I recently received this message in an e-mail. I?ve edited it to hide the writer?s personal details, but here?s some of what it says:
I'm currently in the process of starting my own business. I have extensive knowledge of and experience in?
I have the necessary resources for my startup and all of the necessary partners for the business to start?
Unfortunately, I'm not a writer. This is my Achilles' heel. I have this great business concept I'd like to put on paper and have been challenged every step of the way. My startup began two weeks ago, and I've consulted with several CPAs, but to no avail. They either don't have the time, charge too much or aren't interested in assisting me with my business plan. I just couldn't believe how neglected this area of business planning is when their profession deals with financial management and, to a greater extent, consulting.
My response starts with an emphatic ?No, please, no!? You're missing the point of business planning--getting caught in the trap of the plan as a document--and making your life and your planning process far more difficult than they should be.
Notice how this e-mail puts the problem into perspective. The guy's starting his business, feels quite confident in the business concept and has ?extensive knowledge and experience? in the specific type of business, but can?t go further because he?s ?not a writer.? That?s crazy, right?
What?s wrong with this picture? Why do people assume a business plan is about quality of writing? Hey, I was a literature major years ago in college; I was a journalist before I was an MBA and a planner; and I love good writing as much as the next person. But being a writer has nothing to do with writing a business plan.
This is really important: A business plan is about content, not writing, formatting or pictures. I've listed some of the things your business plan needs to do below. Notice how none of them have anything to do with quality of writing.
We?re afraid our plan has to be well written because it represents us and stands for our intelligence, experience or ability to run a business. Get over it. It isn?t a writing contest; it?s a business. Tell your story. Keep it simple. Bullet points are fine.
Also, don't confuse your plan for the kind a business student would turn in. In business school, the plan is a teaching tool. When I give students a grade for a business plan, I look at writing. I judge the quality of the document in part based on spelling and grammar and, more important, completeness. That?s a special case, though, that shouldn't apply to you out there in the real world.
The bottom line is, well, the bottom line--not the editor?s pencil. A good business plan is about results, not writing. Don?t wait an extra minute for that ?writer.? Get working on your plan. And never forget, the real value is in implementation. Prepare to track results, compare those results to your plan, revise, correct course and manage your business better because of your plan.