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Business Plans to Guide, Lead and Follow

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Business Plans to Guide, Lead and Follow Heather Gessner McCook County Extension Educator Mark Major Jerauld County Extension Educator South Dakota State University ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Business Plans to Guide, Lead and Follow


1
Business Plansto Guide, Lead and Follow
2
  • Heather Gessner
  • McCook County Extension Educator
  • Mark Major
  • Jerauld County Extension Educator
  • South Dakota State University
  • Cooperative Extension Service

3
What is a Business Plan
  • It is an ongoing process that begins with the
    identification of values and ends with strategic
    planning to address critical management functions

4
  • Business planning is a critical component to any
    operation. Even though a seat of the pants
    approach to farming might work, it takes to long
    to figure out if a decision is a poor one you
    can waste years doing the wrong thing when you
    could have done the right thing.
  • ---Greg Reynolds, Riverbend Farms

5
Who should take the time?
  • Beginning/Starting Farmers
  • Families farming with older children or that want
    to bring children back to the operation
  • Marketing Groups
  • New/Value-Added Product
  • Lender/Investor information
  • Holistic

6
If you are planning on
  • Changing management practices
  • Expanding the operation
  • Incorporating more family members or business
    partners
  • Transferring or selling the business
  • Adding a value added component
  • Adding a new business venture

7
Who puts this thing together?
  • YOU DO
  • Anyone with a vested interest in the operation
    should be invited to add their input

8
  • Family members
  • Employees
  • Partners
  • Renters
  • Other producers
  • Landlords

Customers Resource organizations Input
dealers Lenders Community members Technical
experts
9
Building A Sustainable Business
  • A Guide to Developing A Business Plan For Farms
    and Rural Business
  • Minnesota Institute for Sustainable Agriculture

10
Parts To A Business Plan
  • Cover
  • Executive Summary
  • Table of Contents
  • Business Background (History and Business Mission
  • Current Situation)
  • Vision and Goals
  • Key Planning Assumptions
  • Marketing Strategy
  • Operations Strategy
  • Management and Human Resources Strategy
  • Financial Strategy
  • Projected Income Statement and Cash Flow
  • Appendices (Relevant support info. market
    research, resumes, brochures, letters of
    recommendation, tax returns etc.)

11
The Three Questions
  • Where did I come from?
  • What is my current situation?
  • Where do I want to go?

12
Business Plan Guides the BusinessThrough Its
Life Cycle
START/BEGIN
GROWTH
CONSOLIDATE
TRANSFER/SELL
Financial Management in Agriculture, 7th ed.,
Barry et al., 2002
13
Through all those stages business owners need to
keep in mind the BIG 4 Management Areas
  • Marketing
  • Operations
  • Human Resources
  • Finance

14
Where Do We Start?
  • Identify Values
  • What is important to you?
  • These are not goals.
  • Identify the values that bring everyone together.
  • Personal values need to be combined with the
    values of the whole team.

15
Personal Values
EXAMPLE THOUGHT PROCESS
  • Because our health is directly tied to the
    health of the environment, we strive to produce
    healthy dairy and meat products by utilizing
    sustainable methods in their production
  • ----Cedar Summit Farms

16
  • Review History and Take Stock of Your Current
    Situation
  • What is my current situation?
  • Document your business history and take stock of
    your current situation.
  • Relay as accurately as possible these facts.

17
Current Status
  • Current market assessment
  • Working assets
  • Crop/Livestock production systems
  • Human resources
  • Family situations
  • Financial documentation
  • Risk Management

18
SWOT Analysis
  • Analysis of your operations
  • Strengths
  • Weaknesses
  • Opportunities
  • Threats

19
  • Clarify Your Vision
  • Where do you want to go?
  • What are your goals?
  • Clarify a future vision for the business and
    develop goals and a mission statement that
    reflect the values you have identified.

20
Where do you want to go?
  • Expanding
  • Exiting
  • Ownership change
  • Production changes
  • Vertical integration
  • Business Mission Statement

21
  • Strategic Planning and Evaluation
  • What routes can you take to get where you want to
    go
  • Development and evaluation of strategic
    marketing, operations, human resources and
    financing alternatives is the largest and maybe
    the hardest part of the plan.

22
Strategic Planning Evaluation
  • Value added products
  • Inventory management
  • Marketing plans/Risk Management
  • Production systems
  • Permits, Policies, Regulations
  • Resource allocation/Human resources
  • Executive Summary

23
Executive Summary
  • Most important part of the Business Plan
  • Typically includes
  • Identity
  • Location
  • History
  • Ownership
  • Industry and competition
  • Product
  • Marketing
  • Human Resources
  • Finances

24
  • Present, Implement and Monitor Your Business Plan
  • Which route will you take and how will you check
    your progress along the way
  • Pull everything together into a formal, written
    plan that can be used as an in-house tool, to
    obtain credit, help everyone remember where you
    want to go.

25
Implementation
  • How are you going to create this beast?
  • Outline
  • Implementation to-do list
  • Monitoring list
  • Tasks and Workload breakdown

26
Tying it all together
  • Look at where youve been
  • Decide where you are
  • Figure out where you want to go
  • Compile facts, figures, and resources
  • Implement and monitor progress

27
USE IT!!
  • The biggest part of this process is to use the
    Business Plan
  • Make it available
  • Revise it as needed
  • Reevaluate your goals and checkpoints
  • Dont use it as a bookend!

28
Thank you
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