Business Articles
Why Business Planning is not just for Start-ups
One of the greatest misconceptions about business planning is that a
business plan is useful only for start-ups. While start-up companies are indeed
one significant segment of business planners, business planning is being
utilized by an increasing number of companies as a means to manage growth
better, to ensure new ideas have been assessed for commercial viability, and to
value a business on exit.
Secondly, the importance of the business planning process is often under-emphasized
relative to the primary focus on the final output, the business plan. The very
process of producing a business plan enables management to take a holistic view
of their organization. It helps them give due consideration to the various
factors that mesh together to create the opportunity they are seeking to explore,
as well as the resources required and the key drivers needed for success. This
article aims to justify a more expansive remit for the business plan, by
highlighting a number of key areas where its application is of considerable
benefit for all companies.
1. Intrapreneurship
Companies are increasingly encouraging employees to create new growth
opportunities as competition intensifies in their core (mature) business lines.
Mature invariably means competitive, so the focus on growth opportunities is
via innovation and creativity, especially in emergent areas. The term
intrapreneurship thus refers to “inside entrepreneurs”; where intrepreneurs
personify the key characteristics of an entrepreneur, but do so within the
company bounds.
Intrapreneurship is not new - 3i, a venture capital/equity investment
company, has been one obvious practitioner for many years - and its application
of intrapreneurship has helped to spawn a number of new products. Google, a
company renowned for innovation, operates a 70 percent rule, whereby employees
are expected to spend 70 percent of their time on the core business, 20 percent
on related projects, and 10 percent on unrelated new business opportunities. While
the generation of new ideas is paramount, ensuring their commercial viability
is of critical concern, and writing a business plan is one key way to assess
the merits of an innovative proposal in a more rigorous fashion. The plan can thus
be produced for an internal opportunity as if it were a stand-alone entity,
with the author being required to detail both the opportunity and the resource
implications of pursuing it.
2. Managing
Performance
A business plan can also be used as a management tool to assess ‘actual
results’ against ‘planned results’. Using these figures in conjunction with an
assessment of year-on-year performance can ensure that managers reflect on
performance not just based on the previous year’s achievements, but also in relation
to the original planned figures. This enables managers to analyse deviations
from plan so as to understand what figures are materially different from the
planned ones and what drivers shaped the disparities. It also helps to shift the focus away from solely
historic comparisons –instead the manager is tasked with planning for the year
ahead and hence there is an agreed goal up front and greater transparency on a
month by month basis when ‘actuals’ can be compared with ‘planned’.
Such analysis helps to enhance a manager’s understanding of the changes
that have impacted recent performance. If planned results and actual results
are considered on a monthly basis, this analysis may also help the manager take
remedial action in a more urgent time frame.
3. Planning
Strategically
The process of business planning is in itself a worthwhile pursuit as it
forces the authors to remove themselves from the day-to-day tactical/responsive
mode in which many managers operate. The planning process forces any manager to
consider the future. In particular, they must take into account the resources
at the company’s disposal and plan to maximise the return on capital, as
limited by the wider context.
For many companies, a desire on the one hand to maximise the return from
the existing product/service revenue stream, needs to be balanced on the other by
a desire to develop new additional revenue streams. By putting a business case
together for a particular course of action, a manager ensures that the proposal
is financially robust (i.e., worthy of pursuit), that the goals are kept in
focus and that resources are allocated accordingly. Hence, a business plan can
support a company’s focus on exploiting a particular market segment, creating a
new product, promoting a new use for a product, etc. Once the plan is committed
to paper, it is easier to ensure that there is consensus, ownership of the plan,
and a breakdown of tasks, milestones and deliverables to help achieve the goals
set out in the plan.
4. Preparing
for a Future Exit
At some point in the life cycle of a business, the founders/investors
may decide that they want to cash out of the business. The exit strategy will typically
focus on extracting the highest value possible from the sale. An up-to-date
business plan detailing the opportunity for new buyers will support any
valuations put on the business by its current owners.
Before a company reaches the point of sale, it is important to get everything
ready by making sure that all historic accounts, cash flow statements and
business plans are up-to-date. It is generally accepted that thorough
preparation for a sale, well in advance of the sale date, improves internal
management focus, aids performance, and ultimately serves to increase the final
valuation.
Once management identifies the key drivers for a typical potential
acquirer, a business plan can be put in place to focus the minds of employees
and ensure that the sale value is maximized. For example, if the general bases
for valuation for the industry are focused more on cash generation than profit,
a company can drive short term revenues by undercutting sales prices of
competitors by selling at cost + 5%. While such activity may not be sustainable
in the long run, it can serve to help cash flow when a sale is being considered
and prospective acquirers are reviewing performance. While some
managers are not that comfortable with planning and projections, the
preparation of a thorough business plan plays a vital role in extracting the
maximum value from a sale.
5.
Supporting a Company Valuation at
Ascertaining the value of a company is a difficult and ultimately
subjective process whereby the sellers are naturally looking to maximise their
return and the buyers to minimise their outlay. The bases for valuation are
numerous and tend to be the subject of much negotiation, with various multiples
being considered as both parties attempt to come up with an agreed price.
The primary aim of the acquirer will usually be to assess the future
income generation capability of the company. As a result, negotiations will
usually include attempts to agree on an ‘earnings multiple’, a common method of
valuation which focuses on the ability of the firm to generate revenue and
cash. These earnings multiples can vary but are correlated with perceived risk,
so they tend to go down for smaller companies, where the perceived risk is
often higher. Conversely, a higher earnings multiple is likely when a company
has strong historic growth figures and a robust business plan. This will
usually lead to a higher price.
This analysis of earnings potential will typically be assessed in
conjunction with an analysis of historic financial data that is already
available, e.g. audited Income Statement/Profit and Loss. This valuation will
be used to assess the likely return on investment, and the preparation of a
sound business plan valuation document can save both time and money. At the
very least, a business plan will identify the key drivers of growth, assess
future conditions, and provide a structure to support a more accurate estimate
for the value of the company.
6.
Conclusion
Business planning is a vital process for any business seeking to
effectively focus resources to maximise future value, be it for exit or for maximising
return. Much like the value of a map is only truly appreciated when one is
driving a long distance and gets lost, the benefits of a business plan may only
be truly appreciated when the journey has begun, and different events conspire
to alter the company’s path along that desired route.
Alan
Gleeson is the Managing Director of Palo Alto Software, Ltd., creators of
Business Plan Pro® 2006. He holds an MBA from
All articles reproduced with permission from This Is Your Business

