Creating a business plan will help
you achieve your entrepreneurial goals. A clear and compelling business plan
provides you with a guide for building a successful enterprise focused on
achieving your financial goals. It is also a document that can persuade others,
including banks, to invest in what you're creating and running. While there are
many types of businesses out there, the basic categories of information and
questions that need to be covered by a business plan are fairly standard and
widely applicable. You can learn how to conduct research, structure your
business appropriately, and write up a draft.
Analyze the potential
markets for your business. Consider which segment of the local (and/or
international) population will be seeking to use your products or services.
This needs to be more than mere guesswork and involves doing accurate and
intelligent research. You need to analyze secondary research collected by
outside observers, as well as getting primary research that you collect
yourself, with your own methods and observations. Consider the following areas
of inquiry:
- Is there a viable market for the product or service you want to sell?
- How old are your potential customers?
- What do they do for a living?
- Is your product or service attractive to a particular ethnic or economic population?
- Will only wealthy people be able to afford it?
- Does your ideal customer live in a certain type of neighborhood or area?
Establish the size of your
potential market. It's important to be as specific as possible in regard to
your market and your product. If you want to start a soap business, for
example, you may believe that every dirty body needs your product, but you
can’t start with the entire world as your initial market. Even if you’ve
developed such a universally needed item as soap, you need to identify a
smaller, more targeted customer group first, such as children under eight who
might like bubblegum scented bubble bath, or soap made for mechanics. From
there, you can analyze demographic information more specifically:
- How many car mechanics are in need of soap in any given community?
- How many children in the United States are currently under the age of eight?
- How much soap will they use in a month or a year?
- How many other soap manufacturers already have a share of the market?
- How big are your potential competitors?
Identify your company’s
initial needs. What will you require to get started? Whether you want to
buy an existing company with 300 employees or start your own by adding an extra
phone line to your home office desk, you need to make a list of the materials
you’ll need. Some may be tangible, such as five hundred file folders and a
large cabinet in which to store them all. Other requirements may be intangible,
such as time to create a product design or to do market research on potential
customers.
Prepare product samples.
If you’re going to build a better mousetrap, you may have constructed a
prototype out of used toothpaste tubes and bent paperclips at home, but you’ll
need a sturdier, more attractive model to show potential investors. What
exactly will your mousetrap look like? What materials will you need? Do you
require money for research and development to improve on your original
toothpaste tube and paper clip construction? Do you need to hire an engineer to
draw up accurate manufacturing designs? Should you patent your invention?
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