Imagine you are starting a trip. Where are you going? How will you get there? A plan helps you chart the best course, ensures that you follow your route, alerts you to important landmarks and reminds you of your schedule and budget.
You wouldn’t embark on a trip without a plan so why would you start a business without one? Studies have shown that the failure rate of start-ups without business plans is three times higher than that of businesses whose owners prepared a plan.
A business plan provides you with the analysis needed to decide whether it is in your financial interest to go into the business. If you decide to continue exploring the idea, this analysis is critical to obtaining the main thing that fuels the business world: capital. A plan helps the prospective investor – be it your banker or brother-in-law – determine the merits of the “deal.”
Plans can be as short as one page or as long as one hundred; most are between twenty-five and fifty pages in length. Whatever length and style is suitable for you, your plan should, at a minimum, contain the following information:
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