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Business Articles » Business
Planning
Believing Plan
by Alvah Parker
Mary had a delivery service business. Her idea was to market to senior citizens
who couldnt get out every day. She came to me as a SCORE counselor because
her business was struggling and she thought she needed marketing help. She had
been marketing to seniors for more than a year and was frustrated by her results.
She hoped I would have the silver bullet that would change everything.
My first question to Mary was had she written a business plan. I wanted to
see her marketing plan and forecast of sales. Mary told me she had written one
before she started but she said she just didnt believe it.
A business counselor had worked on the cash flow section with her but the forecast
was much more optimistic than she really believed possible.
It always astonishes me that people go into business with a business plan
that seems impossible to them. If the business owner doesnt believe it
then who will? Not believing your own plan should be a red flag to the entrepreneur
to go back to the drawing board.
The owner may need to redefine their market or update their idea to something
that will generate the business the owner needs. It may take more market research
(What does the market want? How much is the target market willing to pay?) It
may take a more robust marketing plan in order to reach the numbers the entrepreneur
needs to get the sales flowing. It may also take more money to fund the necessary
marketing or support equipment or services.
Sometimes the entrepreneur just needs more confidence in his/her own ability
to get the work. In that case it may be that the entrepreneur needs to work in
someone elses business first to see how it is done and gain that confidence.
Another tact that an owner might take would be to make a minimal investment
in the business to get it going and find other work for self-support while he/she
experimented with the business-a pilot or beta of sorts. This in effect would
be real time market research.
As much as Mary didnt want to hear it she really needed to rethink her
business plan. She had already decided her target market wouldnt pay for
her services in enough quantity to support her. Now the task was to decide what
her new target market would be and what her offering looked like.
Mary needed a new vision for her business and she needed it to be clear and
compelling. It is the vision of the business that motivates the owner to do some
things that perhaps the owner would ordinarily find tedious or even a bit scary.
The very first part of a business plan is called the Business Description and
it is here that the vision belongs.
Recently a participant in my teleclass Taking the Mystery Out of Business
Plan Writing talked about a creative way she had for writing her business
plan. She was taking magazine pictures and drawings to illustrate her plan. This
way of illustrating her plan made it more alive and exciting to her. A vision
needs to draw you to it. One possible way to make it that way is with pictures
and illustrations.
Writing a business plan calls on the logical, analytical, and rational part
of people. Scientists tell us this is an activity done by left side of the brain
(logical, analytical, rational). It doesnt have much appeal to people who
prefer to use the right side of their brain (intuitive, creative, holistic).
The entrepreneur needs to have the ability to access both parts of the brain
for different tasks. A client who is very creative and loves being in that mode
told me recently, Sometimes it is necessary for me to get very left brained
so I can get some work done. If you resist the idea of business plan writing
but know you want to write one, try finding your own special way of getting it
done-but do get it done!
Take Action. Not sure which side of your brain dominates your behavior? Try
this assessment: What is your vision of your own business or your ideal job?
Spend an hour writing down what it looks like and feels like. Get creative. Make
it feel real! See it in your mind's eye.
Alvah Parker is a Business and Career Coach as well as publisher of Parkers
Points, an email tip list and Road to Success, an ezine. Alvah is found on the
web at www.asparker.com.
She may also be reached at 781-598-0388.
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