Start Anywhere. Get Going
Sunday, August 2, 2009 15:33| by
(Note: this article is an excerpt from The Plan-As-You-Go Business Plan, published by Entrepreneur Press, written by Tim Berry, and bundled with Business Plan Pro. It is reproduced here with permission of the publisher.) Think of your business plan as a matter of blocks, like interrelated pieces. You don’t have to have the whole block structure done before you take any next steps. Start your blocks where you like. Some common blocks are the mantra, the sales forecast, the mission statement , the keys to success, maybe a break-even analysis, or a SWOT, or how about the heart of your plan, as in the whole discussion of who needs your product or service and why and what it is? A sales forecast is a block, and so is an employee or personnel plan, as in laying out month by month how many people will be working in your company, and how much each of them will be paid. The key here is that you don’t get bogged down on having a finished business plan before you do anything else. You’re planning as you go. You’ve heard the stories of people who spent months developing their plan, but never get started. So instead of that, think of the blocks. Choose where you want to start. Get going. Start Wherever You Like The blocks idea also saves you from the tyranny of sequence. You don’t have to start at the beginning and work through to the end. You can jump in and start wherever you want. |
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Don’t Worry About Finishing A good business plan is never done. It’s the launch of a planning process, and you want to understand from the very beginning that if you ever think your plan is done, your business is probably finished. You’ll have to review and |
| revise regularly to keep your business going. Assumptions will change, your forecasts will be wrong, and the art of management will be figuring out when to revise the plan to accommodate changing reality, and when to stick to the parts of the plan that will work if you hold your course.
That’s paradox, of course, and that’s why we (owners and managers) do it instead of computers. (Additional note, for Business Plan Pro users: your outline view makes it easy to jump around as suggested here. Tim) Source : bPlans.com |
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James Raymond says:
November 22nd, 2009 at 10:42 am
James Raymond…
Is there anymore you could add to this article that would people understand all spetrums of this subject?…