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E-raamat: Business Plans For Dummies

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  • Ilmumisaeg: 04-Feb-2022
  • Kirjastus: For Dummies
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781119866381
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  • Formaat: PDF+DRM
  • Ilmumisaeg: 04-Feb-2022
  • Kirjastus: For Dummies
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781119866381
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Offers advice on assessing goals and objectives, writing a mission statement, identifying the needs of customers, economic forecasting, planning for market disruption, and creating a digital strategy.

Plan to succeed as an entrepreneur—we show you how

Business Plans For Dummies can guide you, as a new or aspiring business owner, through the process of creating a comprehensive, accurate, and useful business plan. In fact, it is just as appropriate for an already up-and running firm that realizes it's now time for a full-bore check-up, to ensure the business is in tip-top shape to meet the challenges of the globalized, digitized, and constantly changing 21st Century. This edition of is fully updated, featuring the most recent practices in the business world. Let us walk you through each step of the planning process. You'll find everything you need in this one book, so you can finally stop googling, close all those browser tabs, and get organized and get going.

Updates to this new revision include knowing how to pivot when your situation changes, recognizing the need for diversity and inclusion in the workplace, where to tap the latest funding sources, and how to plan for a digital strategy, market disruption, and environmental sustainability. You'll also learn how today's globalized marketplace influences your business—and how you can use social media to influence your customers right back.

  • Learn the ins and out of creating a business plan that will actually work
  • Set effective goals and objectives so your business can find success
  • Wow investors with your knowledge of today's important business trends
  • Map out your finances, marketing plan, and operational blueprint—then confidently get to work!

Challenge the traditional framework by building a business plan that's workable in today's reality. Dummies is here to help.

Introduction 1(4)
About This Book
2(1)
Foolish Assumptions
3(1)
Icons Used in This Book
4(1)
Beyond the Book
4(1)
Where to Go From Here
4(1)
PART 1 GETTING STARTED WITH BUSINESS PLANS
5(62)
Chapter 1 Preparing to Do a Business Plan
1(22)
Identifying Your Planning Resources
8(1)
Checking out the variety of sources out there
9(1)
Surfing the Internet
9(3)
Purchasing business-planning software
12(1)
Seeking professional help
12(1)
Finding friendly advice
13(1)
Assembling Your Planning Team
14(1)
Setting the ground rules
15(1)
Delegating responsibility
15(1)
Putting Your Plan on Paper or in Cyberspace
16(1)
Executive summary
17(1)
Company overview
18(1)
Business environment
19(1)
Company description
19(1)
Company strategy
20(1)
Financial review
20(1)
Action plan
21(2)
Chapter 2 Understanding the Importance of a Business Plan
23(16)
Bringing Your Ideas into Focus
24(1)
Looking forward
25(1)
Looking back
26(1)
Looking around
27(1)
Taking the first step
27(1)
Understanding the Planning behind the Plan
28(1)
Is planning an art or science?
28(1)
Why planning matters
29(1)
Satisfying Your Audience
30(1)
Venture capital
31(2)
Bankers, backers, and bootstrappers
33(6)
Chapter 3 Setting Off in the Right Direction
39(12)
Understanding Why Values Matter
40(1)
Facing tough choices
40(1)
Weighing utilitarianism and other philosophies
41(1)
Applying ethics and the law
42(1)
Getting caught lost and unprepared, if not naked and afraid
43(1)
Understanding the value of having values
44(2)
Clarifying Your Company Values
46(1)
Putting together your values statement
46(2)
Following through with your values
48(1)
Creating Your Company's Vision Statement
48(3)
Chapter 4 Charting the Proper Course
51(16)
Creating Your Compan's Mission Statement
52(1)
Getting started
52(3)
Capturing your business (in 50 words or less)
55(2)
Introducing Goals and Objectives
57(1)
Why bother?
57(1)
Goals versus objectives
58(2)
Efficiency versus effectiveness
60(1)
Minding Your Own Business: Setting Goals and Objectives
61(1)
Creating your business goals
61(1)
Laying out your objectives
62(1)
Matching goals and objectives with your mission
62(1)
Timing is everything
63(4)
PART 2 DESCRIBING YOUR MARKETPLACE
67(94)
Chapter 5 Examining the Business Environment
69(26)
Understanding Your Business
70(1)
Analyzing Your Industry
71(2)
Configuring the structure
73(2)
Measuring the markets
75(3)
Remembering the relationships
78(2)
Figuring out the finances
80(2)
Coming up with supporting data
82(3)
Recognizing Critical Success Factors
85(1)
Adopting new technologies, procedures, and policies
86(1)
Getting a handle on what counts most
86(1)
Determining what drives your business
86(1)
Looking for a great location
87(1)
Dealing with distribution
87(1)
Marketing mind games
87(1)
Getting along with government regulation
88(1)
SWOT: Preparing for Opportunities and Threats
89(1)
Finding warm and soothing waters
89(3)
Scanning for clouds on the horizon, ice on the water, or worse
92(3)
Chapter 6 Slicing and Dicing Markets
95(16)
Separating Customers into Groups
96(2)
Identifying Market Segments
98(1)
Who buys
99(4)
What customers buy
103(4)
Why customers buy
107(3)
Finding Useful Market Segments
110(1)
Is the segment the right size?
110(1)
Can you identify the customers?
111(1)
Can you reach the market?
111(2)
Becoming Market Driven
113(4)
Chapter 7 Getting Up Close and Personal with Customers
117(1)
Keeping Track of the Big Picture
118(1)
Categorizing Your Customers
119(1)
Comparing generations
120(1)
Defining your good customers
121(1)
Handling your not-so-best customers
122(1)
Scoping out the other guy's customers
123(1)
Discovering the Ways Customers Behave
124(1)
Understanding customer needs
125(2)
Determining customer motives
127(1)
Figuring Out How Customers Make Choices
128(1)
Realizing perceptions are reality
128(1)
Setting in motion the five steps to adoption
129(1)
Understanding the Global Customer
130(2)
Serving Your Customers Better
132(2)
Looking at a Special Case: Business Customers
134(1)
Filling secondhand demand
135(1)
Decision-making as a formal affair
136(1)
Knowing the forces to be reckoned with
136(3)
Chapter 8 Covering Your Competition
139(22)
Understanding the Value of Competitors
140(2)
Identifying Your Real Competitors
142(1)
Considering competition based on customer choice
143(3)
Paying attention to product usage and unexpected new competition
146(1)
Spotting strategic groups
147(2)
Focusing on future competition
149(2)
Tracking Your Competitors' Actions
151(1)
Determining competitors' capabilities
151(2)
Assessing competitors' strategies
153(2)
Predicting Your Competitors' Moves
155(1)
Figuring out competitors' goals
155(1)
Uncovering competitors' assumptions
156(2)
Competing to Win
158(1)
Organizing facts and figures
158(2)
Choosing your battles
160(1)
PART 3 WEIGHING YOUR COMPANY'S PROSPECTS
161(78)
Chapter 9 Assessing Where You Stand Today
163(20)
Doing Situation Analysis
164(1)
Identifying Strengths and Weaknesses
165(1)
Keeping frames of reference
165(1)
Defining capabilities and resources
166(11)
Monitoring critical success factors
177(3)
Analyzing Your Situation in 3-D
180(1)
Getting a glance at competitors
180(1)
Completing your SWOT analysis
180(3)
Chapter 10 Profiting from Your Business Plan
183(18)
Describing What You Do Best
184(1)
Looking at the links in a value chain
184(3)
Forging your value chain
187(2)
Understanding your value proposition
189(1)
Putting Together a Business Model
190(1)
How will you make money?
191(2)
How's your timing?
193(1)
Making Your Business Model Work
193(1)
Searching for a competitive advantage
194(1)
Focusing on core competence
195(1)
Sustaining an advantage over time
196(1)
Earmarking Resources
197(4)
Chapter 11 Figuring Out the Financial Details
201(20)
Reading Income Statements
203(1)
Rendering revenue
203(2)
Calculating costs
205(1)
Pondering profits
206(1)
Interpreting Balance Sheets
206(1)
Ascertaining assets
207(3)
Categorizing liabilities and owners' equity
210(1)
Examining Cash-Flow Statements
211(2)
Moving money: Cash in and cash out
213(1)
Watching cash levels rise and fall
214(1)
Evaluating Financial Ratios
214(1)
Meeting short-term obligations
215(2)
Remembering long-term responsibilities
217(1)
Reading relative profitability
218(3)
Chapter 12 Forecasting and Budgeting
221(18)
Constructing a Financial Forecast
222(2)
Piecing together your pro-forma income statement
224(4)
Estimating your balance sheet
228(2)
Projecting your cash flow
230(1)
Exploring Alternative Financial Forecasts
231(1)
Utilizing the DuPont formula
231(2)
Answering a what-if analysis
233(1)
Making a Budget
233(1)
Looking inside the budget
234(1)
Creating your budget
234(5)
PART 4 LOOKING TO THE FUTURE
239(74)
Chapter 13 Confronting Uncertainty
241(24)
Understanding the Dangers of Ignoring Change
242(1)
Defining the Dimensions of Change
243(1)
Governmental trends
244(4)
Economic trends
248(5)
Cultural trends
253(2)
Technological trends
255(4)
Anticipating Change
259(2)
Preparing for a Changing Future
261(4)
Chapter 14 Thinking Strategically
265(20)
Applying Off-the-Shelf Strategies
266(2)
Leading with low costs
268(6)
Standing out in a crowd
274(2)
Focusing on focus
276(3)
Changing Your Boundaries
279(1)
The evolution of new strategic models
279(1)
Outsourcing and offshoring
280(1)
Leading and Following
281(1)
Market-leader strategies
282(1)
Market-follower strategies
282(2)
Tailoring Your Own Strategy
284(1)
Chapter 15 Growing Up, Growing Bigger, and Growing Old
285(28)
Facing Up to the Product Life Cycle
286(1)
Starting out
287(1)
Growing up
288(1)
Maturing in middle age
288(2)
Riding out the senior stretch
290(1)
Gauging where you are now
290(2)
Finding Ways to Expand
292(2)
Same product and same market
294(2)
New market or new product
296(4)
New product and new market
300(2)
Managing Your Product Portfolio
302(1)
Utilizing strategic business units
302(2)
Aiming for the stars
304(5)
Asking Two Final Questions About Growth
309(1)
Knowing that, yes, growth is good
309(1)
Managing growth wisely
310(3)
PART 5 PUTTING YOUR BUSINESS PLAN INTO ACTION
313(22)
Chapter 16 Shaping and Shape-Shifting Your Organization
315(10)
Recognizing That Form Follows Function
315(2)
Putting Together an Effective Organization
317(1)
Choosing a basic design
317(1)
Focusing on a functional model
318(1)
Divvying up duties with a divisional form
318(1)
Sharing talents with the matrix format
319(1)
Dealing with too many chefs in the kitchen
320(1)
Finding what's right for you
321(1)
Thinking and Organizing for the Future
322(3)
Chapter 17 Leading the Way
325(10)
Encouraging Leadership Roles
326(1)
Leading from the front or the back
326(1)
Looking at leadership styles
327(1)
Developing Business Skills (And Having the Right Personality Traits)
328(1)
Evaluating personality traits
328(1)
Distinguishing appropriate skills
329(1)
Creating the Right Culture
330(2)
Following Through with Your Vision
332(1)
Bringing Your Plan to Life (And Making a Final Check)
333(2)
PART 6 THE PART OF TENS
335(20)
Chapter 18 Ten (Or So) Signs That Your Business Plan Needs Refreshing -- or Worse
337(6)
Your Business Goals Change Abruptly
338(1)
You Don't Meet Your Plan Milestones
338(1)
New Technology Makes a Splash
338(1)
Important Customers Walk Away
339(1)
The Competition Heats Up
339(1)
Product Demand Falls Sharply
339(1)
Revenues Go Down or Costs Go Up
340(1)
Company Morale Slumps
340(1)
Key Financial Projections Don't Pan Out
340(1)
Too Much Growth, Too Fast
341(1)
An Unwanted Surprise Pops Up
341(2)
Chapter 19 Ten (Or So) Questions to Ask about Your Plan
343(6)
Are Your Goals and Mission in Sync?
343(1)
Can You Point to Major Opportunities?
344(1)
Have You Prepared for Threats?
344(1)
Do You Know Your Customers?
344(1)
Can You Track Your Competitors?
345(1)
Do You Know Your Strengths and Weaknesses?
345(1)
Does Your Strategy Make Sense?
346(1)
Can You Stand Behind the Numbers?
346(1)
Are You Really Ready for Change?
346(1)
Is Your Plan Concise and Up-to-Date?
347(1)
What's the Worst That Can Happen, and How Will You Deal with It?
347(2)
Chapter 20 Ten (Or So) Business-Planning Never-Evers
349(6)
Failing to Plan in the First Place
349(1)
Shrugging Off Values and Vision
350(1)
Second-Guessing the Customer
350(1)
Underestimating Your Competition
350(1)
Ignoring Your Strengths
351(1)
Mistaking a Budget for a Plan
351(1)
Shying Away from Reasonable Risk
351(1)
Allowing One Person to Dominate a Plan
352(1)
Being Afraid to Change
352(1)
Forgetting to Motivate and Reward
352(1)
Faking It
353(2)
Appendix: A Sample Business Plan 355(26)
Index 381
Paul Tiffany, PhD, is a professor at the Haas School of Business, UC Berkeley, where he teaches courses on public policy and management. He is an expert in business strategy and management. Prior to beginning his career in academia, Tiffany worked as a business consultant and continues to lead his own consulting agency.

Steven D. Peterson, PhD, is the senior partner and founder of the management tool development company Strategic Play Technologies.