Interview: Common Business Plan Mistakes


Dave Lavinsky

How to Think About and Write Your Business Plan


In this interview with Dave Lavinsky, of BusinessPlanVictory.com, we discuss the ins-and-outs of writing a business plan. We also cover many of the most common mistakes entrepreneurs make when writing their business plan.

If you have the good fortune to get your plan in front of a high powered investor or banker, don't screw it up! It just takes one little mistake to disqualify you...

Don't be a casualty... listen to this interview and prepare your business plan the right way, the first time!

Including:

  • Who needs a business plan, and who doesn't. (Learn what kind of business plan you should build - for YOUR business needs.)
  • How to simplify the process of writing your plan. Most people spend weeks writing their plan, but you can write it in just a couple days.
  • The NUMBER 1, MOST IMPORTANT THING to keep in mind when writing your business plan.
  • The tools and techniques you can use for researching your plan, writing your plan, and getting it out into the world.
  • How to strike the perfect balance between past accomplishments and current opportunity. (And what to do if you don't have past accomplishments to brag on...)
  • How to get your plan in front of investors who will give you money.

And so much more!

You can listen to this interview right from here, or download it to your computer.



Common Business Plan Mistakes with Dave Lavinsky (1 hour 14 minutes)

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Dave's business plan template has helped entrepreneurs raise over $1 BILLION in funding!

Small Business Victory listeners get it for 98% off! Just $1 by following the link below:

I've arranged a very special discount, only for my listeners. For a short time, get the $97 business plan template product for just $1. Click here for details:

Business Plan Victory.com.




FREE PDF: 10 Rules to Bet the Jockey (not the horse)

A hard-core, eagle-eyed, "been-there-done-that" investor WILL NOT FUND YOUR IDEA.

** He will only fund YOU. **

Today, I'm going to give you a FREE investor cheat sheet, called "10 rules investors use to bet the jockey". This cheat sheet is super-valuable, and only available for a very short period of time...

This FREE PDF Cheat sheet will only be available until Monday - at which time I will remove the link for downoad. If you're interested, get it now:

[link removed - sorry!]

Soon, I'm re-launching the Startup Victory training. This cheat sheet, along with the complete interview with Mr. Rose is only available as a bonus for members.

I'm super proud of the content coming out of this training... so proud that I'm putting my own money on the line.

I guarantee that if you complete the simple weekly assignments, at the end of the training you will own a business with at least enough monthly profit to replace your current paycheck - or I'll give you 250% of your course tuition back.

Travis

PS: If you are a current Startup Victory subscriber, you'll get all the new bonuses for free... and there are a lot.

 

 

Business Financing Myths - Part 2

A few days ago, I sent you information on using credit to finance your start-up requirements.
 
Today, I'll tell you what I think of the other 3 financing avenues:
 
* Debt
* Equity
* Government Grants
 
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Going into Debt to Finance Your Business
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Debt is just another way of saying "to get a loan".
 
The loan can be from a bank, or from a friend/family member.
 
As you know, loans must be re-paid.
 
This means that a bank will only loan you money if they're pretty darn sure they will get it back. A family member might buy into your dream a little easier - but they still want their money back...
 
In order to get a bank loan, you need to have a killer idea, a killer business plan to go with it, a good credit score, and a decent relationship with your banker.
 
** They will check my credit score? **
 
Yes, these days, the bank will check your personal credit score before giving you a business loan. The reasoning, from their perspective is: "If this guy can't take care of his own money, why
do I think he'll take care of ours?"
 
The bank will also require that you sign personally for the loan. If your business goes under - they still want their money back...
 
The SCORE interview with Carl Woodard is a good place to start learning about banks and bank loans. 
(This is a full, free interview with a senior business coach from SCORE)

 
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Financing Your Business With Equity
-----------------------------------
 
When you finance your business with equity, you are basically selling a percentage of your company for a price.
 
In other words, some investor gives you a certain amount of moolah, and you give them a piece of paper saying they own a part of your company.
 
Pretty good deal, right?
 
Yes, it can be.
 
But there is also a huge downside to equity financing. Namely, that downside is the amount of time and effort it takes to close a round of equity financing.
 
The primary sources of equity financing are: Venture Capitalists, Angel Investors, and your rich Uncle.
 
All three of these sources have money for a reason... they know how to make it come back with friends.
 
This means --> they are extremely picky about the investments they make. 
 
In most cases you not only need a killer idea, and a killer business model, and a killer business plan - but you also usually need a track record of success, or a reference from some influential third party.
 
99% of those looking for equity financing will never get it. Sad, but true.
 
If that doesn't deter you, there is also this: you will likely spend 1-3 YEARS chasing equity investment before you land it. This is usually a slow process, and I've personally been involved in
more than one company that went out of business due to lack of operational funds before the equity investment was achieved.
 
If you decide to pursue VC or Angel money - be prepared to play the game!
 
The interview with Venture Capitalist Brad Feld is a good place to start playing:
(another full length, free interview)

 
 
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Financing Your Business with Grant Money
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Grants are free money from the federal government that you don't have to pay back and you don't have to give away a piece of your business for.
 
Sounds awesome, right?
 
It would be awesome... if it existed!
 
Unless you are a non-profit, into bio-tech, an intermediary lending institution, or a branch of government - you will not qualify for a grant. (Even if you do fall into these categories, you still
probably don't qualify...)
 
Anybody that tries to sell you grant applications, grant training, etc., is "most likely" a snake-oil salesman. I would run the other way, fast.
 
While it's a nice dream - getting free money for your business - it just doesn't work that way in the real world. Sorry.
 
 
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CONCLUSION
----------------------------------------
 
Knowing what I know about small business financing, I take a different path... When I start a new business, I "bootstrap" it.
 
I start very small, usually with less than $1,000 and do market research. I figure what the market wants. I "test" the waters with experimental advertising.
 
I don't put all my eggs in one basket...
 
Until I find that it can be profitable. THEN, I take all my eggs from elsewhere and consolidate them into my basket (and watch that basket very, very closely).
 
At the point when I know I can put $1 in advertising into the world, and it will come back with $1.20, $1.50, or $2 - that is when I use credit to expand marketing and sales. After all, how
much money would YOU borrow if you KNEW you could double it?
 
Food for thought!
 
Travis

4 Ways to Finance Your Business

There are easy ways, hard ways and impossible ways to finance your business.
 
Over the next two posts I will cover Credit, Debt, Equity, Grants, and more. I'm gonna give you the "low down, dirty" stuff that nobody else will tell you.
 
There are only 4 ways to finance your business:

* Credit
* Debt
* Equity
* Government Grants

Today, I'll cover "Credit" and in a few days I'll follow up with the other options.
 
-------------------------------------
Using Credit to Finance Your Business
-------------------------------------
 
This is the most common way to finance a business. The credit route is mostly reserved for startup operations with smallish capital needs.
 
Just put it on the credit card! After all... It's the American way, right?
 
Well, it turns out there are smart and not-so-smart ways to finance your business with credit.
 
 
The not-so-smart business owner will load up the credit card to build a web site, design a logo, form an LLC, maybe hire a consultant to help with the business plan, and buy the latest whiz-bang marketing course.
 
Before you know it, he has a really cool website and business cards to show everyone. But since he already spent all his money, there is nothing left for actual marketing - and never any for a "rainy
day"...
 
Before you know it, he shuts down the operations. His business is DEAD, and he is up to his eyeballs IN DEBT.
 
---
 
The intelligent business owner only puts money on the credit card when it is "smart money". The smart guy only goes into debt when he knows the money is coming back (hopefully with friends).
 
Smart guy has done the market research up front and knows his customer. He has a killer USP (unique selling propsition). He has a strategic plan for marketing.
 
Then, with very small amounts of money, he "tests the waters" with marketing experiments.
 
When he finds the "secret sauce" - when he can make $2 for every $1 he puts out - THAT is when the money starts going on credit cards.
 
In a few days, I'll follow up with info on Debt, Equity, and Government Grants.
 
 
Looking forward!
 
Travis