this post was submitted on 14 Nov 2023
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Super naive question from a yet-to-be entrepreneur but I was wondering if you used a specific software or Microsoft words will do just fine?

I was also wondering where i could find some examples of business plans (actual ones and not the ones i was given in college lmao)

Also, are there any conventional structures when it comes to business plans or the more blend and straight to the point the better? My classmates used to put a lot of colours and flashy icons. Is it the way to go?

Cheers,

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[–] founderscurve@alien.top 1 points 10 months ago (1 children)

Business plans used to be really popular, but at least for Startups (and VC) it tends to be pitch decks (the Y Combinator one, you can google is particularly good)

whether you do a pitch deck or a business plan in a more conventional sense you still want to cover areas such as. - competitors (and features and why you are better than them); total market size? beachhead of the market, the customer personal, you want to articulate the problem, how your solution solves the problem, how your business will make money.

personally, what i find more important than a pitchdeck or a business plan is the financial model - i was speaking with a fellow VC at a conference and we agreed, if the financial model is sufficiently good, we can understand most of what the business is trying to do, how it will do it, how it will make money and how it will grow, so then we only need addressable market size data, and verification that the founders assumptions are realistic and achievable - TL;DR - do the financial model first and use it to plan.

[–] Inquation@alien.top 1 points 10 months ago (1 children)

Thanks so much for your elaborate answer!!

[–] rapidPanic@alien.top 1 points 10 months ago

To piggyback on u/founderscurve's guidance, here is a succinct on-ramp style reading about the startup finance stack: https://www.causal.app/blog/the-ultimate-guide-to-finance-for-seed-series-a-companies

Might help to think unit sales and subsequent economics of putting the product or service out and use that for modeling the financial stack.