Why You Need a Business Planning System NOT a Business Plan
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Title: Why You Need a Business Planning System NOT a Business Plan
Word Count: 777
Author: David Coffman
Email: dave@bus-val-strat.com
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Why You Need a Business Planning System NOT a Business Plan
Copyright 2005 David Coffman
When someone mentions business planning we have been
conditioned to think about writing a business plan. There
are hundreds of books and articles, tons of software, an
army of consultants, and a multitude government programs to
help you write a business plan. There are virtually no
resources to help you set up what today’s business
environment really demands – a continuous, ongoing planning
system.
A commonly accepted theory is that for a business to
survive and prosper it must be flexible and nimble. It must
be able to turn on a dime as conditions warrant. Having a
written five-year plan is not part of this picture. In
fact, trying to follow a long-term plan during rampant
change is not logical. It is applying linear thinking to a
non-linear situation. It just doesn’t work.
Having a formal, written business plan is so accepted as
being crucial to success that there haven’t been many
studies or surveys to test this premise. If business plans
were such a wonderful thing, there would be a significant
and conclusive difference between businesses that have them
and those that don’t. Interviews of 100 founders of
companies on 1989s “INC 500” list of fastest growing
private companies in the U.S. found only 28 percent had
“full-blown” business plans. The 1993 AT&T Small Business
Study found that 59 percent of small businesses that grew
over the previous two years used a formal business plan. A
1994 survey of the country’s fastest growing companies
found 23 percent lacked a business plan. “The Relationship
between Written Business Plans and the Failure of Small
Businesses in the U.S.,” by Dr. Stephen Perry, surveyed 152
failed and 152 non-failed small businesses in 1997. He
found that 64 percent of the non-failed firms had no
written business plan. He also found that non-failed firms
had more extensive written plans than failed firms, 23
percent compared to 9 percent, respectively.
As you can see the results of studies and surveys are all
across the board and don’t prove anything. Clearly, a
significant percentage of successful businesses don’t have
written business plans. None of these studies reveal the
nature of the process that created the plan. Was it the
result of an annual process with occasional updates or an
ongoing, continual process? As Professor Albert Shapero
said, “Companies that plan do better than companies that
don’t, but they never follow their plan.”
The focus needs to be on the PROCESS not on the plan. If a
continual, ongoing planning process is in place, a written
business plan is just not important. Writing a business
plan without a planning system in place is a massive effort
that is done very infrequently. Many businesses write three
to five year plans and update them annually. The plans are
reviewed periodically during each year to analyze the plan
vs. actual variances. Little, if any, thought is given to
strategy between the annual updates. Strategy should be the
focus everyday. Setting up a planning system allows and
sometimes forces you to focus on strategy.
A planning system consists of two functions. One is a goal
setting and attaining process, and the other is a trend
watching or environment scanning process. Setting up a
planning system takes several steps. The first and foremost
task is to set aside or make time for planning on a
regular, ongoing basis. It must become part of your
routine, not an occasional event that can be easily
postponed. In the evaluation phase, the owner or management
team and the company are analyzed. From the analysis, key
or critical areas of the business are identified. These
areas are filtered down to focus on the most important
ones. Performance measures are determined and systems to
gather and process the necessary data are set up, if
needed. A base of current performance is used to set goals.
Now the regular, ongoing stuff begins. Strategies are
formulated, tested, implemented, monitored, and reworked
until the goals are achieved. Each planning session is
split between working on strategies and trend watching. As
goals are achieved, the goal setting and strategy
formulation process begins again.
Let’s put the focus back where it belongs on continuous,
ongoing planning instead of writing business plans. As Karl
Albrecht said in his book Corporate Radar, “The majority is
not always right, the conventional wisdom is not always
wise, and the accepted doctrine could well be flawed. The
more fashionable an idea, the more it is likely to be
exempt from critical evaluation. Breakthrough thinking
sometimes calls for contradicting the most widely held
assumptions and beliefs.”
About the Author:
David E. Coffman CPA/ABV, CVA has authored a number of
articles, reports, white papers, and books about small
business valuation and planning topics. He founded Business
Valuations & Strategies in 1997 to work exclusively with
small businesses in these areas. His “Power to Prosper
Small Business Planning System” is available at
www.bus-val-strat.com.
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