The Pitch-Then-Plan Business Planning Template

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The Pitch-Then-Plan Business Planning Template

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Title: The Pitch-Then-Plan Business Planning Template


1
The Pitch-Then-Plan Business Planning Template
2
About This Template
  • This Pitch-Then-Plan template was originally
    presented in the Book The Art of the Start by
    Guy Kawasakifounder of Garage Ventures and part
    of the original Apple Macintosh development team.
  • To use this template, read then delete all of the
    slides that have a black background. Complete
    the slides that have a blue background.

3
About Entrepreneurship
  • Doing, not learning to do, is the essence of
    entrepreneurship.
  • Remember, no one ever achieved success by
    planning for gold.
  • The hardest thing about getting started is
    getting started.
  • As an (emerging) entrepreneur, you should always
    be sellingnot strategizing about selling.

4
Pitch, Then Plan
  • Many entrepreneurs try to perfect their business
    plans and then pull PowerPoint slides out of it.
  • This is backwards thinking. A good business plan
    is a detailed version of the pitchNOT a pitch as
    a distilled version of the business plan.
  • If you get the pitch right, youll get the plan
    right. The opposite is not always true.

5
The Proper Process
  • Throw together a pitch that contains the ten
    slides presented in this template.
  • Try it out on some mentors, colleagues, and
    relatives. Do this about ten times.
  • Get the team together in a room and discuss what
    you have learned.
  • Fix the pitch.
  • Start writing the plan.

6
Why This Is The Right Process
  • Your pitch is more important than your business
    plan, because it will determine whether youre
    rejected or generate further interest. Few
    sophisticated investors will read a business plan
    as the first step.
  • A pitch is easier to fix than a business plan
    because it contains less text.
  • You wont get feedback on your business plan.
    Frankly, it may not even be read. You will,
    however, get immediate reactions to your pitch.

7
Explain Yourself in The First Minute
  • Never has a presentation been given where the
    audience has said to itself, I wish the speaker
    had spent the first fifteen minutes explaining
    his life story.
  • While youre busy warming up, your listeners are
    inevitably wondering, What does their
    organization do?
  • Do everyone a favor Answer that question in the
    first minute. Once the audience has learned what
    you do, they can listen to everything else with a
    more focused perspective.

8
Answer The Little Man
  • Nothing in a pitch is more powerful than combing
    an answer to So what? with For instance,

9
Observe The 10/20/30 Rule
  • Here is a good guideline to follow for the
    content, length, and font of a good pitch. Its
    called the 10/20/30 rule
  • Ten slides
  • Twenty minutes
  • Thirty-point font text

10
Dont Use A Top-Down Model
  • No bootstrapper in his right mind would do a
    top-down forecast. Heres a typical top-down
    model
  • There a 1.3 billion people.
  • 1 percent want internet access.
  • Well get 10 percent of that potential audience.
  • Each account will yield 240 per year.
  • 1.3 billion people X 1 of the market X 10
    success rate X 240/customer 312 million.
  • (And as an added bonus, look at how conservative
    these percentages are!)

11
Instead, Use A Bottom-Up Model
  • Heres an example
  • Each salesperson can make ten phone sales a day
    that get through to a prospect.
  • There are 240 working days per year.
  • Five percent of the sales calls will convert
    within six months.
  • Each successful sale will bring in 240 worth of
    business.
  • We can bring on board five sales people.
  • Ten calls/day X 240 days/year X 5 success rate X
    240/sale X 5 salespeople 144,000 in sales in
    the first year.

12
Organization Name
  • Your Name
  • Title
  • Contact Information
  • Sunday, November 25, 2012

13
Problem
  • Describe the pain that youre taking away. The
    goal is to get everyone nodding and buying in.
  • Try to personalize the problem.
  • Example If you go to five travel sites, you
    will be presented with 5 completely different
    offers. Visiting each site and comparing trip
    packages is time-consuming and confusing.

14
Solution
  • Explain how you take away this pain. Ensure that
    the audience clearly understands what you sell
    and your value proposition.
  • Example We are a discount travel website. We
    have written software that searches all the other
    travel sites and collates their price quotes into
    one report.

15
Business Model
  • Explain how you make money who pays you, your
    channels of distribution, and your gross margins.
  • Generally, a unique, untested business model is a
    scary proposition. If you truly have a
    revolutionary business model (unlikely), explain
    it in terms of familiar ones.
  • Think of eBay We charge a listing fee plus a
    commission. End of story.

16
Underlying Magic
  • Describe the technology, secret sauce, or magic
    behind your product.
  • Specifically, how does it create value for the
    customer.
  • Example The delivery of a wines message,
    its bouquet and taste, depends on the shape of
    the glass. The secret to Reidel glasses is that
    there is a perfect shape for every beverage.
    Through ten generations of glassblowers, we have
    discovered the timeless forms of glass to convey
    the wines message in the best manner to the
    human senses.

17
Positioning
  • Describe your position in the marketplace.
  • Competitive Positioning What stories are the
    prominent competitors selling?
  • Creative Positioning What story will you tell
    that customers will find either more important or
    different than the stories already being told in
    the market?
  • Example Wal-Mart is telling the story of low
    prices everyday. We telling a story of
    convenience.

18
Marketing and Sales
  • Explain how you are going to reach your customer
    and your marketing leverage points.
  • Convince the audience that you have an effective
    go-to-market strategy that wont break the bank.
  • Example We can reach the majority of the
    primary buyers of our educational software
    through two national trade shows and four primary
    regional shows.

19
Competition
  • Provide a complete view of the competitive
    landscape.
  • Never dismiss your competition.
  • Everyonecustomers, investors, employeeswants to
    hear why your good, not why the competition is
    bad.

20
Management Team
  • Describe the key players of your management team,
    board of directors, advisors, as well as any
    major investors.
  • Discuss how your team completes the management
    trinity production, marketing, and financial
    expertise.
  • Discuss what are the holes in the team and how do
    you plan to fill them.

21
Financial Projections
  • Provide a three year forecast containing not only
    dollars, but also key metrics such as numbers of
    customers and conversion rate.
  • This should be a bottom-up forecast taking into
    account long sales cycles and seasonality.
  • Making people understand the underlying
    assumptions of your forecast is as important as
    the numbers youve fabricated.

22
Milestones
  • Explain
  • the current status of your product or service,
  • what the near term future looks like,
  • any accomplishments to date, and
  • how youll use any money that you are trying to
    raise.
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