cited by McCarthy point out a six-step formal process for embarking on marketing research (McCarthy, 2015): 1. Define the Problem and Research Objectives 2. Develop a Research Plan 3. Collect the Information 4. Analyse the Information 5. Present the Findings 6. Make the Decision Competitor Analysis • Competitor analysis is a deeper look at one aspect of market analysis. A modern approach to achieving this would involve evaluating the competitor’s website, their products, pricing, customer reviews and customer journey. The latter can be done by patronizing the competition. (BigCommerce, 2015). Competitor analysis helps take decisions around product positioning and product differentiation. Risk Analysis • Risk analysis is an attempt to anticipate the possible problems that may occur in the course of embarking on a business venture and taking steps to prevent, avoid, of prepare for such negative outcomes as the case may be. The Risk Management Process consists of Risk Identification, Risk Prioritization and Risk Treatment. Risk Treatment options include Risk Avoidance, Risk transfer, Risk Mitigation and Risk Acceptance • SWOT Analysis SWOT is an acronym for Strength, Weaknesses, Opportunities and Threats. In SWOT analysis, the strengths, weaknesses, opportunities, and threats of a business are outline in each of four quadrants as shown in Figure 5. According to Erica Olsen (2016), “the purpose of a SWOT analysis is to create a synthesized view of your current state.” It is in effect a situation analysis for the company (Wolters, 2019). In Figure 5, the top part of the SWOT contains the quadrants that represent aspects derived from internal data – aspects that the organization can impact and directly influence. The bottom part represents aspect that derive from external data – aspects the organisation can influence but cannot directly impact (Olsen, 2016). • PESTEL Analysis and similar frameworks like PEST and STEEPLE help the user to examine the macro- environment of an organization (Johnson, 2019). In other works, PESTEL is focused on external factors that affect the organization. The original PESTEL analysis homes in on six factors namely: Political, Economic, Social, Technological, Ecological and Legal. The PEST framework is limited to exploring the first four factors while the STEEPLE frameworks adds • Ethical factors to the mix. These frameworks consider both the market and nonmarket aspects of strategy. Performing a PEST, PESTEL or STEEPLE analysis involves outlining the specific factors that may affect a business – either opportunities or threats – and grouping them in the categories specified in these frameworks. An analysis of this nature can help paint a more intricate picture of the business venture to investors. • Porter’s Five Forces Professor Michael Porter of the Harvard Business School developed the Five Forces that shape strategy back in 1979 (Harvard Business Review, 2008). These five forces are explicitly stated as follows (Business To You, 2019): 1. Rivalry Among Existing Competitors 2. Threat to New Entrants 3. Threat of Substitute Products or Services 4. Bargaining Power of Suppliers 5. Bargaining Power of Buyers Financial Analysis • Cost-Benefit Analysis Cost-Benefit Analysis (CBA) is an attempt to evaluate a project in the light of the possible profits from the venture as well as the alternatives to that venture like simply doing nothing or embarking on a different venture. CBA. When CBA considers only the firm in question, it is called Financial Cost Benefit Analysis. Economic Cost Benefit Analysis looks at how the project impacts the larger environment (Conservation Strategy Fund, 2014a). • Sensitivity Analysis Sensitivity Analysis is an attempt to dig deeper into Cost-Benefit analysis to cater of risk and uncertainty. Using a spreadsheet, the approach is to build a sensitivity table and evaluate the changes in net present value as the input costs are varied (Conservation Strategy Fund, 2014b). Financial Models • A financial model is a representation of the summary of expenses and earnings of a business. Financial models are used to help forecast a business’s future performance and make decisions on investment, growth, budgeting, asset management and business valuation. At the beginning of a business, the figures used in a financial model are mostly estimates and extrapolation of the current state. The results of a financial model typically fit at the end of a business plan. Financial Models • There are three types of financial models: • 1. Three Statement Model 2. Discounted Cash Flow Model 3. Industry Specific Model