Reviewing a Standard Business Plan – Important for the Investors
Every business should have a business plan. Unfortunately the vast majority of the business plans are not worth. Following errors are encountered while taking an outline of a bad business plan: Poorly written: Spelling, punctuation, grammar and style are important when it is done on paper. The investors are not supposed to invest in companies that have committed English mistakes. They are looking for clues about the underlying business and the leaders while following a plan. After seeing the spelling, punctuation and grammar mistakes, they will think about the negative aspects of the company. Careless presentation: Once your writing is proper, the presentation has to match. It is irritating for the investors to view inconsistent margins, charts without labels or improper units, missing page numbers, tables without heading, and technical terminology with missing contents in table. Incomplete plan: A complete plan should involve a discussion about the industry, specifically the industry trends like, if the market is developing or decreasing. Your plan should include detailed financial reports like, monthly cash flow, income statements and annual balance sheet. These are important facts for reviewing a standard business plan. Blurred plan: Business plan is not a novel, a poem or a code. If an individual with high school education can’t guess your plan, then you will require rewrite the plan. If you are trying to give blurred information due to confidentiality of your business, you should show summary to the people. If they show more interest to know about the business, then have then non complete sign and nondisclosure agreements before showing the complete plan.
Too detailed plan: Keep the technical details to a minimum in the main plan. If you want to include them, then add this in appendix. You may break your plans into three parts. Two to three page executive summary, ten to twenty page business plan and appendix if required to mention what you want to say. Unrealistic assumptions: