Writing a Business Plan in a Recession
Writing a Business Plan in a Recession
Writing a business plan in a recession works differently.
One needs to take a different approach--one that recognizes
the economic landscape. Further, in a recession, one should
make a special effort to avoid certain types of
errors--because the damage can be so severe.
Fortunately, one can do several simple things to write a
better, more realistic business plan in a recession:
Recession Business Planning Idea #1: De-grandiose-ize the
Plan
In a frothy economy, one can find it easy to get
over-excited about an opportunity or venture. And, in a
sense, that's may be good. Excitement, optimism and
confidence can be contagious. If the entrepreneur or
management team displays, say, excitement and confidence,
those feelings can infect--in a good way--the perception of
customers, vendors, investors, lenders, and employees.
In recession, however, probably one wants to be more
cautious for a couple of reasons: First of all, in a
sputtering or shrinking economy, one will have more trouble
selling. Period. Customers will have less money for
everything. And this "less money for everything" will
particularly mean less money for non-essential purchases
and services.
A second factor relates to the "less money for everything"
issue: With less money, customers will logically take more
time and be cautious in their purchasing. In other words,
even if some customer does choose ultimately to buy a
product, the customer may take six months longer to make
the decision.
Recession Business Planning Idea #2: Focus on Cash
Operating Profits
In a recession, businesses need to focus their business
planning on maximizing cash operating profits.
This admonition sounds, perhaps, a little too obvious. But
to make the point here stand out: Many business plans focus
too much on the liquidity event... the transaction that
allows the entrepreneur to exit the business at some point
in the future with a generous financial windfall.
For example, the business plan may focus on doing the
things perceived necessary to get to an initial public
offering. Or the business plan may optimize some element of
the business that in the past, large companies have used to
value the small companies they buy. Like top-line revenue
or customer counts.
When the economy is good, focusing on these "liquidity
event" issues may make sense. Focusing on the "liquidity
event" issues when major public corporations need
government bailouts to make it through the next week is
dumb.
Recession Business Planning Idea #3: Strip Out Geometric
Growth Rates
Commonly, in business plans, the people forecasting
revenue, profits and cash flow use geometric growth rates.
In a good economy, one can often get away with an
assumption of geometric growth. Maybe. But geometric growth
rates don't make sense in a recession.
A geometric growth rate assumes that some value in the
business plan will grow by a certain percentage. For
example, the business plan might assume revenues will grow
(almost automatically) by 5% a year. Or that inflation will
trigger annual (dependable) price adjustments of 3% for the
foreseeable future. Or that customer counts will grow
(magically) by 10% a year.
Geometric growth rates create exponential growth--and
implicitly assume that the business will just always get
better and better.
Note: The subprime mortgage meltdown that triggered the
current economic crisis stemmed in part from people using
geometric growth rates. Investors, lenders and policy
makers assumed that home prices would continue to almost
automatically, dependably, magically increase...
The alternative to a geometric growth rate is an arithmetic
growth rate. With arithmetic growth, you assume that a
value grows by a specific value. For example, a retailer
assumes that revenues grow by $500,000 each time a new
retail location is added.
Arithmetic growth assumptions provide two benefits to the
business planner. Arithmetic growth removes exponential
growth from the business plan. Arithmetic growth in general
makes the business planner explain with more detail what
drives growth.
Recession Business Planning Idea #4: Do Serious Scenario
Planning
In a recession--particularly in a recession that looks to
be as bad and deep as the current one--the business
planning process needs to include serious scenario planning.
Scenario planning means redoing the business plan for some
crazy, nearly unimaginable event. Like deflation. Or the
collapse of an entire industry. Or commodities prices
rising or falling to levels not seen in recent history.
Scenario planning delivers two benefits: Thinking the
unthinkable should give the entrepreneur the opportunity to
avoid some kinds of risks. And thinking the unthinkable--if
the worst case occurs--should mean the entrepreneur can
more quickly respond to a threat.
A final comment: Scenario planning should not look only at
bad scenarios--though that bias may be easy in the current
economy. Some of the surprises we see in the coming months
will be unimaginably good...
About the Author:
Stephen L. Nelson, CPA is the author of the MBA's Guide to
Microsoft Excel. He also edits the
www.writeyourownbusinessplan.com web site and the
www.scorporationsexplained.com web site. Nelson has
an MBA in finance and an MS in taxation.
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