QUESTION: I recently read that
the importance of business plans is overrated. To start a homebased
business, do I need to have a business plan?
ANSWER: We salute you for both
taking to heart what you read, while at the same time, not taking
something in writing at face value. We have long held that the value of a
business plan for a start-up homebased business is to provoke the
thinking you owe yourself before risking time, money and energy on a new
venture. Now the research is in.
Peter Economy, the co-author of Lessons From the Edge
(Oxford University Press), interviewed 75 entrepreneurs whose companies
were producing more than $1 million a year before the owners reached age
40. "They said [if they had to do it over], they would not have done a
business plan," says Economy. "They expressed the belief that it's
better to dive in than to plan every move. The only time they needed a
formal business plan was when they went to get outside financing or
funding."
Similarly, David E. Gumpert, author of How to Really Create a Successful Business Plan (Lauson Publishing), has a written a new book, Burn Your Business Plan!
(Lauson Publishing). Gumpert surveyed 42 private investors and found
half had invested in companies without seeing a business plan, and
nearly two out of three said a business plan is less than critical to
their evaluation of a business. Gumpert examined academic research and
concluded that a formal business plan can actually hamper an early-stage
company's chances of success.
Are business plans just artifacts of the pre-Internet era, entombed
in business school curricula? For most of the 50-page plans promoted in
these venues, the answer is yes. But learning all you can about your
industry and your market remains vital, so before you start any
business, you should be able to answer these questions:
- What, specifically and succinctly, is your business? Are you, for instance, renting wedding gowns, selling sporting goods or providing recreational activities for seniors?
- Who is most likely to buy what you will be selling?
- Why would people buy what you offer? What advantages does your product or service offer that people can't already get from the marketplace?
- What are the best ways for you to reach your target customers?
- What tasks do you need to do first to get underway? If it's wise "to do first things first," what is first? And what is next? And after that?
- How will you price what you offer, and what do you expect your costs and revenues to be?
It helps to put your answers in writing, but you can do this on the
back of a napkin, in a notebook or on a computer. If you prefer a more
structured method, consider the one-page approach, available as software
at www.onepagebusinessplan.com or in the book The One Page Business Plan (One Page Business Plan Co.) by Jim Horan.
What's most important once you decide to start a business is to be active. As we say in Why Aren't You Your Own Boss?
(Prima Publishing), the key is to always move forward toward your goal,
and to refuse to allow obstacles-like feeling blocked by needing to
write a business plan-to get in your way. Before you go to bed each
night, set at least one goal to accomplish the next day that brings you
closer to starting your own business. Write it down in a notebook, and
when you accomplish it, cross it off your list.
Paul and Sarah Edwards are the co-authors of 15 books, including Working From Home.
http://www.entrepreneur.com/article/64652
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