How to Write a Business Plan
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How to Write a Business Plan
By Sam Vaknin
Author of "Malignant Self Love - Narcissism Revisited"
There are many types of symbols. Money from investors, banks or
financial organisations is one such kind of symbols.
A successful Business Plan (=a successful manipulation of symbols)
is one which brings in its wake the receipt of credits (money,
another kind of symbol). What are the rules of manipulating symbols?
In our example, what are the properties of a successful Business
Plan?
(1) That it is closely linked to reality. The symbol system must map
out reality in an isomorphic manner. We must be able to identify
reality the minute we see the symbols arranged.
If we react to a Business Plan with incredulity ("It is too good to
be true" or "some of the assumptions are non realistic") - then this
condition is not met and the Business Plan is a failure.
(2) That it rearranges old, familiar data into new, emergent,
patterns.
The symbol manipulation must bring to the world some contribution to
the sphere of knowledge (very much as a doctoral dissertation
should).
When faced with a Business Plan, for instance, we must respond with
a modicum of awe and fascination ("That's right! - I never thought
of it" or "(arranged) This way it makes sense").
(3) That all the symbols are internally consistent. The demand of
external consistency (compatibility with the real world, a realistic
representation system) was stipulated above. This is a different
one: all symbols must live in peace with one another, the system
must be coherent.
In the example of the Business Plan:
Reactions such as: "This assumption / number/ projection defies or
contradicts the other" indicate the lack of internal consistency and
the certain failure to obtain money (=to manipulate the
corresponding symbols).
(4) Another demand is transparency: all the information should be
available at any given time. When the symbol system is opaque - when
data are missing, or, worse, hidden - the manipulation will fail.
In our example: if the applicant refuses to denude himself, to
expose his most intimate parts, his vulnerabilities as well as his
strong points - then he is not likely to get financing. The
accounting system in Macedonia - albeit gradually revised - is a
prime example of concealment in a placewhere exposition should have
prevailed.
(5) The fifth requirement is universality. Symbol systems are
species of languages. The language should be understood by all - in
an unambiguous manner. A common terminology, a dictionary, should be
available to both manipulator and manipulated.
Clear signs of the failure of a Business Plan to manipulate would be
remarks like: "Why is he using this strange method for
calculation?", "Why did he fail to calculate the cost of financing?"
and even: "What does this term mean and what does he mean by using
it?"
(6) The symbol system must be comprehensive. It cannot exclude
certain symbols arbitrarily. It cannot ignore the existence of
competing meanings, double entendres, ambiguities. It must engulf
all possible interpretations and absolutely ALL the symbols
available to the system.
Let us return to the Business Plan:
A Business Plan must incorporate all the data available - and all
the known techniques to process them. It can safely establish a
hierarchy of priorities and of preferences - but it must present all
the possibilities and only then make a selection while giving good
reasons for doing so.
(7) The symbol system must have links to other, relevant, symbol
systems. These links can be both formal and informal (implied, by
way of mental association, or by way of explicit reference or
incorporation).
Coming back to the Business Plan:
There is no point in devising a Business Plan which will ignore
geopolitical macro-economic and marketing contexts. Is the region
safe for investments?
What are the prevailing laws and regulations in the territory and
how likely are they to be changed? What is the competition and how
can it be neutralized or co - opted? These are all external
variables, external symbol systems. Some of them are closely and
formally linked to the business at hand (Laws, customs tariffs,
taxes, for instance). Some are informally linked to it: substitute
products, emerging technologies, ethical and environmental
considerations. The Business Plan is supposed to resonate within the
mind of the reader and to elicit the reaction: "How very true!!!"
(8) The symbol system must have a discernible hierarchy. There are -
and have been - efforts to invent and to use non-hierarchical symbol
systems. They all failed and resulted in the establishment of a
formal, or an informal, hierarchy. The professional term is "Utility
Functions". This is not a theoretical demand. Utility functions
dictate most of the investment decisions in today's complex
financial markets.
The author(s) of the Business Plan must clearly state what he wants
and what he wants most, what is an absolute sine qua non and what
would be nice to have. He must fix and detail his preferences,
priorities, needs and requirements. If he were to attach equal
weight to all the parts of the Business Plan, his message will
confuse those who are trying to decode it and they will deny his
application.
(9) The symbol system must be seen to serve a (useful) purpose and
it must demonstrate an effort at being successful. It must,
therefore, be direct, understandable, clear and it must contain
lists of demands and wishes (all of them prioritized, as we have
mentioned).
When a computer faces a few tasks simultaneously - it prioritizes
them and allocates its resources in strict compliance with this list
of priorities.
A computer is the physical embodiment of a symbol system - and so is
a bank doling out credit. The same principles apply to the human
organism.
All natural (and most human) systems are goal-oriented.
(10) The last - but by no means the least - requirement is that the
symbol system must be interfaced with human beings. There is not
much point in a having a computer without a screen, or a bank
without clients, or a Business Plan without someone to review it. We
must always - when manipulating symbol systems - bear in mind
the "end user" and be "user friendly" to him. There is no such thing
as a bank, a firm, or even a country. At the end of the line, there
are humans, like me and you.
To manipulate them into providing credits, we must motivate them
into doing so. We must appeal to their emotions and senses: our
symbol system (=presentation, Business Plan) must be aesthetic,
powerful, convincing, appealing, resonating, fascinating,
interesting. All these are irrational (or, at least, non-cognitive)
reactions.
We must appeal to their cognition. Our symbol system must be
rational, logical, hierarchical, not far fetched, true, consistent,
internally and externally. All this must lead to motor motivation:
the hand that signs the check given to us should not shake.
THE PROBLEM, THEREFORE, IS NOT WHERE TO GO, NOT EVEN WHEN TO GO IN
ORDER TO OBTAIN CREDITS.
THE ISSUE IS HOW TO COMMUNICATE (=to manipulate symbols) IN ORDER TO
MOTIVATE.
Using this theory of the manipulation of symbols we can
differentiate three kinds of financing organizations:
(1) Those who deal with non-quantifiable symbols. The World Bank,
for one, when it evaluates business propositions, employs
criteriawhich cannot be quantified (how does one quantify the
contribution to regional stability or the increase in democracy and
the improvement in human rights records?).
(2) Those who deal with semi-quantifiable symbols. Organizations
such as the IFC or the EBRD employ sound - quantitative - business
and financial criteria in their decision making processes. But were
they totally business oriented, they would probably not have made
many of the investments that they are making and in the geographical
parts of the world that they are making them.
(3) And there are those classical financing organizations which deal
exclusively with quantifiable, measurable variables. Most of us come
across this type of financing institutions: commercial banks,
private firms, etc.
Whatever the kind of financial institution, we must never forget:
We are dealing with humans who are influenced mostly by the
manipulation of symbol systems. Abiding by the aforementioned rules
would guarantee success in obtaining funding. Making the right
decision on the national level - would catapult a country into the
21st century without having first to re-visit the twentieth.
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AUTHOR BIO (must be included with the article)
Sam Vaknin ( samvak.tripod.com ) is the author of Malignant
Self Love - Narcissism Revisited and After the Rain - How the West
Lost the East. He served as a columnist for Global Politician,
Central Europe Review, PopMatters, Bellaonline, and eBookWeb, a
United Press International (UPI) Senior Business Correspondent, and
the editor of mental health and Central East Europe categories in
The Open Directory and Suite101.
Until recently, he served as the Economic Advisor to the Government
of Macedonia.
Visit Sam's Web site at samvak.tripod.com
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