M15981511985
商业计划书英文
Your business plan is very often the first impression potential investors get about your venture. But even if you have a great product, team, and customers, it could also be the last impression the investor gets if you make any of these avoidable mistakes.
INVESTORS see thousands of business plans each year, even in this down market. Apart from a referral from a trusted source, the business plan is the only basis they have for deciding whether or not to invite an entrepreneur to their offices for an initial meeting.
With so many opportunities, most investors simply focus on finding reasons to say no. They reason that entrepreneurs who know what they are doing will not make fundamental mistakes. Every mistake counts against you.
This article shows you how to avoid the most common errors found in business plans.
Content Mistakes
Failing to relate to a true pain
Pain comes in many flavors: my computer network keeps crashing; my accounts receivable cycle is too long; existing treatments for a medical condition are ineffective; my tax returns are too hard to prepare. Businesses and consumers pay good money to make pain go away.
You are in business to get paid for making pain go away.
Pain, in this setting, is synonymous with market opportunity. The greater the pain, the more widespread the pain, and the better your product is at alleviating the pain, the greater your market potential.
A well written business plan places the solution firmly in the context of the problem being solved.
Value inflation
Phrases like "unparalleled in the industry;" "unique and limited opportunity;" or "superb returns with limited capital investment" - taken from actual documents - are nothing but assertions and hype.
Investors will judge these factors for themselves. Lay out the facts - the problem, your solution, the market size, how you will sell it, and how you will stay ahead of competitors - and lay off the hype.
Trying to be all things to all people
Many early-stage companies believe that more is better. They explain how their product can be applied to multiple, very different markets, or they devise a complex suite of products to bring to a market.
Most investors prefer to see a more focused strategy, especially for very early stage companies: a single, superior product that solves a troublesome problem in a single, large market that will be sold through a single, proven distribution strategy.
That is not to say that additional products, applications, markets, and distribution channels should be discarded - instead, they should be used to enrich and support the highly focused core strategy.
You need to hold the story together with a strong, compelling core thread. Identify that, and let the rest be supporting characters.
No go-to-market strategy
Business plans that fail to explain the sales, marketing, and distribution strategy are doomed.
The key questions that must be answered are: who will buy it, why, and most importantly, how will you get it to them?
You must explain how you have already generated customer interest, obtained pre-orders, or better yet, made actual sales - and describe how you will leverage this experience through a cost-effective go-to-market strategy.
"We have no competition"
No matter what you may think, you have competitors. Maybe not a direct competitor - in the sense of a company offering an identical solution - but at least a substitute. Fingers are a substitute for a spoon. First class mail is a substitute for e-mail. A coronary bypass is a substitute for an angioplasty.
Competitors, simply stated, consist of everybody pursuing the same customer dollars.
To say that you have no competition is one of the fastest ways you can get your plan tossed - investors will conclude that you do not have a full understanding of your market.
The "Competition" section of your business plan is your opportunity to showcase your relative strengths against direct competitors, indirect competitors, and substitutes.
Besides, having competitors is a good thing. It shows investors that a real market exists.
Too long
Investors are very busy, and do not have the time to read long business plans. They also favor entrepreneurs who demonstrate the ability to convey the most important elements of a complex idea with an economy of words.
An ideal executive summary is no more than 1-3 pages. An ideal business plan is 20-30 pages (and most investors prefer the lower end of this range).
Remember, the primary purpose of a fund-raising business plan is to motivate the investor to pick up the phone and invite you to an in-person meeting. It is not intended to describe every last detail.
Document the details elsewhere: in your operating plan, R&D plan, marketing plan, white papers, etc.
Too technical
Business plans - especially those authored by people with scientific backgrounds - are often packed with too many technical details and scientific jargon.
Initially, investors are interested in your technology only in terms of how it:
solves a really big problem that people will pay for;
is significantly better than competing solutions;
can be protected through patents or other means; and
can be implemented on a reason-able budget.
All of these questions can be answered without a highly technical discussion of how your product works. The details will be reviewed by experts during the due diligence process.
Keep the business plan simple. Document the technical details in separate white papers.
No risk analysis
Investors are in the business of balancing risks versus rewards. Some of the first things they want to know are what are the risks inherent in your business, and what has been done to mitigate these risks.
The key risks of entrepreneurial ventures include:
Market risks: Will people actually buy what you have to sell? Will you need to create a major change in consumer behavior?
Technology risks: Can you actually deliver what you say you can? On budget and on time?
Operational risks: What can go wrong in the day-to-day operations of the company? What can go wrong with manufacturing and customer support?
Management risks: Can you attract and retain the right team? Can your team actually pull this off? Are you prepared to step aside and let somebody else take over if necessary?
Legal risks: Is your intellectual property truly protected? Are you infringing on another company's patents? If your solution does not work, can you limit your liability?
This is, of course, just a partial list of risks.
Even though you may feel that the risks are negligible, potential investors will feel otherwise unless you demonstrate that you have given a lot of thought to what can go wrong and have taken prudent steps to mitigate these risks.
Poorly organized
Your idea should flow in a nice, organized fashion. Each section should build logically on the previous section, without requiring the reader to know something that is presented later in the plan.
Although there is no single "correct" business plan structure, one successful structure is as follows:
Executive Summary: This is a brief, 1 to 3 page summary of everything that follows in the plan. It should be a stand-alone document, as many readers will make their initial decision based on the executive summary alone. This should usually be written last; otherwise, you have nothing to summarize!
Background: If you are in a highly specialized field, you should provide some background in layman terms since most investors will not have advanced degrees in your field.
Market Opportunity: Describe how businesses and consumers are suffering, and how much they are willing to pay for a solution.
Products or Services: Describe what you do, and how your solution fits into the market opportunity.
Market Traction: Describe how you have succeeded in attracting customers, marketing and distribution partnerships, and other alliances that demonstrate that experts in your market are betting on your solution.
Competitive Analysis: Identify your direct and indirect competitors, and describe how your solution is better.
Distribution and Marketing Strategy: Describe how you will go to market, how you will price your products, etc.
Risk Analysis: Identify major sources of risks, and describe how you are mitigating them.
Milestones: Showcase a strong past track record, and describe key checkpoints for the future.
Company and Management: Provide the basic facts about your company - where and when you incorporated, where you are located, and brief biographies of your core team.
Financials: Provide summaries of your P&L and cash flows, and the assumptions used to come up with these. Also describe your funding needs, how you will use the proceeds, and possible exit strategies for investors.
As stated earlier, there is no "right" structure - you will need to experiment to find the one that best suits your business.
Your business plan is very often the first impression potential investors get about your venture. But even if you have a great product, team, and customers, it could also be the last impression the investor gets if you make any of these avoidable mistakes.
Financial Model Mistakes
Forgetting Cash
Revenues are not cash. Gross margins are not cash. Profits are not cash. Only cash is cash.
For example, suppose you sell something this month for $100, and it cost you $60 to make it. But you have to pay your suppliers within 30 days, while the buyer probably won't pay you for at least 60 days.
In this case, your revenue for the month was $100, your profit for the month was $40, and your cash flow for the month was zero. Your cash flow for the transaction will be negative $60 next month when you pay your suppliers.
Although this example may seem trivial, very slight changes in the timing difference between cash receipt and disbursement - just a couple of weeks - can bankrupt your business.
When you build your financial model, make sure that your assumptions are realistic so that you raise sufficient capital.
Lack of Detail
Your financials should be constructed from the bottom-up, and then validated from the top-down.
A bottom-up model starts with details such as when you expect to make certain sales, or when you expect to hire specific employees.
Top-down validation means that you examine your overall market potential and compare that to the bottom-up revenue projections.
Round numbers - like one million in R&D expenses in Year 2, and two million in Year 3 - are a sure sign that you do not have a bottom-up model.
Unrealistic financials
Only a very small handfull of companies achieve $100 million or more in sales only five years after founding.
Projecting much more than that will not be credible, and will get your business plan canned faster than almost anything else.
On the other hand, a business with only $25 million in revenues after five years will be too small to interest serious investors.
Financial forecasts are a litmus test of your understanding of how venture capitalists think.
If you have a realistic basis for projecting $50-100 million in Year 5, you are probably a good candidate for venture financing. Otherwise, you should probably look elsewhere.
Insufficient financial projections
Basic financial projections consist of three fundamental elements: Income Statements, Balance Sheets, and Cash Flow Statements. All of these must conform to Generally Accepted Accounting Principles, or GAAP.
Investors generally expect to see five years of projections. Of course, nobody can see five years into the future. Investors primarily want to see the thought process you employ to create long-term projections.
A good financial model will also include sensitivity analyses, showing how your projected results will change if your assumptions turn out to be incorrect. This allows both you and the investor to identify the assumptions that can have a material effect on your future performance, so that you can focus your energies on validating those assumptions.
They should also include benchmark comparisons to other companies in your industry - things like revenues per employee, gross margin per employee, gross margin as a percentage of revenues, and various expense ratios (general and administrative, sales and marketing, research and development, and operations as a percentage of total operating expenses).
Conservative assumptions
Nobody ever believes that assumptions are conservative, even if they truly are.
Develop realistic assumptions that you can support, refrain from using the words "conservative" or "aggressive" in your plan, and leave it at that.
Offering a valuation
Many business plans err by stating that their company is worth a certain amount. How do you know? The value of a company is determined by the market - by what others are willing to pay - and unless you are in the business of buying, selling, or investing in companies, you probably don't have an acute sense of what the market will bear.
If you name a price, one of two things can happen: (a) your price is too high, and investors will toss your plan; or (b) your price is too low, and investors will take advantage of you. Both are bad.
The purpose of the business plan is to tell your story in the most compelling manner possible so that investors will want to go to the next step. You can always negotiate the price later.
Stylistic Mistakes
Poor spelling and grammar
If you make silly mistakes in your business plan, what does that say about how you run your business?
Use your spelling and grammar checkers, get other people to edit the plan, do whatever it takes to purge embarrassing errors.
Too repetitive
All too often, a plan covers the same points over and over. A well-written plan should cover key points only twice: once, briefly, in the executive summary, and again, in greater detail, in the body of the plan.
Appearance matters
At any point in time, an investor has dozens if not hundreds of plans waiting to be read. Get to the top of the pile by making sure that the cover is attractive, the binding is professional, the pages are well laid out, and the fonts are large enough to be easily read.
On the other hand, don't go too far - you don't want to give the impression that you are all style and no substance.
Execution Mistakes
Waiting until too late
The capital formation process takes a long time. In general, count on 6 months to a year from the time you start writing the plan until the time the money is in the bank.
Don't put it off. Your management team should be prepared to invest about 500 hours into the plan. If you are too busy building your product, company, or customers (which is arguably a better use of your time), consider outsourcing the development of the business plan.
Failing to seek outside review
Make sure that you have at least a few people review your plan before you send it out - preferably people who understand your market, sales and distribution strategies, the VC market, etc.
Your plan may look perfect to you and your team, but that's probably because you've been staring at it for months.
Good, objective reviews from outsiders with a fresh perspective can save you from myopia.
Overtweaking
You could spend countless hours tweaking your plan in the pursuit of perfection.
A lot of this time would be better spent working on your product, company, and customers.
At some point, you need to pull the trigger and get the plan out in front of a few investors.
If the reaction is positive, and they want to move forward, great.
If the reaction is negative (assuming that the investor was a good fit to begin with), then you may have been heading down the wrong path. Get feedback from a couple of investors, and if a general consensus emerges, go back and refine your plan.
Conclusion
It's a tough investment climate, but good ideas backed by good teams and good business plans are still getting funded.
Give yourself the best possible chance by avoiding these simple mistakes.
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商业计划是为客户准备的,因为他们需要知道该产品是否符合市场目标而不是该产品的实用性,同时也是为政府准备,因为政府需要了解产品的法律,经济和补贴问题是否符合要求等诸如此类的问题。(Business plan is prepared for customers for they need to know whether the product serves the purpose or not and the utility of the product, for government because it is necessary to know for government whether the legal economical and subsidy concerns are met or the like.)那么一篇商业计划书通常需要包含哪些内容呢?通常情况下,一篇优秀的商业计划书(Business Planning)需要包含以下几个部分Executive SummaryBackground/Industry ResearchCompetitor AnalysisCustomer ProfileProduct RangePersonnelOperations AnalysisLegal and/or TechnicalSales and MarketingFinancial projectionsReferencesAppendix当然,这不是每个Business Planning都必须遵守的内容结构,同学们需要根据各自Module上的写作要求具体决定。比如说,斯旺西大学MN-M552business planning这门课,我们就根据他的具体要求,列出如下结构:1.0 Background and industry research (背景与行业分析)1.1 Background1.2 Industry research1.3 Summarised opinion2.0 Competitor analysis (竞争对手分析)3.0 Customer profile (顾客介绍)3.1 Segmentation3.2 Targeting4.0 Product range (产品范围)4.1 Products4.2 Value addition4.3 Market gap5.0 Personnel (人事部门)6.0 Operations analysis (运营分析)7.0 Legal/technical (法律与技术)7.1 Legal7.2 Technical8.0 Sales and marketing (销售与市场推广)9.0 Financials (财务)9.1 Sales and cost forecast9.2 Cash flow analysis9.3 Profit and loss statement9.4 Key ratiosReferencesAppendix 1 Interview questions
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一位投资人每年可能会看到超过一万份商业计划书(BP),其中有99.9%的BP连看第二遍的兴趣都提不起来,这对于创业项目融资来说是致命的。BP是创业者进入资本市场的一块敲门砖,一份BP只有吸引到投资人的兴趣,从而进一步获得与投资人对话的机会。那如何才能写出一份让投资人眼前一亮的BP呢?首先我们要明确投资人被打动过程中,哪些因素起到决定作用?BP的页数看似一个简单的文稿处理工作,其实起到了敲门的作用,对于绝大部分早期项目,BP不应该超过2页word文档的信息量,也就是最多15页PPT的信息量。许多投资人对于超过20页PPT的BP,内心是抵触的,更有些创始人为了追求美观,用了太多设计图片,造成一份BP超过20M,投资人在收到这类BP的时候,如果周边信号不佳,很大可能是不会选择下载查看,这样就白白错过了许多机会。BP的逻辑这点是一份BP的核心价值,每个投资人一天要看得BP不会少于20份,能从这几十份BP中脱颖而出,让投资人牢牢记住你的项目,靠的就是清晰的逻辑。BP的美观之前说过有些创始人为了追求美观,过度包装造成BP过大,这一点是不可取的,不过适当的颜色搭配选择,还是可以让投资人在大量垃圾BP中耳目一新的。“收到BP,直接在微信里打开,快速扫描,基本一分钟读完。”从一位投资人日常工作中的场景中,可以发现投资人对行业的基本情况都有大致认识,所以一份BP最主要的就是直奔主题,只讲重点,在最短的时间讲述自己项目的商业逻辑。一,封面。写项目名称,而不是公司名称。更不要写“商业计划书”。加上项目Logo和一句话简介,基本说明项目是做什么的。二,市场。首先,介绍市场容量,90%的人会夸大项目的市场容量。这里要讲清细分市场的真实规模。其次,用户痛点是什么,如刚需、高频、高客单价等。再有,就是切入点。切入点是针对这个市场痛点去做,市场容量够大,可以允许很多人进入。三,产品/服务。这是BP的重点,快速地介绍公司业务,简单清晰明了,少用套话、空话。介绍完业务之后,一定要介绍产品的进度,点明项目的阶段。机构不同,对每个阶段的项目评价标准是不一样的。再有就是用户数据,投资人都非常关注用户数据,比如公众号类项目,用户数、活跃用户数、增长用户数,都是投资人比较关注的。四,竞品。尽量找跟自己阶段相近、模式相似、估值差不多的竞品。投资人可以基于对竞品的分析来进行估值。如果国内没有竞品,可以对标国外。千万注意,不要攻击竞争对手,尽量做到客观。五,盈利模式。一些投资人现在比较倾向于投有收入的项目。对于常年亏损的项目,还是比较恐惧的。如果常年没找到盈利模式,光烧钱的话,吸引力会小很多。六,团队。草根创业越来越难,未来创业的门槛会越来越高。团队核心成员的履历就显得非常重要;完整性也很重要,CEO、CTO、CMO要齐全。建议创业者能找到理想的团队,合理分工,默契配合。团队的核心问题就是股权结构,核心团队成员持股比例一定要足够。投资很大程度上就是投资团队,一个健康的股权结构很重要。七,发展历程。做一个简单的发展历程时间轴,提炼出关键性事件,何时立项、何时上线、何时获得融资,何时数据有大的增长等。八,融资情况。BP拿出来就是去融资,融资需求要写得非常明确。过往的融资情况,资方是谁,这一轮要多少钱,出让多少股份,融资的钱用在什么地方等。要说服投资人你的资金使用是合理的。再强调一次,融资不是越多越好,符合公司的发展规划才最好。需要多少钱,这笔钱用多长时间,拿到钱之后能达到什么样的目标,要有合理的规划,这些是创业者在见投资人之前就要想好的。九,封底。产品二维码、Slogan、联系方式。最重要的就是联系方式,很多BP描述的项目很有意思,但没有联系方式,投资人也不知道去找谁。另外还有一些小技巧,对于项目BP也可以起到加分项:1、BP的命名,最好能用这种格式命名,“项目名称+行业+城市+轮次”,PDF格式最佳,文件越小越好。2、用户数据,务必点明所用时间、获客方式和成本。如:“单月用户由1W自然增长至10W” “两周增长1W,地推30%,自然增长70%,获客成本10元/位” “用户已由1W增长至10W” “现有用户10W”3、巧用LOGO,团队过往公司如果特别知名,完全可以用LOGO代替。4、BP的色调要跟产品的色调保持一致。滴滴当年用来融资的BP,整个色调就是橙色,跟产品保持一致。-END-
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商业计划书英文为Business Plan,简称BP, 是一份全方位的项目计划,是创业融资的“敲门砖”。优质的商业计划书是企业成功融资的第一步,它的作用就像预上市公司的招股说明书,是对项目的产品或技术、商业模式、团队、竞争对手分析、竞争优势、财务计划等方面进行陈述和分析,方便投资人对投资对象进行初步评审和考察,是投资人面谈创业者的前提。随着融资程序日益规范,商业计划书已经成为投资人审批项目的正式文件之一。 一、商业计划书需要包含哪些内容:1、摘要摘要是整个商业计划书的“凤头”,是对整个计划书的最高度的概括。从某种程度上说,投资者是否中意你的项目,主要取决于摘要部分。可以说没有好的摘要,就没有投资。2、项目介绍主要介绍项目的基本情况、企业主要设施和设备、生产工艺基本情况、生产力和生产率的基本情况,以及质量控制、库存管理、售后服务、研究和发展等内容。3、市场分析主要介绍产品或服务的市场情况。包括目标市场基本情况、未来市场的发展趋势、市场规模、目标客户的购买力等。4、行业分析主要介绍企业所归属的产业、行业领域的基本情况,以及企业在整个产业或行业中的地位。和同类型企业进行对比分析,做SWOT分析,表现企业的核心竞争优势等。5、市场营销主要介绍企业的发展目标、发展策略、发展计划、实施步骤、整体营销战略的制定以及风险因素的分析等。6、管理团队主要介绍管理理念、管理结构、管理方式、主要管理人员的基本情况、顾问队伍等基本情况、员工安排、薪金标准等。7、财务分析主要对未来5年营业收入和成本进行估算,计算制作销售估算表、成本估算表、损益表、现金流量表、计算盈亏平衡点、投资回收期、投资回报率等。8、资金需求主要介绍申请资金的数额、申请的方式,详细使用规划等。9、资金退出主要告诉投资者如何收回投资,什么时间收回投资,大约有多少回报率等情况。10、风险分析主要介绍本项目将来会遇到的各种风险,以及应对这些的风险的具体措施。11、结论对整个商业计划的结论性概括。12、附件附件是对主体部分的补充。由于篇幅的限制,有些内容不宜于在主体部分过多描述。把这些内容,或需要提供参考资料的内容,放在附录部分,供投资者阅读时参考。二、在计划摘要中,还必须要回答下列问题:1、企业所处的行业,企业经营的性质和范围2、企业主要产品的内容3、企业的市场在那里,谁是企业的顾客,他们有哪些需求4、企业的合伙人、投资人是谁5、企业的竞争对手是谁根据项目来看,项目大写8000-几万字,项目小写3000-8000字。