Tips
To Create A Business Plan (for People Who Hate Business Plans!)
By
Dr Philip E. Humbert
One of the key challenges for any business is to remain
focused and invest resources for maximum pay-off. It's
said that 80% of a business's activity accounts for only 20% of
total profits. In plain language, most of the work we do
is unfocused, poorly designed and ineffective. In today's
competitive world, no business, whether it's an individual
professional or a large manufacturing operation, can survive
with that much lost time and wasted effort. A
business plan can help, but most small business owners (and some
managers/supervisors) hate doing them! In the spirit
that any map is better than no map, here are my top ten keys to
creating your own map to success:
1. Have a dream. This
sounds simple and obvious, but answering the questions:
"Why am I doing this? What's the big
picture?" can lead to profound changes in many
organizations. Too often in the daily grind, we
forget to think about where we want to go, or why we started the
business or took the job in the first place.
2. Make the dream bigger. What if the whole world bought your products or loved
your service? What would it mean if your profits, or
your personal income were 10 times greater? How about 100,
or 1000 times greater? What shifts in focus would
that require? Would your daily routine change? Would
you spend your time and energy on different problems, attend to
different priorities? Why wait?
3. Make the dream clearer. Have a precise description of exactly what you
want and hang it in your office, in the employee lunch room, in
the restrooms, and on the dash of your car. Use key
words, phrases, a photograph of your future office building or
whatever symbol will crystallize the dream and make it real for
you and for every member of your team
4. List 100 obstacles that will get in your way. Enlist staff, friends,
competitors to help. Ask your customers to join with you
in looking for the roadblocks, blindspots and bottlenecks that
prevent you from growing. Make it a matter of personal
pride to never have a problem pop up that you haven't already
considered.
5. List 1000 solutions, 10 for each potential problem. The key here is
creativity, flexibility, and responding instantly when the
unexpected happens. Expect the unexpected, and have
a file of alternative solutions at your finger tips. It's
called contingency planning. Do it!
6. Get tons of advice. Have your accountant, your attorney, your
insurance agent, your spouse and your cousin take a look at
this. If you can't explain it to them, will you be
able to explain it to your staff? If these people don't
understand and support your plan, will you be able to maintain
your own enthusiasm over the long haul?
7. Get GOOD advice.
After explaining your dream and your plan to lots of people, sit
down with a handful of those you trust the most, and pay them to
give you their best feedback. Lots of people can give you
technical advice, expert advice, and even friendly advice.
Wisdom is more important, and harder to find.
8. Create the path of least resistance. Using the dream as your goal, and knowing the
obstacles that could get in your way, begin mapping your way
through the wilderness to your destination. What's
the easiest, most direct, route? What's the safest route?
Which combination of activities and priorities makes the most
sense?
9. Take action. Once you
know where you want to go and have a path to get there, start
walking! Too many managers put their business plan
into a nice file folder that is never looked at because they are
too busy working "hard". Instead, use your
efforts and your plan together so that your effort is focused,
productive and smart!
10. Re-assess
often. Just as someone hiking across barren territory
needs to periodically stop and check their map and compass to
avoid walking in circles, business owners and managers need to
check their direction and their priorities.
Conditions change. Opportunities pop up or disappear, new
problems arrive or the nature of the dream changes. All of
these things will happen. Plan for it!
Regularly step outside your business to re-assess and redefine
your most important tasks. You can't afford to spend 80%
of your effort in busywork and unprofitable distractions.
Re-assess and stay on course.
© Copyright 2000 by Philip E. Humbert. All Rights
Reserved.
By
Dr Philip E. Humbert, author, speaker and personal success
coach. Dr Humbert has hundreds of tips, tools and articles
on his website that you can use for your own success! It's
a great resource! Visit him on the web at: www.philiphumbert.com
And, be sure to sign up for his great newsletter!
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