The Seven Key Sections of a Business Plan
1. Executive summary
Your executive summary should be 1–2 pages long, and provide an
overview of your business concept, key objectives of your business and
your plan, ownership structure, management team, your product or service
offering, target market(s), competitive advantages, marketing strategy,
and a summary of your financial projections. Your executive summary
should be written last, after you've written the rest of the plan; each
paragraph should be a summary of the more detailed, related section of
the plan.
2. Business Overview
In your overview, include details regarding your business’s history,
vision and/or mission, objectives, and your ownership structure.
3. Products and Services
Expand upon your products and services, including features and
benefits, competitive advantages, and, if marketing a product, how and
where your products will be produced.
4. Industry overview
The industry overview is your opportunity to demonstrate the viability
of your business by discussing the size and growth of your industry, the
key markets within your industry, how your customers will buy your
products or services, and which markets you’ll be targeting.
5. Marketing Strategy
Here you describe your target market segments, your competition, how
you'll differentiate your products or services, and your products’ or
services’ unique selling proposition (USP).
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Discuss product or service pricing and promotion, including how your
promotional programs will appeal to each of your target market segments.
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Provide a plan of traditional and guerrilla marketing tactics, such as
tradeshows, press-magnet events, social media marketing (e.g. Facebook,
Twitter, etc.), networking, and print, media, or online advertising.
Include the cost associated with each tactic.
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Describe how your products or services will be sold (e.g. storefront,
online, wholesalers), and your target markets’ buying cycle.
6. Operations Plan
Provide a profile of your management team, your human resources plan,
your business location(s) and facilities, your production plan (if
selling a product), and an overview of day-to-day operations.
7. Financial plan
Some believe this is the most important part of a plan – so much so,
it’s worth dedicating up to 80% of your time to writing this section.
You'll need to show three years’ worth of projected financial
statements, including income statements, pro-forma balance sheets, and
monthly cash flow and annual cash flow statements. Summarize each
statement into a few easy-to-understand sentences and put these in a
cover page for the statements. Be sure to document all of the
assumptions you used in forecasting your revenues and expenses.
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