A process model of business plan development.
Rogoff, Edward G.
ABSTRACT
Current writing on the subject of business plan development almost
uniformly follows an approach of asking an entrepreneur to use a
template for a business plan or to answer numerous detailed questions
regarding the various aspects of the proposed business. This method
produces frustration on the part of many entrepreneurs because the
templates or lists of questions do not follow the thinking processes
that they engage in as they initially conceptualized the business and as
they then begin to think through issues of operations, competition,
finance, and others. As an alternative to the Template Model, this paper
suggest a Process Model of business plan development that lays out 10
steps for the entrepreneur to follow either on his or her own or with a
business advisor. These steps generally follow the more typical and more
organic way that entrepreneurs develop business ideas and plans. The
Process Model deals with key concepts first and then works toward
developing the detail of a complete plan.
INTRODUCTION
Creating business plans is one of the most important functions that
entrepreneurs engage in because business plans are often prerequisites
for obtaining financial and other resources that entrepreneurs require
for creating and growing their ventures. There is also a growing body of
research that points to business plans as an effective tool for
developing and monitoring internal business operations. Pedagogy for
business plan creation is, therefore, one of the most important
functions of entrepreneurship education programs. Most curricula in
entrepreneurship include courses or programs in the development of
business plans and there are numerous books on the subject.
Most approaches to business plan creation use what I will call the
Template Model. In this approach the author of the business plan follows
an outline, or template, and basically goes through the outline filling
in the blanks. Sometimes these templates are converted into lists of
questions such as "How much debt do you expect to raise?" or
"How much would you like to earn from your business?" While
there are certain plusses to this template approach, such as quickly
introducing the entrepreneur to many issues that will need attention, it
often leads to frustration on the part of the entrepreneur and,
ultimately, to plans that read like copies of previous plans for other
businesses often from distant industries. It often seems to me that
answering questions like these early in the process of plan development
are like being asked to produce a shopping list for cooking a meal
before you have decided what to cook.
The alternative to the Template Model is an approach that follows
the more logical process of thinking, analysis, and strategic planning that goes into business plan development that I will call a Process
Model. In my experience working with hundreds of entrepreneurs, teaching
courses on business plan development, interviewing funding sources such
as bankers, venture capitalists, and angel investors, and writing on the
topic, the Process Model represents a more organic approach that leads
to less frustration, higher rates of plan completion, and, most
importantly, better, more compelling plans.
The purpose of this article is to review the literature on business
plans including their use and value, detail and give some examples of
the Template Model, and propose a detailed Process Model for business
plan creation.
The Planning Function for Entrepreneurs
The value of planning is demonstrated best by looking at a
profession in which virtually all the work is planning, for example
architects. Architects develop plans that are usually executed by others
professions for structures that are paid for and lived in by the client.
Yet, new structures or modifications to existing structures of more than
minimal scale are rarely carried out without the plans produced by
architects. There are several reasons for this. First, projects
requiring government approvals or permits often mandate
architect-certified plans. Second, building projects require many
decisions and specifications and it is easier, faster, and cheaper to
make these decisions on paper or on a computer screen than by
rearranging actual buildings, steel girders, or bricks once the building
project has begun. Finally, and perhaps most importantly, planning
allows for testing the viability and safety of structures in a cost
effective manner. Prior to the development of scientifically based
architecture tools, innovative structures such as cathedrals met or
failed their test of soundness only after being built--and many failed
that test.
Entrepreneurial ventures can benefit similarly from planning.
First, investors, lenders, and the Small Business Administration serve a
similar role to both the consumers and government agencies, requiring
plans before giving their approvals to investments and loans. Second,
budgeting on paper or a spreadsheet allows for the myriad of decisions
(and their complex interactions) that an entrepreneur must make such as
hiring, marketing, capital investment, and many more to be observed and
tested in a virtual and no-risk environment before being tried in
reality. Finally, there is growing evidence that planning actually leads
to lower rates of business failure, just as it did for buildings.
Research on Planning
There is surprisingly little research that goes directly to the
issue of whether formal business plans increase positive business
outcomes generally and virtually none directly related to entrepreneurs.
Research currently being carried out at the Lawrence N. Field Center for
Entrepreneurship and Small Business at Baruch college that tracks
start-up rates for aspiring entrepreneurs, preliminarily points to much
higher actual start-ups among those who complete business plans, but
part of this preliminary result could be related to the fact that people
who abandon business ideas or decide to pursue other career paths have
no need to complete a plan. Longer term data which is in the process of
being collected will show if people who completed plans have higher
success rates or greater business growth in business than those who
started businesses without plans. Again, the preliminary data point to
positive effects of plan creation.
Perry (2001) examined matched samples of firms that entered formal
bankruptcy and those that did not and compared them with regard to how
much formal business planning was engaged in by each category. Overall,
Perry concluded that all firms engaged in little formal planning, but
that the firms that failed engaged in less than the firms that did not
fail. A recent study by Gibson and Cassar (2002) found that engaging in
formal planning correlates with variables such as firm size,
owner's education level, training, and intention to change. But
this study does not address the long or short-term effects of planning
on firm performance. Berman et al. (1997) found a positive relationship
between financial planning and growth while O'Neill et al. (1987)
failed to show any relationship between formal planning and performance.
One of the limitations of the research is that much of it defines
planning in the broadest sense and does not focus on the creation of
business plans by entrepreneurs. Nonetheless, as a normative matter,
management and entrepreneurship writers continue to strongly recommend
that entrepreneurs engage in significant, formalized planning. Examples
of this include Timmons (1999), Longenecker, et al. (1994), Stevenson et
al. (1999), and Scarborough and Zimmerer (2003).
METHODOLOGY
This study grows out of several qualitative research approaches to
this subject. First, the literature on business plan development was
reviewed. This literature is summarized in the previous section to this
paper. Second, virtually every textbook and trade book on the subject of
business plan creation was reviewed. Without exception, all the existing
books on the subject rely on a template model as described below. Third,
I taught graduate and undergraduate level classes on business plan
creation for eight years, bringing me into contact with more than 350
students going through the process of creating a business plan for their
course project. Fourth, I worked as a Faculty Mentor in an
entrepreneurship center. In this capacity, I worked with several hundred
business owners and aspiring entrepreneurs who were creating business
plans.
This qualitative research approach lead me to a clear conclusion
that template models were producing frustrations among students and
business owners who were writing business plans, regardless of the books
or other materials that they used.
During this experience, I began to extensively interview those who
were writing plans to see the origins of their frustration and to
discern their thought processes. This lead to a conclusion that a more
deductive, process model would better match the thinking that went into
the formulation of business ideas and then to their specific plans. In
all, 63 of these open-ended interviews took place over a two-year
period.
Finally, I began to create materials that more closely matched this
deductive process that aspiring entrepreneurs were following. Throughout
this interviewing period, the process model as presented below was
refined and finalized through use with more than 150 people who were
developing business plans. My subjective observations are that the level
of frustration decreased and the speed at which the plans were completed
increased.
THE TEMPLATE MODEL
The Template Model of business plan development gives the
entrepreneur an outline of a plan or a list of questions to answer.
Often it gives both an outline and list of questions. The textbooks
listed above all give outlines, and, with the exception of the Stevenson
text which has less of emphasis on business plan creation, they all give
questions. The Timmons text also gives a detailed personal inventory
questionnaire before taking its readers into business plan creation.
Typically, these books give their readers approximately 100 headings
under the business plan outline and an equal or greater number of
questions on various lists broken out by functional areas of management
such as finance, organization, or marketing.
In my experience there is nothing wrong with the content of the
outline or the questions, but the structure of the process of creating a
plan from a template does not follow how entrepreneurs think about
creating their business. Generally, I see people who have a concept that
evolves through various stages of growing complexity and detail into a
full plan. The result of attempting to answer the questions or follow
the template that takes into great detail too soon is that the
entrepreneur becomes discouraged soon after starting to work on the
template or are forced to answer questions out of sequence, meaning
before they have addressed the underlying strategies. For example,
without having arrived at a strategy and understanding of one's
competitive advantage it is difficult to address most marketing
questions.
Table 1 is a simple outline given on the Small Business
Administration website that demonstrates this and is generally typical
of what is seen in most entrepreneurship books that cover the subject of
business plan development.
Table 2 presents a list of questions the same SBA website suggest
answering as part of developing a marketing plan.
I have seen many business owners and aspiring entrepreneurs attempt
to address these questions and become quickly frustrated because they
have not yet addressed the fundamental, conceptual issues that must
underlie every business. Virtually every business plan textbook or
pamphlet takes this same approach.
THE ALTERNATIVE:
A PROCESS MODEL OF BUSINESS PLAN CREATION
In working with hundreds of business owners and aspiring
entrepreneurs as they go through the process of creating business plans,
I have seen the frustrations that they encounter as they face a template
of an outline or a long list of detailed questions. The Process Model
that I present below, strives to proceed from the general to the
specific while at the same time moving from issues of how the business
will be of service to others to what the business will need from others
to be successful. I believe that this approach can be used in one-on-one
counseling or in a classroom setting and will lead to higher quality
plans more quickly than the Template Model.
Step 1: Define The Company: What will it accomplish for others?
Defining the company consists of specifying the needs that the
company will satisfy for its customers. Entrepreneurs tend to define
their ventures in terms of what it will accomplish for them, but
ultimately this is irrelevant to getting customers, lenders, investors,
or partners. Potential investors need to know that that the business
will be meaningful and marketable to people who can use your product or
service. Therefore, this step concentrates on the external needs that
will be met. Examples of these include a product or service that enable
people to do something better, more cheaply, more safely, or more
efficiently.
Step 2: Identify The Venture's Initial Needs: What will the
venture require to get started?
Whether an entrepreneur wants to buy an existing company with 300
employees or you can start a business by only adding an extra phone line
to a home office desk, they need to make a list of the needed materials.
Some may be tangible, such as five hundred file folders and a large
cabinet in which to store them all. Other requirements may be
intangible, such as time to create a product design or to do market
research on potential customers. One venture may require hiring an
assistant to develop a retrievable filing system for the five hundred
folders, or hire a consultant to set up a computer system that's
beyond your technical skills.
If the entrepreneur is going to build a better mousetrap, he or she
may have constructed a prototype out of used toothpaste tubes and bent
paperclips at home, but will need a sturdier, more attractive model to
show potential investors. What exactly will your mousetrap look like?
What materials will be needed? Does it require money for research and
development to improve on the original toothpaste tube and paper clip
construction? Does it need to hire an engineer to draw up accurate
manufacturing designs? If the entrepreneur wants to open a restaurant,
he or she will have to figure out how much money will be needed to cover
rent, equipment and renovations before turning a profit. This step
involves doing a great deal of homework such as calling real estate
brokers and looking at actual potential spaces.
Step 3: Choosing A Strategy: How will one distinguish the product
or service from others?
Although there are millions of types of businesses, there are
actually only a few basic strategies that can be applied to make any
enterprise successful. It is important to see the strategic options and
understand the reasoning behind the selection of one over others. The
first step in selecting an effective strategy is for the entrepreneur to
identify a competitive advantage for his or her product or service. How
will they establish that their product or service is better, cheaper,
more delicious, or more convenient? Competitive advantage may include
designing special features not found in rival products. It may entail superior service characteristics such as speedier delivery, a lower
price, or more attentive sales people.
Suppose an entrepreneur wants to open a restaurant that serves
squid flavored pancakes. What will its competitive advantage be? Do
people in the neighborhood devour other squid based dishes and
can't seem to get their fill? Have all the other pancake restaurants in the community failed to include squid flavored items on
their menus? Is squid much cheaper to acquire than other more
traditional pancake ingredients, such as bananas? Will that enable the
business to charge much less for all the items on your menu, including
banana pancakes? Will the decor of the restaurant be so enticing to
squid lovers that they'll come in to look around and then discover
how delicious your squid pancakes can be?
In short, the entrepreneur must have a reason why the business will
succeed. This is the competitive advantage and once there is a
competitive advantage established, a strategy can be selected.
Step 4: Analyze the Potential Markets: Who will want the product or
service?
In this step, the entrepreneur defines the target market for the
business' product or service, covering such issues as age, gender,
profession, ethnicity, race, economic characteristics, location, and
size. Once the target market is defined then the entrepreneur can
research the numbers: How many car mechanics, house painters or bathroom
contractors are there in any given community? How many children in the
United States are currently under the age of eight? How much soap will
they use in a month or a year? How many other soap manufacturers already
have a share of the market? How big are the potential competitors?
Identifying the target market is one of the great satisfactions of
starting one's own business. At this stage, entrepreneurs are
thinking about the actual people who will use their product or service.
Step 5: Develop a Marketing Campaign: How will the business reach
customers and what will be the message?
Entrepreneurs, especially inventors, often believe that their
business concept is so spectacular that promoting their product or
service won't be necessary. Sort of a "build it and they will
come" attitude, especially if what you're building is the
proverbial better mousetrap. One of the most common flaws I see in plans
is the entrepreneur's failure to describe exactly how customers
will be reached and how products will be presented to them. Potential
investors, staff, and partners won't be convinced that an idea can
succeed until there are established well-researched and effective
methods of contacting customers--and the assurance that once they are
reached, they can be convinced to buy the product or service.
Suppose hypothetically an entrepreneur wants to open a financial
services business to advise Wall Street investors who wish to buy stocks
in the rubber sole industry. The entrepreneur already identified the
target market as major New York City based investors interested in
rubber sole stocks and the competitive advantage as the
entrepreneur's unparalleled expertise in rubber sole stocks.
Some of the questions that have to be answered to develop a
marketing campaign include: What trade journals and newspapers do
potential clients read? Would ads in these publications be worth the
cost of placing them? How could one interest a reporter for one of these
periodicals in writing a story about this new advisory firm? Is there an
organization of rubber sole company investors that the entrepreneur
should join? Are there conventions for investors in rubber sole
companies that would be worth attending?
Step #6: Build A Sales Effort: How will the business attract
customers?
The word "sales" covers all the issues related to making
contact with actual customers once the entrepreneur has established how
to reach them through the marketing campaign. How will the sales staff
be trained to approach potential customers? Will the sales staff be
divided up so some become experts in selling one or a few types of
customers? What advertising and promotional efforts will be employed?
In planning sales activities, the entrepreneur also needs to answer
questions such as: Is it ethical to contact colleagues and clients from
his or her former job? Will the entrepreneur be the only salesperson in
the beginning stages of the company? When will he or she know it's
time to hire additional sales staff? What will the basic sales
philosophy be--building long-term relationships with a few major clients
or developing a clientele of many short-term customers?
The entrepreneur will also need to consider how you will compensate
the sales staff--with a base salary plus a commission or just a
commission? Knowledge of the competitive advantage is just as important
in designing a dynamic sales effort as it is in developing an effective
marketing campaign. The entrepreneur needs to think about what product
or service qualities will be the most compelling to prospective
customers. Then he or she has to devise convincing language that clearly
communicates this competitive advantage to the sales staff who will in
turn use it when talking to customers. In my experience, the most
important element of an effective sales effort is having a sales staff
that thoroughly understands the business and the needs or potential
customers. Therefore, the sales plan must address the issue of how to
create a sales staff that is as knowledgeable about your business as it
is about your potential customers.
Step # 7: Design the Company: How will the business hire and
organize its workforce?
By the time the entrepreneur has reached the stage of thinking
about the potential business concept, he or she probably has a good idea
of the number of people they will need and the skills they will require
to get the enterprise up and running.
The entrepreneur needs to focus on establishing that he or she
capable of running the business. Perhaps they are not, and need to bring
in experienced managers. They need to know where they will find these
potential employees.
The entrepreneur will need to specify the key management jobs and
roles. Positions such as president, vice presidents, chief financial
officer, and managers of departments will need to be defined along with
stating who reports to whom. Many people may hope to run their companies
as one big happy family--and it may work out that way--but organizations
require formal structure and investors will expect to see these issues
addressed ultimately in a plan.
Issues such as how to find the right consultants, whether the
entrepreneur will collect a salary, when will it be time to hire a
staff, what skills must they have, how will they be recruited them, and
how will the company be structured so the chain of command and quality
control are maintained if the company grows dramatically, all need to be
thought through.
Step # 8: Target the Funding Sources: Where will the financing come
from?
As the business concept begins to take shape, the entrepreneur can
begin to hone in on the most likely financing sources. Issues such as
the size of the business, the industry it is in, whether it is a
start-up the purchase of an existing business, and whether the
entrepreneur can provide collateral to a lender are among the issues
that must be considered in creating a target list of funding sources.
Banks and other funding sources don't lend money because people
with interesting business ideas are nice. The entrepreneur needs to see
that lenders and investors follow specific guidelines which are designed
to insure that they will make money by investing in or lending to a
business.
For the vast majority of entrepreneurs, the well-known, high
profile means of raising money, such as through venture capital
companies or by going public, are not viable options. Their own credit,
credit rating, and business history are key factors in obtaining
financing for your venture through Small Business Administration (SBA)
guaranteed loans and other bank credit. Their ability to tap into a
personal network of friends, family, and professional contacts is
crucial to raising money beyond what their own personal funds or credit
can provide. In all of these cases, there are important considerations
such as the potential impact on relationships when family and friends
become investors.
When the process of identifying the likely potential funding
sources and writing a bankable business plan that addresses their needs
and answers their questions, then the entrepreneur will have greatly
increased the likelihood of obtaining the needed financing.
Step # 9: Detail and Explain the Financial Data: How others be
convinced to invest in this endeavor?
The accuracy of the financial projections is absolutely critical in
convincing investors, loan sources and partners that the business
concept is worthy of support. The data must also be scrupulously honest
and extremely clear. Since banks and many other funding sources will
compare your projections to industry averages in the Risk Management
Association (RMA) data, it is important to use the RMA figures to test
projections before the bank does. Numbers will be more credible if they
compare reasonably to the industry averages.
The actual number crunching portion of the business plan is not the
place to talk about pie-in-the-sky hopes for opening an office in every
country around the globe or for convincing the U.S. Army that the squid
flavored pancakes should become standard fare in all military mess
halls. It's the place to discuss how and why certain equipment is
needed, how much these items will cost, when the business expects to
turn a profit, and how much return and other benefits investors will
receive.
The most common reason new businesses fail is simply because they
run out of cash reserves. Investors lose confidence in the entrepreneur
and the business and become reluctant to make additional investments
when projections are not met. Had the projections been less optimistic and the investors asked to invest large amounts in the beginning, they
probably would have done so. In most cases, proper planning and more
accurate projections could have avoided this problem completely.
A business plan should clearly state the amount of funds you need,
how soon they are required, and how long before g investors will be
repaid. By the time the entrepreneur has pulled together all the
important financial data, he or she will have a clearer picture of how
much money they will need to borrow, how much of their own funds they
will be able to commit, and the amount of investments they will have to
secure. This is also a good time for the entrepreneur to take a crash
course in accounting principles or learning how to create spreadsheets
on a computer program.
Step # 10: Showing the Entrepreneur in the Best Light: What are his
or her qualifications for bringing this plan to fruition?
The talents, experience and enthusiasm each entrepreneur brings to
their enterprise are unique. They provide some of the most compelling
reasons for others to finance a business. The entrepreneur needs to keep
in mind that investors invest in people more than ideas. Even if your
potential business has many competitors or is not on the cutting edge of
an industry, the qualifications and commitment the entrepreneur
demonstrates in the plan can convince others to proffer their support.
The entrepreneur's resume will be included in the separate
appendix of exhibits at the end of the plan, so the body of the plan is
not the place to list every job he or she ever had or the fact that they
were an art history major in college, especially if these experiences
have no direct bearing on the ability to start a business. But it is the
place to emphasize qualifying skills that may not be readily apparent
from a resume.
Say the entrepreneur wants to open the restaurant featuring squid
flavored pancakes. Investors won't be initially impressed by a long
and successful career as a commercial airline pilot. They may be much
more swayed by the fact that from the age of eight to eighteen, he
worked after school and weekends in your father's delicatessen.
This information has probably never appeared on your professional
resume, which stresses the number of flying hours logged, an outstanding
safety record and the citations received for the most on-time flights.
But having worked for so long and intimately in a family-owned retail
food business indicates that the aspiring entrepreneur knows how to
supervise cooks, run a cash register, and order perishable foodstuffs in
bulk.
Of course, the entrepreneur should not overlook the impact being a
pilot may have on his ability to run a restaurant, especially if those
skills are not apparent to potential investors. He should stress that
you know how to supervise a crew of people working together to make a
group experience if not comfortable, at least safe. Pilots have
undoubtedly handled dissatisfied or enraged customers. Even that BA
degree in art history may enable someone to teach cooks how to make
their dishes more appealing to the eye. If the business requires
partners or staff, the entrepreneur must be prepared cover the same
issues for them.
CONCLUSION
As a normative matter and based on numerous anecdotal experiences
of businesspeople and academics in the field of entrepreneurship, it is
generally accepted that engaging in formal business plan development is
an important precursor to success for entrepreneurs. While long term
studies with statistically significant broad samples is not yet
available, it is likely that such studies will confirm this finding. If
nothing else, it is currently true and will likely remain true well into
the future that a formal business plan is a necessary document required
by investors, lenders, partners, and government agencies. Yet, the
methodology offered to aspiring entrepreneurs and existing business
owners for the creation of such plans is often difficult to maneuver and
manage.
This article proposes an alternative approach to the Template Model
that relies upon detailed outlines, questionnaires, or both. This
alternative approach is called the Process Model of business plan
development and takes the entrepreneur from the conception stage to more
detailed stages of plan development based on the thought processes that
I have observed entrepreneurs engaging it. As currently formulated, it
has ten stages with the development of detailed financial projections
coming towards the end of the process after key strategic, management,
and marketing issues have been addressed.
REFERENCES
Berman, J.A., D.D. Gordon & G. Sussman. (1997). A study to
determine the benefits small business firms derive from sophisticated
planning versus less sophisticated types of planning. The Journal of
Business and Economic Studies, 3(3), 1-11.
Gibson, B. & G. Cassar. (2002). Planning behavior variables in
small firms. Journal of Small Business Management, 40(3), 171-187.
Hisrich, R.& M. Peters. (1998). Entrepreneurship, (4th Ed.),
New York: Irwin McGraw Hill.
Longnecker, J. G., C. Moore & J. W. Petty. (1994). Small
Business Management: An Entrepreneurial Emphasis, (9th Ed.), Cincinnati:
South Western Publishing Co.
O'Neill, H.M., C.B. Saunders & A.N. Hoffman. (1987).
Beyond the entrepreneur: Planning as the organization grows. Business
Forum, 12(4), 38-40.
Perry, S. C. (2001). The relationship between written business
plans and he failure of small businesses in the U.S. Journal of Small
Business Management, 39 (3), 201-207.
Scarborough, N. M.& T. W. Zimmerer.(2003). Effective Small
Business Management: An Entrepreneurial Approach, (7th Ed.) Upper Saddle
River, N. J.: Prentice Hall.
Stevenson, H.,M.J. Roberts & H.I. Grousbeck. (1999). New
Business Ventures and the Entrepreneur, (5th Ed.), New York: Irwin
McGraw Hill.
Timmons, J. A. (1999). New Venture Creation: Entrepreneurship in
the 21st Century, (5th Ed.) New York: Irwin McGraw Hill.
Edward G. Rogoff, Baruch College, CUNY
Table 1
Outline for a Business Plan Provided the U.S. Small Business
Administration
Introduction
* Give a detailed description of the business and its goals.
* Discuss the ownership of the business and the legal structure.
* List the skills and experience you bring to the business.
* Discuss the advantages you and your business have over your
competitors.
* Discuss the products/services offered.
* Identify the customer demand for your product/service.
* Identify your market, its size and locations.
* Explain how your product/service will be advertised and marketed.
* Explain the pricing strategy.
Financial Management
* Explain your source and the amount of initial equity capital.
* Develop a monthly operating budget for the first year.
* Develop an expected return on investment and monthly cash flow
for the first year.
* Provide projected income statements and balance sheets for a
two-year period.
* Discuss your breakeven point.
* Explain your personal balance sheet and method of compensation.
* Discuss who will maintain your accounting records and how they
will be kept.
* Provide "what if" statements that address alternative approaches
to any problem that may develop.
Operations
* Explain how the business will be managed on a day-to-day basis.
* Discuss hiring and personnel procedures.
* Discuss insurance, lease or rent agreements, and issues pertinent
to your business.
* Account for the equipment necessary to produce your products or
services.
* Account for production and delivery of products and services.
Concluding Statement
* Summarize your business goals and objectives and express your
commitment to the success of your business.
Table 2
Questions for the Entrepreneur Provided the U.S. Small Business
Administration
Develop a marketing plan for your business by answering these
questions. (Potential franchise owners will have to use the marketing
strategy the franchisor has developed.) Your marketing plan should
be included in your business plan and contain answers to the
questions outlined below.
* 1. Who are your customers? Define your target market(s).
* 2. Are your markets growing? steady? declining?
* 3. Is your market share growing? steady? declining?
* 4. If a franchise, how is your market segmented?
* 5. Are your markets large enough to expand?
* 6. How will you attract, hold, increase your market share? If a
franchise, will the franchisor provide assistance in this area?
Based on the franchisor's strategy? how will you promote your sales?
* 7. What pricing strategy have you devised?