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Actual for You - Do You Really Need a Business Plan?
Misconduct Investigations: When Punting Can Save the Game lan.”A bungled investigation can quickly turn a reasonable, still employed complainant into a hurt, damaged and angry former-employee-plaintiff. --AnonymousFor Tammie C. Allen, former admin assistant to MTSU President Sidney McPhee, the unsolicited advances, kisses, groping and requests for sexual activities from her boss were less injurious than the humiliating and biased s If your father or rich uncle is planning to invest in you business, for example, you may not need a business plan that “sells” the investment. Right or wrong, you dad or rich uncle Joe may write you a check just because you are who you are. What about a White-paper Style Business Plan? Does what I’ve just said mean that you don’t need a business plan at all? Well, sort of. Sort of not. I have personally started, oh, let’s say 5 businesses over the la Making Sure the Celebrity Will Be the Right Fit for Your Audience I stumbled onto an online donnybrook at one of those entrepreneurs’ online discussion boards yesterday. And I just had to smile. People were going just nuts about whether a business plan is needed, what a business plan even is, who should write the plan, and other assorted topics.Chapter 2 of 14 Making sure the Celebrity will be the right fit for your audience.One of the biggest mistakes made when contemplating the use of a celebrity endorser is choosing a celebrity that does not complement your business or product well. For example, sticking a retired baseball player into a kids video about baseball could be a sure failure. Kids don’t recognize pla But before I repeat the comments I shared, let me just say that as a CPA with many business clients in the Seattle area I've done a bunch of business planning, have covered the subjects in books I've written like the super-sized version of QuickBooks for Dummies, and also covered the subject rather extensively in my book MBA's Guide to Microsoft Excel (which was used at several big business schools.) With that as background, let me share a handful of thoughts. Not All Business Plans Are Equal So here’s a first thought. People often mean different things when they use the phrase “business plan.” Sometimes they just mean a strategy (which could just as well be described in a sentence). Sometimes they mean a 20-25pp document that "sells" a business to new investors or lenders. And sometimes they mean a long document--a sort of white paper--that describes in massive detail a new venture opportunity, an approach to exploiting that opportunity, and then detailed workplans for getting from “here” to “there”. And that’s the first thing I told the people squabbling online. People use the phrase to mean different things—and that’s confusing. And part of the fight I witnessed stemmed from this miscommunication. New Venture Plans Aren’t Necessarily Unless Funders Require It Here was my next point for the flame warriors I encountered. Obviously, if you're not raising money or you're raising money from people who aren't traditional new venture investors and orthodox lenders, you don't need a business plan that “sells” the business to funding sources—the sort of plan I’ve often called a “new venture plan.” If your father or rich uncle is planning to invest in you business, for example, you may not need a business plan that “sells” the investment. Right or wrong, you dad or rich uncle Joe may write you a check just because you are who you are. What about a White-paper Style Business Plan? Does what I’ve just said mean that you don’t need a business plan at all? Well, sort of. Sort of not. I have personally started, oh, let’s say 5 businesses over the la Put That Email Aside Until You Calm Down! tten like the super-sized version of QuickBooks for Dummies, and also covered the subject rather extensively in my book MBA's Guide to Microsoft Excel (which was used at several big business schools.)If we lived in a perfect world, business would be business.It wouldn’t be tainted with destructive competition and the petty conflicts that are so prevalent in everyday transactions. But, as you know, we’re far from that ideal.We have to handle defensive people, who make us defensive, and then who call us, defensive! When we feel burdened by someone’s ego, we should to try With that as background, let me share a handful of thoughts. Not All Business Plans Are Equal So here’s a first thought. People often mean different things when they use the phrase “business plan.” Sometimes they just mean a strategy (which could just as well be described in a sentence). Sometimes they mean a 20-25pp document that "sells" a business to new investors or lenders. And sometimes they mean a long document--a sort of white paper--that describes in massive detail a new venture opportunity, an approach to exploiting that opportunity, and then detailed workplans for getting from “here” to “there”. And that’s the first thing I told the people squabbling online. People use the phrase to mean different things—and that’s confusing. And part of the fight I witnessed stemmed from this miscommunication. New Venture Plans Aren’t Necessarily Unless Funders Require It Here was my next point for the flame warriors I encountered. Obviously, if you're not raising money or you're raising money from people who aren't traditional new venture investors and orthodox lenders, you don't need a business plan that “sells” the business to funding sources—the sort of plan I’ve often called a “new venture plan.” If your father or rich uncle is planning to invest in you business, for example, you may not need a business plan that “sells” the investment. Right or wrong, you dad or rich uncle Joe may write you a check just because you are who you are. What about a White-paper Style Business Plan? Does what I’ve just said mean that you don’t need a business plan at all? Well, sort of. Sort of not. I have personally started, oh, let’s say 5 businesses over the la Employment Service escribed in a sentence). Sometimes they mean a 20-25pp document that "sells" a business to new investors or lenders.Recruitment market place has remained at a healthy level across the area. The number of requirements that to be handled that shows a target and increase by percentage. This increasing practice in recruitments brings effect on candidate availability, and employers' need altogether. Companies, who are experiencing a shortage of good skilled candidates, they depend on the employment service And sometimes they mean a long document--a sort of white paper--that describes in massive detail a new venture opportunity, an approach to exploiting that opportunity, and then detailed workplans for getting from “here” to “there”. And that’s the first thing I told the people squabbling online. People use the phrase to mean different things—and that’s confusing. And part of the fight I witnessed stemmed from this miscommunication. New Venture Plans Aren’t Necessarily Unless Funders Require It Here was my next point for the flame warriors I encountered. Obviously, if you're not raising money or you're raising money from people who aren't traditional new venture investors and orthodox lenders, you don't need a business plan that “sells” the business to funding sources—the sort of plan I’ve often called a “new venture plan.” If your father or rich uncle is planning to invest in you business, for example, you may not need a business plan that “sells” the investment. Right or wrong, you dad or rich uncle Joe may write you a check just because you are who you are. What about a White-paper Style Business Plan? Does what I’ve just said mean that you don’t need a business plan at all? Well, sort of. Sort of not. I have personally started, oh, let’s say 5 businesses over the la American Auto Makers Have to Change - So Do We! g. And part of the fight I witnessed stemmed from this miscommunication.The past few weeks have presented nothing but bad news for the formerly world leading American automobile industry. Henry Ford must be rolling over in his tomb. Alfred Sloan, the architect of the multi-division General Motors juggernaut, is a very sad “car guy” in the sky these days. Plant closings, huge employee layoffs, lost market share and horrid fiscal performance indicate that the New Venture Plans Aren’t Necessarily Unless Funders Require It Here was my next point for the flame warriors I encountered. Obviously, if you're not raising money or you're raising money from people who aren't traditional new venture investors and orthodox lenders, you don't need a business plan that “sells” the business to funding sources—the sort of plan I’ve often called a “new venture plan.” If your father or rich uncle is planning to invest in you business, for example, you may not need a business plan that “sells” the investment. Right or wrong, you dad or rich uncle Joe may write you a check just because you are who you are. What about a White-paper Style Business Plan? Does what I’ve just said mean that you don’t need a business plan at all? Well, sort of. Sort of not. I have personally started, oh, let’s say 5 businesses over the la Why a Professional Dallas Window Cleaning Job Is Important lan.”Are you a business owner who operates a business in or around the Dallas area? Whether you run a business that is in an office setting or a setting like a retail store, if your establishment has windows, you need to make sure that your windows are always clean. That is why it is advised that you seek professional assistance, in terms of window cleaning. Dallas business owners, just li If your father or rich uncle is planning to invest in you business, for example, you may not need a business plan that “sells” the investment. Right or wrong, you dad or rich uncle Joe may write you a check just because you are who you are. What about a White-paper Style Business Plan? Does what I’ve just said mean that you don’t need a business plan at all? Well, sort of. Sort of not. I have personally started, oh, let’s say 5 businesses over the last 25 years. Four succeeded rather nicely. One basically failed (ironically, the one profiled in a glowing Wall Street Journal feature!) I didn’t really create a formal, white-paper-style business plan for any of these ventures. But even though I didn’t have a formal written document, I truly had done all the research that feeds a white-paper-style business plan... I just hadn’t documented and “published” my research results. So I guess I would say that you don’t necessarily need a formal, printed-and-bound white-paper business plan document. But you really should have done all the research that goes into such a document. Enough said.
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