In our efforts to find out why 99% of business plans are typically
rejected, numerous venture capitalists, investors, bankers, and
investment bankers have let us in on the things they look for. When
the following rules are broken, it becomes a simple thing for the
professionals to spot, thus helping them save time by quickly
weeding out the business plans they will dump.
Credit Pacific Service Union Follow these rules and give your business plans a better chance
of being seriously looked at.
A successful repayment plan requires you to make regular, timely payments, and could take 48 months or longer to complete. Ask the credit counseling service for an estimate of the time it will take you to complete the plan. Some credit counseling services charge little or nothing for managing the plan; others charge a monthly fee that could add up to a significant charge over time. Some credit counseling services are funded, in part, by contributions from creditors.
Credit First Service Union Rule 1: The business plan is the most important document
in a business.
The business plan, whether on paper or in your head,
guides the company. It provides the basic framework of
communicating the goals of the organization. Few documents are as
important to the future of the enterprise. Unfortunately, few
documents are also as ignored and ill prepared.
Rule 2: The value of a business plan is directly
proportional to its use.
The more a business plan is used throughout the
organization, the more chance the business has of meeting its goals
and succeeding. Everyone in the organization should have access to
it to help them make decisions that are consistent with the
direction the company wants to go.
Corollary 2A: The only ones who will use
the business plan are those who believe it.
Corollary 2B: The first one to believe
the business plan is the one who writes it.
Rule 3: A business plan is first and foremost a guidance
document.
The purpose of the business plan is generally
misunderstood. Entrepreneurs think it is a document that is written
once in order to attract an investor. Once the business is funded,
they think the business plan is no longer needed.
The reality is that the business plan should be used as
the guiding document of the business. It should be reviewed
regularly to help refresh people as to the goals of the company.
The projections in it should be used to regularly compare
expectations against what actually happens in the company and its
marketplace to evaluate progress and determine "course
corrections."
Rule 4: The business plan does not run the business.
While the business plan is an important guidance
document, people, not the document, run the business. As time goes
on, more accurate information becomes available, new avenues become
apparent, and new goals get set.
Rule 5: The business plan is a dynamic document, not a
static document.
Because things change during the progress of a
business, the business plan should regularly be adjusted to reflect
those changes. New goals get set, new markets open up, some markets
close, etc. A maintained business plan allows the company to keep
important information in the forefront as well as simplifies the
process of attracting additional capital if needed.
Rule 6: The business plan must be as complete as possible.
This rule is important in maintaining a useful
document, whether using it to help guide the company or using it to
help attract capital.
Rule 7: The business (funding) plan must be preceded by an
executive summary.
In the cases where the business plan is used to attract
capital, it must be preceded with a well-written Executive Summary.
Investors will not read the entire business plan at first. Without
a well-written and concise Executive Summary, the plan doesn´t have
a chance.
Corollary 7A: The executive summary must
not exceed three pages.
Investors typically spend no more than five minutes to
decide whether or not to dig deeper into a business plan. They have
learned over many years that if the Executive Summary is more than
three pages long, they would be wasting their time. They assume the
entrepreneur is not capable of sufficiently summarizing the company
in order to save them time.
Rule 8: Appearances in the business (funding) plan are
critical.
Investors look for clues to help them cull business
plans. They know that entrepreneurs who do not pay attention to
detail will likely lose money and be unsuccessful. They also know
that if a business plan is flashy, the entrepreneur is inclined to
waste money. They have learned how to spot the "good" plans and
skip the "bad" plans by quickly perusing the document.
© Copyright 2006, Leonard M. Stillman Jr., All Rights Reserved.
- Finance charges will accrue on the purchase from the date the credit plan begins, and minimum payments are due each billing cycle.
- If the sales slip honoring your account or the card does not specify that the purchase is subject to a special credit plan, then the purchase is subject to the Regular Revolving Credit Plan.
- Any charges to your Golfers Warehouse credit card that do not meet the minimum purchase requirement of $499.99 will be subject to the rules of the Regular Revolving Credit Plan.
Card Credit Mobile Service Len Stillman is the owner of
Business
Plan Tools, LLC and the
Thrifty Shoppers Club. He has served
entrepreneurs, banks, and investors for over 35 years. You are
invited to learn more about the information in this article by
visiting his Business Plan Tools blog.
Plans will vary based on the size of a company. branch credit union with 100 people. Likewise, the credit union's plan will differ greatly from the disaster recovery plan for a Fortune 500 company. For the small to size business, real money can be saved by developing and implementing a plan that takes advantage of the company's size and flexibility.
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