The idea is simple - make sure your business plan is the one on the desk, not one of the 50 in the bin. How? Here are a few common mistakes:
- The plan doesn't tell a complete story: there's lots of good guidance out there, so not doing your research is unforgivable. You might want to have a look at the Business Link website, for example, for help with the contents of a plan
- It's your plan, not your accountants: this is your business, therefore your plan, and the excuse that "my accountant did that bit" is never good enough.
- Financial forecasts are wrong: one of the purposes of the business plan is as a tool to assist in raising money, so we can't emphasise enough how important it is that the numbers actually make sense. If this is an area of weakness, get some professional help and get it right.
- Financial forecasts are unrealistic: getting a business off the ground is enormously difficult. You need to be realistic about your prospects for growth, otherwise your credibility will be shot.
- Valuations are unrealistic: think rationally about what you want to achieve. If raising equity might make the difference between success and failure, do you really want to scare off an investor by being ridiculously greedy? It's better to have 20% of a wedding cake, than 90% of a jaffa cake. A couple of thoughts... if you want to raise £100,000 and are offering only 10% of the equity, this means that after investment your company is nominally worth £1 million. Can you justify this valuation? If an angel wants to exit with a tenfold return in three years, can you realistically see the business being worth £10m in that time frame?
- There's always competition: we see plans which talk about a new product for which there is no competitor. An extreme example might be someone who has invested a laser for opening tin cans. True, there are no other lasers on the market, but the reason is that the manual can opener does the job just fine thank you.
- Run the spell checker: this might seem trite, but your business plan is potentially the only opportunity that you will have to impress an angel. As well as giving insight into your business idea, it also is an indication of your professionalism and competence, so don't let the simple things let you down.
We'll update this article whenever we see things which let a plan down. In the meantime, happy writing.
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