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Casual Articles - Serious About Writing A Business Plan... Start A Business Plan Library
Franchise Information in business plans. Often preventing a
knowledgeable writer with good intensions to fail at getting
the message across to an intelligent, interested reader. For
some reason, when people write business plans they are
compelled to write "commence" and "prior to" instead of
"begin" and "before." If you want to write an effective
business plan, your business plan library must have books on
how to be an effective writer.Are looking to start a new business adventure? What type of business opportunity are looking for? A home based business? Buying an existing business that’s for sale from a private individual? Starting your own business? Or are you interested in purchasing a franchise? These are all viable options and there are advantages to each, it just depends on what you’re interested in. If you are more drawn to having your own business, but want to get a piece of a large established market, then possibly a franchise could be just what you’re looking for. Franchise information is abundant on the internet, which is a good place to start if you are seriously looking at this type of business option.There are many different types of franchise opportunities to choose from, which are discussed in detail on many sites that feature franchise information. There are home-based franchises for health and beauty products along with real estate investment, vending or ATM machines, and internet franchises. There is also quite a bit of franchise information available on businesses that sell food, such as Subway, Blimpies, Caliche’s Frozen Custard, Papa Murphy’s Take n Bake Pizza, and a number of other franchise opportunities. Another important consideration when browsing franchise information, is the amount of liquid capital required to purchase a franchise, and how much you have available. Some businesses require very little capital, under $10,000, while others require upwards of around $300,000. New business owners should compare franchise informat Start with Edward Baily; he wrote a surprisingly straightforward book called The Plain English Approach to Business Writing. This book, The Plain English Approach to Business Writing, is about writing as you would talk, which not only makes your writing easier to read, it's also makes it easier to write. In a brief, entertaining 124 pages Baily clearly lays out the dos and don'ts of plan English, illustrating them with examples drawn from business documents, technical manuals, trade publications, and the works of writers like Russell Baker and John D. MacDonald. The Plain English Approach to Business Writing offers practical advice on clarity, precision, organization, layout, and many other topics. Best of all, you can read it an hour...and use it for the rest of your life. But writing well is only a part of writing. A good business plan must be persuasive. Listen carefully to what I just said: persuasive. Not misleading or untruthful, but persuasive. Here's a book you need to look at Persuading on Paper. How's that for a title? Persuading on Paper by Marcia Yudkin. Yudkin is a writing consultant who coaches small-business owners and professionals on improving their marketing materials. In a witty and vivid style, Persuading on Paper shows you how to use the written word to convert strangers to pro Find the Best Part Time Jobs Available - How to Get Easy, Fun and High Paying Part Time Jobs Tap these treasures of ideas. The best money you can spend
is money invested in your business plan education. Don't
shortchange yourself when it comes to investing in your
dream. Start gathering samples of business plans and collect
business plan books and get a business plan library started,
it can change your future. Here's what your library needs to
show: that you're a serious student of business strategy and
planning, finance and economics, selling, and writing.You may be checking out this article because you want more money in your life. Maybe you need it. And making money can be difficult, especially if you don't know how easy it can be.Let's be clear: If you're not earning at least $15-$30/hour for your part-time job (or even full-time job, for that matter) - it's time for you to get the money you deserve. Stop working for less than you're worth.I know all sorts of people busting their butts as salesman and waitresses - they hate their jobs and they sacrifice their personal lives to work these terrible jobs. Worse - when you average out how much money most of those people are making, it's pretty pitiful (even really great waiters/waitresses earn an averages of only $13.50 per hour!). They know they hate their job, but somewhere inside they don't believe a better option is out there. Therefore, they often block out the thoughts about how small their paychecks are... they actually believe they can't do better!I've been there. I've worked for different sales jobs - in the beginning, my bosses would get me all pumped up. They'd make all sorts of claims, such as, "You're going to make $100,000 in your first year." (And if anyone's ever interviewed for a sales job, this is a pretty standard claim. It was only a matter of time that I realized that I probably wasn't going to earn $100,000 a year as a real estate rental agent in Boston. In fact, I probably wasn't going to break $40,000. Worse, I was putting in a 50-60 hour week for 6 months!Don't be a suck Sample Business Plans Start by gathering sample business plans. Look at the annual reports and S-1s, S-4s, 10ks, or 10Qs filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) of companies in your industry. See how they present their case, explain their business, and discuss their industry and competition. What exactly are these forms and how do you get them? Good question. These are forms that public companies must file with the SEC in order to register their securities or to maintain the registration of previously registered securities with the SEC. You can find these forms by going to www.sec.gov, clicking on the Edgar database, and searching for a public company in your industry. The key is to find the most helpful filings. These are the ones labeled S-1, S-4, 10K, and 10Q. They usually contain descriptions of the business, its products, industry, competitors and strategies. Sections that should sound familiar to you if you are planning to write a business plan. Go to these sections and read how the company presents their business and its products. Look at how they describe the industry and their competitors. I encourage you to read as many filings in your industry as possible. See what the “big guys” are saying, the issues, challenges, and trends they see in the industry and how they’re attacking them. Be careful though about mimicking what they write. Many of these documents are written in legalese despite the SEC’s protestations and push for plain English. Just remember, you’re doing this exercise to see how other companies have built their case to business investors. Another approach is to gather and read professionally written business plans of companies in your industry and use them as guides to prepare your plan. Try to avoid generic business plan templates. They're too general and often not worth the investment. Either way. Start filling your business plan library with business plans and registration statements. Keep them close by and refer to them often as you write your business plan. Strategy Now, here's a good book to start your business plan library with. It's called: Competitive Strategy by Michael Porter. In this landmark book, Competitive Strategy, Porter shows you how to identify the forces that drive competition in your industry. Learn what moves your competitors are likely to make within it. Competitive Strategy provides a framework for evaluating the competitive alternatives you must consider and for thinking about how to change the rules of the marketplace in your favor. Competitive Strategy is the bible venture capitalist, investment bankers, and business development executives use when analyzing an industry or business venture. I use this book as the centerpiece of my business plan library. So I'm just asking you to take a look at Competitive Strategy by Michael Porter. If it suits you fine, if it doesn't suit you, keep looking till you find something that helps you understand strategy. Opening your mind to strategic alternatives is a creative process. You can never have too many books on strategy in your business plan library. Read as much as you can to learn why some companies can sell their products more cheaply than others. Why others provide the best products...products that are just far superior to their competition. And, why some companies just always seem to provide unmatched service. Fill your business plan library with business books that inspire, challenge and answer these questions. Read. Read. Read. And, study too. Find out how some companies are reinventing competition in their markets and obtaining funding while others are seemingly oblivious to the changing world around them. Michael Treacy and Fred Wiersema set out to find answers to these types of questions in their book The Discipline of Market Leaders. Although the authors won't appreciate this comment, I found the underlying fundamentals in The Discipline of Market Leaders to closely parallel those laid out by Porter in Competitive Strategy. Perhaps that's why I like it so much. The difference, however, is that they present their material in a less academic, more engaging way. And, they provide excellent case studies that are sure to generate many aha's! The Discipline of Market Leaders will make you think about what it is your company or new venture does better than anyone else; what unique value do you provide to your customers? How will you continually increase that value? If you can't easily answer these questions about your business, The Discipline of Market Leaders is required reading and a must for your business plan library. The business owners and entrepreneurs that can answer these questions are not only raising the value bar in their industries, they're raising capital for their businesses! Finance and Economics Be sure to keep your business plan library well balanced... Let me give you a sense of that balance. First is finance and economics. We all have got to have a sense of how to make money...the universal laws of business success, no matter whether you are selling fruit from a stand or running a Fortune 500 company. Finance and economics are the basic building blocks of business. Your business plan library needs a few books on the numbers. When you understand the basics of finance and economics its possible to bringing the most complex business down to the fundamentals. You become empowered to focus on the basics and make money from your venture. Here's a good book to help you in this area: What the CEO Wants You to Know by Ram Charan. What the CEO Wants You to Know captures the basics of finance and economics and explains in clear, simple language how to do what great business owners and entrepreneurs do instinctively and persistently. Charan explains the basic building blocks of business and how to use them to figure out how your company can, does, or will make money and operate as a total business. Learn how to use these building blocks to cut through the clutter of day-to-day business and the complexity of the real world. What the CEO Wants You to Know by Ram Charan. This little book is only a 137 pages: but I'm telling you, it's so well written you'll be as intrigued as I was. What the CEO Wants You to Know by Ram Charan. Get it for your business plan library. Writing Next is writing. You have to be able to get your thoughts down on paper. Businessese, academese, legalese - all appear too often in business plans. Often preventing a knowledgeable writer with good intensions to fail at getting the message across to an intelligent, interested reader. For some reason, when people write business plans they are compelled to write "commence" and "prior to" instead of "begin" and "before." If you want to write an effective business plan, your business plan library must have books on how to be an effective writer. Start with Edward Baily; he wrote a surprisingly straightforward book called The Plain English Approach to Business Writing. This book, The Plain English Approach to Business Writing, is about writing as you would talk, which not only makes your writing easier to read, it's also makes it easier to write. In a brief, entertaining 124 pages Baily clearly lays out the dos and don'ts of plan English, illustrating them with examples drawn from business documents, technical manuals, trade publications, and the works of writers like Russell Baker and John D. MacDonald. The Plain English Approach to Business Writing offers practical advice on clarity, precision, organization, layout, and many other topics. Best of all, you can read it an hour...and use it for the rest of your life. But writing well is only a part of writing. A good business plan must be persuasive. Listen carefully to what I just said: persuasive. Not misleading or untruthful, but persuasive. Here's a book you need to look at Persuading on Paper. How's that for a title? Persuading on Paper by Marcia Yudkin. Yudkin is a writing consultant who coaches small-business owners and professionals on improving their marketing materials. In a witty and vivid style, Persuading on Paper shows you how to use the written word to convert strangers to pros Are You Charging Enough? allenges, and trends they see in the industry and how
they’re attacking them.What Happens When You Are Under Pressure? We have all been there. Cash flow is a little lean and you are really starting to hate eating Blue Box Kraft Dinner. Murphy's Law also means a potential customer will NOW call you and want you to drop your rates...right down to the bottom of the barrel. Do you do this "just once" and relieve the financial pressure? Or do you walk away?Learn To Value Your Product And Win Customers Too!Remember in sales - it is all about Win/Win. Your customer may be happy that you "gave away the farm" but deep down you will resent them for it. And resentment always shows itself! Plus I don't believe in doing this - you just attract more business like it! However - there are going to be times when you will consider some form of discounting. When a customer asks you for some DISCOUNTS you have to ask yourself TWO IMPORTANT questions.1) WHY SHOULD I DO THIS? If it is just about the money - you are actually setting yourself up for failure. In business - it must always be a great fit - between the customer and your business.2) HOW CAN I BENEFIT FROM THIS IN THE LONG RUN? Is this a customer you want to do further business with? Are they going to pay full price down the road after they have received the deal of the century?Learn The Art Of NegotiationHey remember - a diamond is only a piece of coal that did well under pressure! If you have decided the client is a great fit, and there are opportunities for future business - then sa Be careful though about mimicking what they write. Many of these documents are written in legalese despite the SEC’s protestations and push for plain English. Just remember, you’re doing this exercise to see how other companies have built their case to business investors. Another approach is to gather and read professionally written business plans of companies in your industry and use them as guides to prepare your plan. Try to avoid generic business plan templates. They're too general and often not worth the investment. Either way. Start filling your business plan library with business plans and registration statements. Keep them close by and refer to them often as you write your business plan. Strategy Now, here's a good book to start your business plan library with. It's called: Competitive Strategy by Michael Porter. In this landmark book, Competitive Strategy, Porter shows you how to identify the forces that drive competition in your industry. Learn what moves your competitors are likely to make within it. Competitive Strategy provides a framework for evaluating the competitive alternatives you must consider and for thinking about how to change the rules of the marketplace in your favor. Competitive Strategy is the bible venture capitalist, investment bankers, and business development executives use when analyzing an industry or business venture. I use this book as the centerpiece of my business plan library. So I'm just asking you to take a look at Competitive Strategy by Michael Porter. If it suits you fine, if it doesn't suit you, keep looking till you find something that helps you understand strategy. Opening your mind to strategic alternatives is a creative process. You can never have too many books on strategy in your business plan library. Read as much as you can to learn why some companies can sell their products more cheaply than others. Why others provide the best products...products that are just far superior to their competition. And, why some companies just always seem to provide unmatched service. Fill your business plan library with business books that inspire, challenge and answer these questions. Read. Read. Read. And, study too. Find out how some companies are reinventing competition in their markets and obtaining funding while others are seemingly oblivious to the changing world around them. Michael Treacy and Fred Wiersema set out to find answers to these types of questions in their book The Discipline of Market Leaders. Although the authors won't appreciate this comment, I found the underlying fundamentals in The Discipline of Market Leaders to closely parallel those laid out by Porter in Competitive Strategy. Perhaps that's why I like it so much. The difference, however, is that they present their material in a less academic, more engaging way. And, they provide excellent case studies that are sure to generate many aha's! The Discipline of Market Leaders will make you think about what it is your company or new venture does better than anyone else; what unique value do you provide to your customers? How will you continually increase that value? If you can't easily answer these questions about your business, The Discipline of Market Leaders is required reading and a must for your business plan library. The business owners and entrepreneurs that can answer these questions are not only raising the value bar in their industries, they're raising capital for their businesses! Finance and Economics Be sure to keep your business plan library well balanced... Let me give you a sense of that balance. First is finance and economics. We all have got to have a sense of how to make money...the universal laws of business success, no matter whether you are selling fruit from a stand or running a Fortune 500 company. Finance and economics are the basic building blocks of business. Your business plan library needs a few books on the numbers. When you understand the basics of finance and economics its possible to bringing the most complex business down to the fundamentals. You become empowered to focus on the basics and make money from your venture. Here's a good book to help you in this area: What the CEO Wants You to Know by Ram Charan. What the CEO Wants You to Know captures the basics of finance and economics and explains in clear, simple language how to do what great business owners and entrepreneurs do instinctively and persistently. Charan explains the basic building blocks of business and how to use them to figure out how your company can, does, or will make money and operate as a total business. Learn how to use these building blocks to cut through the clutter of day-to-day business and the complexity of the real world. What the CEO Wants You to Know by Ram Charan. This little book is only a 137 pages: but I'm telling you, it's so well written you'll be as intrigued as I was. What the CEO Wants You to Know by Ram Charan. Get it for your business plan library. Writing Next is writing. You have to be able to get your thoughts down on paper. Businessese, academese, legalese - all appear too often in business plans. Often preventing a knowledgeable writer with good intensions to fail at getting the message across to an intelligent, interested reader. For some reason, when people write business plans they are compelled to write "commence" and "prior to" instead of "begin" and "before." If you want to write an effective business plan, your business plan library must have books on how to be an effective writer. Start with Edward Baily; he wrote a surprisingly straightforward book called The Plain English Approach to Business Writing. This book, The Plain English Approach to Business Writing, is about writing as you would talk, which not only makes your writing easier to read, it's also makes it easier to write. In a brief, entertaining 124 pages Baily clearly lays out the dos and don'ts of plan English, illustrating them with examples drawn from business documents, technical manuals, trade publications, and the works of writers like Russell Baker and John D. MacDonald. The Plain English Approach to Business Writing offers practical advice on clarity, precision, organization, layout, and many other topics. Best of all, you can read it an hour...and use it for the rest of your life. But writing well is only a part of writing. A good business plan must be persuasive. Listen carefully to what I just said: persuasive. Not misleading or untruthful, but persuasive. Here's a book you need to look at Persuading on Paper. How's that for a title? Persuading on Paper by Marcia Yudkin. Yudkin is a writing consultant who coaches small-business owners and professionals on improving their marketing materials. In a witty and vivid style, Persuading on Paper shows you how to use the written word to convert strangers to pro Successful Project Ideas our mind to strategic alternatives is a creative
process. You can never have too many books on strategy in
your business plan library. Read as much as you can to learn
why some companies can sell their products more cheaply than
others. Why others provide the best products...products that
are just far superior to their competition. And, why some
companies just always seem to provide unmatched service.Different projects have different characteristic. All of us would like to work on projects that will in most cases be successful.For progress and development in business, it is important to re-evaluate the projects you are pursuing and refine the business direction you are moving in keeping in mind the resources at your disposal and the goals you have set for a particular project. When running our own business, also, we try to choose the projects that suit our lifestyle and personal goals and the ones that best fit the changing world with respect to the technology and environment.One would like to choose the projects that have high probability of success and reduce the risk exposure for you. The projects that have more likelihood of success have the following characteristics:· Once the product is created, the same product can be sold over and over again very few ongoing changes in the product are required· The product has use for customers who have the ability and would like to spend money for the product· The product selling process can be automated· Little or no inventory requirements, very few employees, no office overhead needed to run project· No presence of partnerships, no revenue splits, no requirement of dependence on others for legal or financial requirements· Minimal project start-up cost and very low overheads and only basic ongoing management requirements after project has taken off· Breakeven point can be achieved after only a few sales are completed Fill your business plan library with business books that inspire, challenge and answer these questions. Read. Read. Read. And, study too. Find out how some companies are reinventing competition in their markets and obtaining funding while others are seemingly oblivious to the changing world around them. Michael Treacy and Fred Wiersema set out to find answers to these types of questions in their book The Discipline of Market Leaders. Although the authors won't appreciate this comment, I found the underlying fundamentals in The Discipline of Market Leaders to closely parallel those laid out by Porter in Competitive Strategy. Perhaps that's why I like it so much. The difference, however, is that they present their material in a less academic, more engaging way. And, they provide excellent case studies that are sure to generate many aha's! The Discipline of Market Leaders will make you think about what it is your company or new venture does better than anyone else; what unique value do you provide to your customers? How will you continually increase that value? If you can't easily answer these questions about your business, The Discipline of Market Leaders is required reading and a must for your business plan library. The business owners and entrepreneurs that can answer these questions are not only raising the value bar in their industries, they're raising capital for their businesses! Finance and Economics Be sure to keep your business plan library well balanced... Let me give you a sense of that balance. First is finance and economics. We all have got to have a sense of how to make money...the universal laws of business success, no matter whether you are selling fruit from a stand or running a Fortune 500 company. Finance and economics are the basic building blocks of business. Your business plan library needs a few books on the numbers. When you understand the basics of finance and economics its possible to bringing the most complex business down to the fundamentals. You become empowered to focus on the basics and make money from your venture. Here's a good book to help you in this area: What the CEO Wants You to Know by Ram Charan. What the CEO Wants You to Know captures the basics of finance and economics and explains in clear, simple language how to do what great business owners and entrepreneurs do instinctively and persistently. Charan explains the basic building blocks of business and how to use them to figure out how your company can, does, or will make money and operate as a total business. Learn how to use these building blocks to cut through the clutter of day-to-day business and the complexity of the real world. What the CEO Wants You to Know by Ram Charan. This little book is only a 137 pages: but I'm telling you, it's so well written you'll be as intrigued as I was. What the CEO Wants You to Know by Ram Charan. Get it for your business plan library. Writing Next is writing. You have to be able to get your thoughts down on paper. Businessese, academese, legalese - all appear too often in business plans. Often preventing a knowledgeable writer with good intensions to fail at getting the message across to an intelligent, interested reader. For some reason, when people write business plans they are compelled to write "commence" and "prior to" instead of "begin" and "before." If you want to write an effective business plan, your business plan library must have books on how to be an effective writer. Start with Edward Baily; he wrote a surprisingly straightforward book called The Plain English Approach to Business Writing. This book, The Plain English Approach to Business Writing, is about writing as you would talk, which not only makes your writing easier to read, it's also makes it easier to write. In a brief, entertaining 124 pages Baily clearly lays out the dos and don'ts of plan English, illustrating them with examples drawn from business documents, technical manuals, trade publications, and the works of writers like Russell Baker and John D. MacDonald. The Plain English Approach to Business Writing offers practical advice on clarity, precision, organization, layout, and many other topics. Best of all, you can read it an hour...and use it for the rest of your life. But writing well is only a part of writing. A good business plan must be persuasive. Listen carefully to what I just said: persuasive. Not misleading or untruthful, but persuasive. Here's a book you need to look at Persuading on Paper. How's that for a title? Persuading on Paper by Marcia Yudkin. Yudkin is a writing consultant who coaches small-business owners and professionals on improving their marketing materials. In a witty and vivid style, Persuading on Paper shows you how to use the written word to convert strangers to pro Vending Machine Rental - How To Profit From One
their industries, they're raising capital for their
businesses!If you want to start your own vending business but do not have enough money to buy a machine, you can temporarily make use of vending machine rentals that are made available in your area. Vending machines success has been increasing but even with its increased number, the demand for them are still high.Vending machine rental can be found everywhere and it can be rented by anyone who wants to start a simple vending business. Vending machines dispense products such as sodas, bottled water, snacks and juices to the people who insert money into the machines.The modern vending machines of today can give change to paper money. Some vending machines require the buyers to insert coins only. Vending machines are normally rented by a start-up business to create additional profit, which are frequently stocked by the company that makes them available for vending machine rental, such as Pepsi and Coke.The products that are placed in the vending machines change from time to time because the different products may not be available. The companies that provides vending machine rental frequently keep the statistics such as the popularity of the items at a specific location. They may change the items from time to time in the vending machines to match the need of the customers.When you have your vending machine contract, you can start to think about the best locations to put your vending machines. In considering this, you need to find the best location for sales. The best way is to find customers, increase your sales and Finance and Economics Be sure to keep your business plan library well balanced... Let me give you a sense of that balance. First is finance and economics. We all have got to have a sense of how to make money...the universal laws of business success, no matter whether you are selling fruit from a stand or running a Fortune 500 company. Finance and economics are the basic building blocks of business. Your business plan library needs a few books on the numbers. When you understand the basics of finance and economics its possible to bringing the most complex business down to the fundamentals. You become empowered to focus on the basics and make money from your venture. Here's a good book to help you in this area: What the CEO Wants You to Know by Ram Charan. What the CEO Wants You to Know captures the basics of finance and economics and explains in clear, simple language how to do what great business owners and entrepreneurs do instinctively and persistently. Charan explains the basic building blocks of business and how to use them to figure out how your company can, does, or will make money and operate as a total business. Learn how to use these building blocks to cut through the clutter of day-to-day business and the complexity of the real world. What the CEO Wants You to Know by Ram Charan. This little book is only a 137 pages: but I'm telling you, it's so well written you'll be as intrigued as I was. What the CEO Wants You to Know by Ram Charan. Get it for your business plan library. Writing Next is writing. You have to be able to get your thoughts down on paper. Businessese, academese, legalese - all appear too often in business plans. Often preventing a knowledgeable writer with good intensions to fail at getting the message across to an intelligent, interested reader. For some reason, when people write business plans they are compelled to write "commence" and "prior to" instead of "begin" and "before." If you want to write an effective business plan, your business plan library must have books on how to be an effective writer. Start with Edward Baily; he wrote a surprisingly straightforward book called The Plain English Approach to Business Writing. This book, The Plain English Approach to Business Writing, is about writing as you would talk, which not only makes your writing easier to read, it's also makes it easier to write. In a brief, entertaining 124 pages Baily clearly lays out the dos and don'ts of plan English, illustrating them with examples drawn from business documents, technical manuals, trade publications, and the works of writers like Russell Baker and John D. MacDonald. The Plain English Approach to Business Writing offers practical advice on clarity, precision, organization, layout, and many other topics. Best of all, you can read it an hour...and use it for the rest of your life. But writing well is only a part of writing. A good business plan must be persuasive. Listen carefully to what I just said: persuasive. Not misleading or untruthful, but persuasive. Here's a book you need to look at Persuading on Paper. How's that for a title? Persuading on Paper by Marcia Yudkin. Yudkin is a writing consultant who coaches small-business owners and professionals on improving their marketing materials. In a witty and vivid style, Persuading on Paper shows you how to use the written word to convert strangers to pro Dealing With Resistance to Change in business plans. Often preventing a
knowledgeable writer with good intensions to fail at getting
the message across to an intelligent, interested reader. For
some reason, when people write business plans they are
compelled to write "commence" and "prior to" instead of
"begin" and "before." If you want to write an effective
business plan, your business plan library must have books on
how to be an effective writer.Business professionals are often stymied by the problems they encounter when trying to implement change. Their frustration can then create even more of a roadblock. Following are a few tips for dealing with resistance.1. Realize that the resistance is a normal, rational human response. Studies of the brain indicate that we prefer the familiar, since it takes less energy to deal with and there are fewer potential fears. If one responds to resistance in a manner that causes others to feel as though their concerns are invalid, they will simply feel more threatened.2. Try to determine the most significant reasons for resistance (their fears and/or concerns), and find ways to help resolve them. This works much better than trying to convince them harder that the change is in their best interests.3. Don’t spend a lot of time trying to work with those who resist nearly everything. It’s part of their psychological makeup, so you’re better off working with those who are more likely to take some risks. Once they’ve done so and succeeded, others are more likely to get on board.Organizations often create much of the resistance due to a lack of communication. We all need time to assimilate new ideas, so letting people know in advance what is coming, why it is being done, and what will be done to ensure that it will be successful can go a long way.In fact, alongside and part of any change in the organization’s technical system should be a plan for how to help the social system adapt to the change. Man Start with Edward Baily; he wrote a surprisingly straightforward book called The Plain English Approach to Business Writing. This book, The Plain English Approach to Business Writing, is about writing as you would talk, which not only makes your writing easier to read, it's also makes it easier to write. In a brief, entertaining 124 pages Baily clearly lays out the dos and don'ts of plan English, illustrating them with examples drawn from business documents, technical manuals, trade publications, and the works of writers like Russell Baker and John D. MacDonald. The Plain English Approach to Business Writing offers practical advice on clarity, precision, organization, layout, and many other topics. Best of all, you can read it an hour...and use it for the rest of your life. But writing well is only a part of writing. A good business plan must be persuasive. Listen carefully to what I just said: persuasive. Not misleading or untruthful, but persuasive. Here's a book you need to look at Persuading on Paper. How's that for a title? Persuading on Paper by Marcia Yudkin. Yudkin is a writing consultant who coaches small-business owners and professionals on improving their marketing materials. In a witty and vivid style, Persuading on Paper shows you how to use the written word to convert strangers to prospects to paying customers (or in our case, investors). What I like about this book is that Yudkin takes you step-by-step through the process of creating marketing materials that sell. Don't underestimate the power of marketing copy in your business plan. You'll be surprised how her methods and strategies can help create a more powerful business plan. Persuading on Paper is a must-have for anyone who wants to attract more clients, customers, or investors. Raising Capital Next is an understanding of the process of obtaining capital. No business plan library would be complete without a book on the process of raising capital. Without capital your venture is destined for failure. You need to learn how to select the right venture capital firm, make presentations, and negotiate your deal. Try this book: The Venture Capital Handbook by David Gladstone. As an executive officer at Allied Capital Corporation, a large publicly-owned, venture capital firm in the United States, David has reviewed many proposals for venture capital financing. The Venture Capital Handbook takes you through the entire process from presentation through negotiations, commitment letters, legal closings, due diligence, the exit by the venture capital company, to when the entrepreneur is left to own it all. As a result, The Venture Capital Handbook provides anyone who wants to spend the time and money with an insight into what venture capitalists really want. Prepare for the process of raising venture capital with The Venture Capital Handbook. Selling Finally, study the art of selling. Like it or not, when you are trying to start a business venture or raise money for your business you have to sell investors on why they should invest with you. It's like a rite of passage. But fast talking salesmanship won't raise the money you need for your business. You need an approach that respects the power of the investor…one that builds a relationship with investors. So, fill your business plan library with books on selling and presenting. Here's a book to try: Socratic Selling by Kevin Daley with Emmett Wolfe. Socratic Selling as the title implies, uses the Socratic Method: "A method of teaching or discussion, as used by Socrates, in which one asks a series of easily answered questions which inevitably lead the answerer to a logical conclusion" (Webster's Unabridged). Dalely's concise, easy-to-follow chapters explain how to open a sales dialogue and go right to the heart of the matter. Socratic Selling is a fun and informative 162 pages for those of us who believe selling means talking with, not at, investors. Study these techniques; they can make you more effective with potential investors. If you are serious about writing your business plan...show it. Start a business plan library that shows you are a serious student of business plans. Fill it with business plans, public filings and annual reports of businesses in your industry. Stay away from those generic business plan templates. They are too general. And, Read, read, read and study too about strategy, finance, economics, writing, selling, and how to raise capital. Spend the money. Buy the books. The reward can be great...a funded business plan.
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