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Business plans guide owners, management and investors as businesses start up and grow through stages of success. A business owner or prospective business owner writes a business plan to clarify each aspect of his business. A business plan includes objectives to anticipate and prepare for growth. Savvy business owners write a business plan to guide management and to promote investment capital. Types of business plans include, but are not limited to, start-up, internal, strategic, feasibility, operations and growth plans.
Ads by Google Business Writing Soft skills training materials to teach Business Writing skills. CorporateTrainingMaterials.com Start-UpDetail the steps to start a new business with a start-up business plan. Include sections describing the company, the product or service your business will supply, market evaluations and your projected management team. Provide a financial analysis with spreadsheets describing financial areas including, but not limited to, income, profit and cash flow projections.
InternalInternal business plans target an audience within the business. Write an internal business plan to evaluate a proposed project. Describe the company’s current state, including operational costs and profitability. Calculate if and how the business will repay any capital needed for the project. Provide information about project marketing, hiring and tech costs. Include a market analysis illustrating target demographics, market size and the market’s positive effect on the company income.
StrategicA strategic business plan provides a detailed map of a company’s goals and how it will achieve them, laying out a foundational plan for the entire company. According to the website, Clean Washington Center, a strategic business plan includes five elements: business vision, mission statement, definition of critical success factors, strategies for achieving objectives and an implementation schedule. A strategic business plan brings all levels of the business into the big picture, inspiring employees to work together to create a successful culmination to the company’s goals.
FeasibilityA feasibility business plan answers two primary questions about a proposed business venture. According to the University of Colorado Leeds School of Business, feasibility plans attempt to determine who, if anyone, will purchase the service or product a company wants to sell, and if the venture can turn a profit. Feasibility business plans include, but are not limited to, sections describing the need for the product or service, target demographics and required capital. A feasibility plan ends with recommendations for going forward.
Operations Business PlansOperations plans are internal plans that consist of elements related to company operations. An operations plan, according to BPlans.com, specifies implementation markers and deadlines for the coming year. The operations plan outlines employees’ responsibilities.
GrowthGrowth plans or expansion plans are in-depth descriptions of proposed growth and are written for internal or external purposes. According to BPlans.com, if company growth requires investment, a growth plan may include complete descriptions of the company, its management and officers. The plan must provide all company details to satisfy potential investors. If a growth plan needs no capital, the authors may forego obvious company descriptions, but will include financial sales and expense projections.