10 Steps to Open for Business

Step 3: Create a Business Plan

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In our experience, the process of creating and writing a business plan is as valuable as the end product itself - a document that will provide the priorities, context and sanity you’ll need as you start up your business.

Just remember that the most important audience for a business plan is YOU! You’ll be forced to be accountable to all of the statements, claims, stats and facts inside of it.

You may also use your business plan as a tool to generate interest from financiers, prospective employees and strategic partners.

We focus on 3 aspects of business planning to consider as you write a business plan:

  1. The "Defining Dozen" questions you must answer
  2. Key components of a business plan
  3. Writing a business plan
Sample Business Plans
Use these sample business plans for reference. * pdf document. Adobe Acrobat Reader required

The "Defining Dozen" questions

To write a good business plan, you have to know the answers to the “Defining Dozen” questions, which we describe in detail in “StartupNation: Open for Business,” our book. Jot down the answers to each of these questions and hang on to them. You might not use every answer in writing your business plan, but they could be helpful when you update your plan as your new business grows.

  1. What’s your business idea? (Read the book excerpt)
  2. How does your idea address a need? (Read the book excerpt)
  3. What model suits you best? (Read the book excerpt)
  4. What’s so different about what you offer? (Read the book excerpt)
  5. How big is the market and how big will you grow? (Read the book excerpt)
  6. What’s your role going to be? (Read the book excerpt)
  7. Who's on your team? (Read the book excerpt)
  8. How will customers buy from you, and how much will they pay? (Read the book excerpt)
  9. How much money do you need, and how much will you make? (Read the book excerpt)
  10. Where's the startup money coming from? (Read the book excerpt)
  11. How will you measure success? (Read the book excerpt)
  12. What are your key milestones? (Read the book excerpt)

Once you’ve answered these questions, you should be prepared to write the actual business plan document.

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Comments

olfolkie olfolkie Posted: 10/6/2008 10:27:25 AM

Projections are the scariest part of a plan because they are, at some level, just guesses.  I put together a tool that solves this problem for me because it lets me say how...

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tlsbus tlsbus Posted: 9/19/2008 1:40:36 PM

I completely agree that it is the process of developing the plan that is critical to business success.  Just sitting down and thinking through all of the questions that go into creating a...

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LolaC LolaC Posted: 9/19/2008 1:18:28 PM

I definitely agree with Danadtoll. The process of going through a business plan will force you to think about things that you may have either overlooked or avoided. It forces you to define every...

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onlineaddict onlineaddict Posted: 8/26/2008 3:48:09 AM

A plan is absolutely important. For it helps one to stay focused on the job. When milestones are charted out, one knows what lies ahead. Or one just travels through a maze and goes...

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