250 likes | 471 Views
Creating a Business Plan. Plan for and communicate success. Objectives. Understand the purposes of a business plan. Be able to develop a business plan Communicate business plan to a commercial lender Utilize a business plan to set your farming operation up for success.
E N D
Creating a Business Plan Plan for and communicate success
Objectives • Understand the purposes of a business plan. • Be able to develop a business plan • Communicate business plan to a commercial lender • Utilize a business plan to set your farming operation up for success
What is a Business Plan? A business plan is a decision making tool that takes the form of a formal document. It encompasses many of the concepts we have already talked about: • Mission Statement & Farm Story • SMART Goals (short and long-term) • SWOT Analysis • Organizational Structure/Job Description/Job Specification • Balance Sheet (actual and/or projected) • Income Statement (actual and/or projected) • Enterprise/Whole-Farm/Cash Flow Budgets • Break-evens
Primary Purpose • Action Plan – starting a business can seem like a daunting task. A business plan breaks starting a business into smaller problems that are easier to solve. This makes the process more successful. • Road Map – a business plan gives your business direction. This will cause it to have a higher likelihood of success and help you communicate your vision to investors and commercial lender. • Sales Tool – a well developed business plan will help you sell your business venture idea to yourself, family members, investors, and commercial lenders. It will show the feasibility of an idea.
Executive Summary • An executive summary is a stand-alone summary of your business plan. It is a chance to sell your reader on your business. • Summarize the essence of your business • Describe why this is a good opportunity • Describe the product, describe the target market and your product’s benefits • Describe your marketing plan, competitive advantage, management team, financial strategy, and funding strategy • Most people will not read pass the executive summary, so make it count!
Step 1: Company Overview • Identify what kind of business you want to pursue. What will you grow/make? Who will be your customers? Where is your location? How will you sell your product? Where do you envision this business to be in 5, 10, 20, or 25 years? • Write Introduction • Develop your mission statement • Develop your farm story (from start to now) • Set SMART goals • Develop objectives • Develop an exit strategy
Step 2: Product Overview • This is your opportunity to introduce the reader to your product. • Describe your product’s feature – attributes, demand for product, prices, customer service • Describe your product’s benefits – what are the benefits for your target market? • Where is your product in the stage of development? When will it be ready for market? What obstacles stand in your way? • Describe your product in ways that someone who has never heard of your product will understand.
Step 3: Market and Industry Analysis • This should be an in-depth analysis of your market. • Define your market, the size, identify any growth • Identify trends affecting your market i.e. consumer trends, business trends, political trends. List both good and bad. • Identify your target market. Look at demographics, economic value, how buying decisions are made. Your target market may be a consumer segment or a business segment.
Step 3: Market and Industry Analysis Cont’d • This should be an in-depth analysis of your industry. • Define how products get to the consumer. What is the level of integration? This should be a supply chain analysis. • Analysis of the competitive market including: • How do businesses compete i.e. price, quality, customer service? • Is it a highly competitive market? • How do competitors react to new, entering firms? Can your business withstand this reaction? • Are there barriers to entry like economies to scale, establishment cost, agreements with suppliers, customers, strategic partners? • Analysis of each competitor and any opportunities you see.
Step 4: Marketing Plan • This section can make or break you. You need to show that you can be competitive. • Provide a complete profile of your direct customer • Describe the marketing channel to get your product to the final consumer • Describe your market positioning. What does the customer need to believe about your product? What unmet need are you fulfilling? What makes you different?
Step 4: Marketing Plan Cont’d • Describe how your product has been tailored to meet the needs of customers • Describe your pricing strategy and how it will be effective • How will you communicate with your customer? Do you need branding? • This may be a great place to show forecasted sales and revenues
Step 5: Operations Plan • You and your employees will be spending a majority of your time and money on operations. It’s important to tie this into your marketing plan. • Describe how you will produce and deliver your product to the direct consumer • Scope of Operations: what tasks will be completed “in-house” • Identify key vendors, suppliers, lenders, strategic partners. What arrangements have you reached with them? • How many inputs, employees, and capital assets do you need to reach your five year sales goal? What level of production do you need?
Step 6: Development Strategy • Describe what 5-10 events need to take place in order for your business to succeed in the next 2-3 years. • Funding • Key agreements • Strategic alliances • Key hires • Facility development • Marketing Strategy
Step 7: Management Strategy • The idea is to convince the reader that you have a great management team to support your great idea. Display your strengths while downplaying your weaknesses. Note your accomplishments. • Include an organizational structure • If you have a board of directors, identify the members and their role • If you have a board of advisors, identify the members and their role • Define the ownership structure of the business. • Write a brief description of each management member including duties, skills, and responsibilities
Step 8: Competitive Advantage • Perhaps one of the most difficult parts of a business plan, this section addresses your true competitive advantages and how you will sustain your competitive advantage as more competitors enter your market. • To identify your sustainable competitive advantage: • Refer to your SWOT analysis • Identify your business’s resources including financial, physical, human, patents, trade-secrets, and organizational • Identify your business’s capabilities including management, sales, technology, or production expertise • Identify the barriers to entry that you can establish for competing businesses
Step 9: Financial Plan • You will want to include financial statement projections for your first five years of operation. • Income Statement – Annually for years 1-5 • Balance Sheet – Annually for years 1-5 • Cash Flow – Monthly for years 1-2, Quarterly for years 3-5 • Break-even and sensitivity analysis • Include your key financial assumptions, compare your estimates to other companies in your industry, and identify the risks to implementation.
Step 10: Funding • You will need to address how much funding is needed, the sources of funding, and how the funding will be used. • Funding Requirements – use your cash flow to determine how much funding is needed • Sources of funding – include equity (owner financing) and debt financing. How will funding from each of these sources be used? • Offering – this is your pitch for money • Equity financing – security offered, share of company, and ROI • Debt financing – collateral, term of loan, interest rate, and how it will be repaid
Make Your Business Plan… • Professional: • Choose professional looking fonts, colors, pictures, and format • Include a cover letter • Include an executive summary • Include a table of contents and topic headers • Include appendices, figures, charts, and graphs • Proof-read, spell-check, and grammar check your work
Make Your Business Plan… • Informative: • Write clearly – “say what you are going to say, say it, say what you said” • Write succinctly • Cite your sources • Reference your appendices, figures, charts, and graphs where applicable in your business plan
Resources to get you started • “Writing a Successful Business Plan” by Lawrence and Moyes • Small Farm Funding Resources from USDA National Agricultural Library • Starting a Business from The U.S. Small Business Administration • Farm Business Planning from Beginning Farmers Business Plan Templates: • Business Plan Preparation from University of Colorado
Homework • Gather information for your business plan. • Write a rough draft of your business plan. Make sure to include a cover letter, executive summary, and all 10 steps.
One Minute Takeaway • Take a minute to write down one or two ideas or takeaways from this lesson.
Sieverkropp Consulting LLC. Contact: Elizabeth Sieverkropp esieverkropp@gmail.com (509) 398-6858 Website: www.sieverkroppconsulting.com Training Program Homepage: www.sieverkroppconsulting.com/fsa-borrower-training-program-homepage