Business Plan Help & Small Business Articles

What Makes a Good Plan?

by Tim Berry

What factors are involved in creating a good business plan? Is it the length of the plan? The information it covers? How well it’s written, or the brilliance of its strategy. No.

The following illustration shows a business plan as part of a process. You can think about the good or bad of a plan as the plan itself, measuring its value by its contents. There are some qualities in a plan that make it more likely to create results, and these are important. However, it is even better to see the plan as part of the whole process of results, because even a great plan is wasted if nobody follows it.

Planning is a process, not just a plan

A business plan will be hard to implement unless it is simple, specific, realistic and complete. Even if it is all these things, a good plan will need someone to follow up and check on it. The plan depends on the human elements around it, particularly the process of commitment and involvement, and the tracking and follow-up that comes afterward.

Successful implementation starts with a good plan. There are elements that will make a plan more likely to be successfully implemented. Some of the clues to implementation include:

  1. Is the plan simple? Is it easy to understand and to act on? Does it communicate its contents easily and practically?
  2. Is the plan specific? Are its objectives concrete and measurable? Does it include specific actions and activities, each with specific dates of completion, specific persons responsible and specific budgets?
  3. Is the plan realistic? Are the sales goals, expense budgets, and milestone dates realistic? Nothing stifles implementation like unrealistic goals.
  4. Is the plan complete? Does it include all the necessary elements? Requirements of a business plan vary, depending on the context. There is no guarantee, however, that the plan will work if it doesn’t cover the main bases.

Uses of business plans
Too many people think of business plans as something you do to start a company, apply for a loan, or find investors. Yes, they are vital for those purposes, but there’s a lot more to it.

Preparing a business plan is an organized, logical way to look at all of the important aspects of a business. First, decide what you will use the plan for, such as to:

  • Define and fix objectives, and programs to achieve those objectives.
  • Create regular business review and course correction.
  • Define a new business.
  • Support a loan application.
  • Define agreements between partners.
  • Set a value on a business for sale or legal purposes.
  • Evaluate a new product line, promotion, or expansion.

No time to plan? A common misconception
“Not enough time for a plan,” business people say. “I can’t plan. I’m too busy getting things done.” A business plan now can save time and stress later.

Too many businesses make business plans only when they have to. Unless a bank or investors want to look at a business plan, there isn’t likely to be a plan written. The busier you are, the more you need to plan. If you are always putting out fires, you should build fire breaks or a sprinkler system. You can lose the whole forest for too much attention to the individual trees.

Keys to better business plans

  • Use a business plan to set concrete goals, responsibilities, and deadlines to guide your business.
  • A good business plan assigns tasks to people or departments and sets milestones and deadlines for tracking implementation.
  • A practical business plan includes 10 parts implementation for every one part strategy.
  • As part of the implementation of a business plan, it should provide a forum for regular review and course corrections.
  • Good business plans are practical.

Business plan “don’ts”

  • Don’t use a business plan to show how much you know about your business.
  • Nobody reads a long-winded business plan: not bankers, bosses, nor venture capitalists. Years ago, people were favorably impressed by long plans. Today, nobody is interested in a business plan more than 50 pages long.

What can help me write a good business plan?

About Tim Berry

Founder and President of Palo Alto Software and a renowned planning expert. He is listed in the index of "Fire in the Valley", by Swaine and Freiberger, the history of the personal computer industry. Tim contributes regularly to the bplans blog, the Huffingtonpost.com as well as his own blogs, Planning, Startups, Stories, Up and Running, and Planning Demystified. His full biography is available at timberry.com.

More from Tim Berry


{ 13 comments… read them below or add one }

mohd kashif August 7, 2008 at 8:25 am

good article. it is very helpful for us.
from mohd kashif
http://www.sastamaalindia.com

Brandon March 5, 2009 at 5:07 am

The service that is offered is excellent and very helpful, I will use this website to get information about business planning and also business ideas.

Seng Moon ja June 7, 2009 at 4:57 am

That site is very useful for me.To start a business, I don’t know how to start and how to write my plan.
But it help me a lot.

habaasa gilbert June 20, 2009 at 2:03 am

am a fresh graduate of bachelor of science in population studies makerere university uganda-east africa. i wish to begin population and development consultation firm. this is in line with my education specialization. how can i design a business plan for this business?

sean smith April 8, 2011 at 5:51 am

this was very help full when it comes to the making of the busness plan
for my project at matthew moss in my world.

thanks

sean smith

vietnamese April 24, 2011 at 9:52 am

Thanks for ur article so much. Really helpful for my presentation at university.

jasmine wilkerson September 23, 2011 at 10:49 am

This was very very helpful for me … I used this article for a project at my school Johnson Senior High School of Saint Paul, Minnesota . We have something at our school where all senior in order to graduate have to pick a topic to research for 9 weeks. One of my topic was how to start a small business as an teenager , then i changed it to how to write a business plan. So far this article is the best one i came across during . I want to thank you .

Thank you ,

Jasmine Wilkerson , 17

koko October 13, 2011 at 2:46 am

This is a wonderful piece, i will definitely make sure i follow all the instructions to avoid haphazard results in my next business.. thank you.

iqbal October 13, 2011 at 8:02 pm

It was worth the knowledge that i got. Yhanks

Chantelle October 24, 2011 at 11:18 am

Thank you so much for the insight to creating a business plan of my own,this will surely help me plenty in future.

amin sanusi labilam October 26, 2011 at 8:46 am

too good article, sure it wil bring one to succese!

Subair m Ummer October 27, 2011 at 1:08 am

Thanks a lot. Actually i was searching about b plan. This articles inspired me to start business as own

Dane Pymble November 9, 2011 at 3:23 am

Excellent article Tim. I particularly like your comments about a lot of small business owners only getting a business plan done when they need to. Once they have the finance/capital etc that the business plan was intended to assist in obtaining, many simply put it in the bottom draw until the next time they need to provide a business plan.

I am currently in discussions with a firm to promote a web-based tool that allows small business owners and their staff to run their business with the business plan as the centrepiece.

I encourage those interested in this to contact me via my website – http://www.smallbusinesswizardry.com/contact-us/

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