need it by December 6.
APA Format.
see attached
Thanks for downloading this business plan template from Bplans.com!
This template is a simplified business plan outline. It’s a good way to get started, but as you know, you can’t just type in your details, print it, and turn it in to the bank. Every business is unique, and your business plan should reflect that.
LivePlan can help. With LivePlan, you can easily create a unique business plan, with all the financial tables and graphs to go with it. You’ll also be able to:
CONFIDENTIAL
[Your company name here]
Your tagline
Business Plan
Prepared [date]
Contact Information
Jane Smith [email protected] 111-222-3333
www.yourcompany.com 1234 Main St.
Anywhere, OR 12345, USA
Table of Contents
Your Business Name Here
ii
CONFIDENTIAL – DO NOT DISSEMINATE. This business plan contains confidential, trade-secret information and is shared only with the understanding that you will not share its contents or ideas with third parties without the express written consent of the plan author.
Executive Summary 1
Opportunity 1
Expectations 1
Opportunity 3
Problem & Solution 3
Target Market 3
Competition 3
Execution 4
Marketing & Sales 4
Operations 4
Milestones & Metrics 5
Company 6
Overview 6
Team 6
Financial Plan 7
Forecast 7
Financing 9
Statements 10
Appendix 13
Profit and Loss Statement 13
Balance Sheet 15
Cash Flow Statement 17
Executive Summary
Opportunity
Problem Summary
INSTRUCTIONS: Describe very briefly why your business needs to exist. What problem do you solve for your customers?
Solution Summary
INSTRUCTIONS: Briefly summarize what your company does. The executive summary should be very short and you can go into more detail later in the plan.
Market
INSTRUCTIONS: Describe your target customer or market segments. Again, keep things very brief in the executive summary and add more detail later in the plan.
Competition
INSTRUCTIONS: Summarize your key competition. Who will your customers also consider?
Why Us?
INSTRUCTIONS: Write a brief overview of you and your team. Why are you the right people to build this business?
Expectations
Forecast
INSTRUCTIONS: Write a brief overview of your financial targets. How much do you plan to sell in the next year? What are your long-term sales goals?
Your Business Name Here
10
CONFIDENTIAL – DO NOT DISSEMINATE. This business plan contains confidential, trade-secret information and is shared only with the understanding that you will not share its contents or ideas with third parties without the express written consent of the plan author.
Financial Highlights by Year
INSTRUCTIONS: Insert a chart of your key financial metrics here. Tools like
LivePlan will do this for you automatically.
Financing Needed
INSTRUCTIONS: If you are writing a business plan to raise money for your business, include a brief summary of what you are looking for. If you aren’t raising money or getting a loan, you can delete this section.
Opportunity
Problem & Solution
Problem Worth Solving
INSTRUCTIONS: Write a little more detail than you provided in the Executive Summary about the problem you are solving. What do your customers need? Do they need a better product, a cheaper product, or just a store in a better location? Describe why customers will want to buy from you.
Our Solution
INSTRUCTIONS: Provide additional detail, beyond what you wrote in the Executive Summary, about your product or service. What is unique and special about your company that’s going to set it apart from the competition?
Target Market
Market Size & Segments
INSTRUCTIONS: Describe your key customers – who they are and what their key attributes are. If your company is targeting multiple customer groups (also called ‘segments’), describe each group here. If you can, include details about how many people are in each segment and how large the total market is.
Competition
Current Alternatives
INSTRUCTIONS: Describe your current competition. What products and services are people using instead of yours?
Our Advantages
INSTRUCTIONS: Explain why your product or service is better than the others. Also, be sure to describe any competitive advantages you may have, such as a patent or other unique component to your business.
Execution
Marketing & Sales
Marketing Plan
INSTRUCTIONS: Explain how you plan on getting the word out about your product to your target market(s). Will you use advertising? Perhaps you are developing a content marketing strategy. Whatever your marketing plans may be, describe them here.
Sales Plan
INSTRUCTIONS: If your company relies on sales people to close sales deals, you need a sales plan. Your sales plan should explain how you convert people who express interest in your product or service into paying customers. If you are opening a food truck, this section is less important and you can consider removing it. However, if you are starting a sales-heavy business like enterprise software or a car dealership, then you need to document how you will nurture leads and close deals.
Operations
Locations & Facilities
INSTRUCTIONS: Describe your company’s physical locations. This might be your office, store locations, manufacturing plants, storage facilities — whatever is relevant to your business. How much space do you have available, and how well will it meet your current and future needs?
Technology
INSTRUCTIONS: Describe any important software, hardware, or other information technology that you use now or plan to use later to operate your business. That might include a point-of-sale system to take payments, an e-commerce engine for your website, a CRM solution for managing your pipeline, marketing tools for generating leads, and so on.
Equipment & Tools
INSTRUCTIONS: List any specialty equipment that you have or plan to acquire to do your work. This is an important component of the business plan for many industrial companies.
Milestones & Metrics
Milestones
INSTRUCTIONS: List your key milestones and the dates that you hope to accomplish them by. If you’ve already accomplished key goals for your business, list them here as evidence that your business is getting traction – in other words, it’s getting positive attention from potential customers.
Key Metrics
INSTRUCTIONS: Explain which performance metrics are most important for understanding how your business is doing. What does success mean for you, and how will you know it when you see it?
Company
Overview
INSTRUCTIONS: Use this area to specify who owns your company. If there are multiple owners, describe each of them and how much of an ownership stake they have. Also, identify your company’s legal structure. Is it a sole proprietorship — that is, just you working for yourself? Or a partnership, such as a limited-liability corporation (LLC) or partnership (LLP), where the profits pass through to the partners involved? Or a nonprofit organization? Or a proper S- or C-type corporation with its own tax obligations and the rest?
Team
Management Team
INSTRUCTIONS: List the members of the management team, including yourself. Describe each person’s skills and experience and what they will be doing for the company. It’s OK if you don’t have everyone for a complete management team yet. In that case, make sure to identify gaps in your team that you intend to fill over time.
Advisors
INSTRUCTIONS: Describe any mentors, investors, former professors, industry or subject-matter experts, knowledgeable friends or family members, small-business counselors, or others who can help you as a business owner.
Financial Plan
Forecast
Key Assumptions
INSTRUCTIONS: Describe how you came up with the values in your financial forecast. Did you project your revenue based on past results, market research, your best guess at how many people who visit your store and what percentage of them might buy, or some other method? What kind of growth are you assuming? What are your key hires and notable expenses? What level of profit do you expect to generate?
Revenue by Month
INSTRUCTIONS: Include a chart that shows your projected revenue. A tool like
LivePlan can help you create a chart like this and automatically include it in your business plan.
Expenses by Month
INSTRUCTIONS: Include a chart that shows your projected expenses. A tool like
LivePlan can help you create a chart like this and automatically include it in your business plan.
Net Profit (or Loss) by Year
INSTRUCTIONS: Include a chart that shows your projected expenses. A tool like
LivePlan can help you create a chart like this and automatically include it in your business plan.
Financing
Use of Funds
INSTRUCTIONS: If your forecast includes loans, investments, or other financing, use this space to explain what you plan do with that money.
Sources of Funds
INSTRUCTIONS: Describe your financing plans. Are you investing your own money in the business? Do you have a credit card or line of credit? What other types of funds — personal or business loans, equity investments from others, etc. — do you expect to receive and when? If you do not have the full detail of future financing worked out yet, that is understandable. Just explain what you do know and when you expect to sort out the details.
Statements
Projected Profit & Loss
INSTRUCTIONS: Provide a summary of your financial forecast here. You can certainly do this by yourself, but tools like
LivePlan make it much easier.
FY2018 |
FY2019 |
FY2020 |
Revenue |
||
Direct Costs |
||
Gross Margin |
||
Gross Margin % |
||
Operating Expenses |
||
Salary |
||
Employee Related Expenses |
||
Total Operating Expenses |
||
Operating Income |
||
Interest Incurred |
||
Depreciation and Amortization |
||
Income Taxes |
||
Total Expenses |
||
Net Profit |
||
Net Profit / Sales |
Projected Balance Sheet
INSTRUCTIONS: Include your balance sheet here.
FY2018 |
FY2019 |
FY2020 |
Cash |
||
Accounts Receivable |
||
Inventory |
||
Other Current Assets |
||
Total Current Assets |
||
Long-Term Assets |
||
Accumulated Depreciation |
||
Total Long-Term Assets |
||
Total Assets |
||
Accounts Payable |
||
Income Taxes Payable |
||
Sales Taxes Payable |
||
Short-Term Debt |
||
Prepaid Revenue |
||
Total Current Liabilities |
||
Long-Term Debt |
||
Total Liabilities |
||
Paid-in Capital |
||
Retained Earnings |
||
Earnings |
||
Total Owner’s Equity |
||
Total Liabilities & Equity |
Projected Cash Flow Statement
INSTRUCTIONS: Include your cash flow statement here.
FY2018 |
FY2019 |
FY2020 |
Net Cash Flow from Operations |
||
Net Profit |
||
Depreciation and Amortization |
||
Change in Accounts Receivable |
||
Change in Inventory |
||
Change in Accounts Payable |
||
Change in Income Tax Payable |
||
Change in Sales Tax Payable |
||
Change in Prepaid Revenue |
||
Net Cash Flow from Operations |
||
Investing & Financing |
||
Assets Purchased or Sold |
||
Investments Received |
||
Change in Long-Term Debt |
||
Change in Short-Term Debt |
||
Dividends & Distributions |
||
Net Cash Flow from Investing & Financing |
||
Cash at Beginning of Period |
||
Net Change in Cash |
||
Cash at End of Period |
Appendix
Profit and Loss Statement (With Monthly Detail)
FY2018 |
Mar ’17 |
Apr ’17 |
May ’17 |
Jun ’17 |
Jul ’17 |
Aug ’17 |
Sep ’17 |
Oct ’17 |
Nov ’17 |
Dec ’17 |
Jan ’18 |
Feb ’18 |
Revenue |
||||||||||||
Direct Costs |
||||||||||||
Gross Margin |
||||||||||||
Gross Margin % |
||||||||||||
Operating Expenses |
||||||||||||
Salary |
||||||||||||
Employee Related Expenses |
||||||||||||
Total Operating Expenses |
||||||||||||
Operating Income |
||||||||||||
Interest Incurred |
||||||||||||
Depreciation and Amortization |
||||||||||||
Income Taxes |
||||||||||||
Total Expenses |
||||||||||||
Net Profit |
||||||||||||
Net Profit / Sales |
Your Business Name Here
13
CONFIDENTIAL – DO NOT DISSEMINATE. This business plan contains confidential, trade-secret information and is shared only with the understanding that you will not share its contents or ideas with third parties without the express written consent of the plan author.
Profit and Loss Statement (Annual Detail)
FY2018 |
FY2019 |
FY2020 |
Revenue |
||
Direct Costs |
||
Gross Margin |
||
Gross Margin % |
||
Operating Expenses |
||
Salary |
||
Employee Related Expenses |
||
Total Operating Expenses |
||
Operating Income |
||
Interest Incurred |
||
Depreciation and Amortization |
||
Income Taxes |
||
Total Expenses |
||
Net Profit |
||
Net Profit / Sales |
Balance Sheet (With Monthly Detail)
FY2018 Mar
’17
Apr ’17 May ’17 Jun ’17 Jul ’17 Aug ’17 Sep ’17 Oct ’17 Nov ’17 Dec ’17 Jan ’18 Feb ’18
Cash
Accounts Receivable Inventory
Other Current Assets
Total Current Assets
Long-Term Assets Accumulated Depreciation Total Long-Term Assets
Total Assets
Accounts Payable Income Taxes Payable Sales Taxes Payable Short-Term Debt Prepaid Revenue
Total Current Liabilities
Long-Term Debt
Total Liabilities
Paid-in Capital Retained Earnings Earnings
Total Owner’s Equity
Total Liabilities & Equity
FY2018 |
FY2019 |
FY2020 |
Cash |
||
Accounts Receivable |
||
Inventory |
||
Other Current Assets |
||
Total Current Assets |
||
Long-Term Assets |
||
Accumulated Depreciation |
||
Total Long-Term Assets |
||
Total Assets |
||
Accounts Payable |
||
Income Taxes Payable |
||
Sales Taxes Payable |
||
Short-Term Debt |
||
Prepaid Revenue |
||
Total Current Liabilities |
||
Long-Term Debt |
||
Total Liabilities |
||
Paid-in Capital |
||
Retained Earnings |
||
Earnings |
||
Total Owner’s Equity |
||
Total Liabilities & Equity |
Cash Flow Statement (With Monthly Detail)
FY2018 Mar
’17
Apr ’17 May ’17 Jun ’17 Jul ’17 Aug ’17 Sep ’17 Oct ’17 Nov ’17 Dec ’17 Jan ’18 Feb ’18
Net Cash Flow from Operations
Net Profit
Depreciation and Amortization
Change in Accounts Receivable
Change in Inventory
Change in Accounts Payable
Change in Income Tax Payable
Change in Sales Tax Payable Change in Prepaid Revenue
Net Cash Flow from Operations
Investing & Financing
Assets Purchased or Sold Investments Received Change in Long-Term Debt Change in Short-Term Debt Dividends & Distributions
Net Cash Flow from Investing & Financing
Cash at Beginning of Period
Net Change in Cash
Cash at End of Period
Cash Flow Statement (Annual Detail)
FY2018 |
FY2019 |
FY2020 |
Net Cash Flow from Operations |
||
Net Profit |
||
Depreciation and Amortization |
||
Change in Accounts Receivable |
||
Change in Inventory |
||
Change in Accounts Payable |
||
Change in Income Tax Payable |
||
Change in Sales Tax Payable |
||
Change in Prepaid Revenue |
||
Net Cash Flow from Operations |
||
Investing & Financing |
||
Assets Purchased or Sold |
||
Investments Received |
||
Change in Long-Term Debt |
||
Change in Short-Term Debt |
||
Dividends & Distributions |
||
Net Cash Flow from Investing & Financing |
||
Cash at Beginning of Period |
||
Net Change in Cash |
||
Cash at End of Period |
Sample Business Plans links and Youtube Video about Business Plan
Note: Do not copy or rephrase from these business plans OR I will get a ZERO..
https://www.bplans.com/medical-and-health-business-plans/
https://www.discoverbusiness.us/resources/business-plans/
https://www.sba.gov/business-guide/plan-your-business/write-your-business-plan
WATCH THIS YOUTUBE VIDEO TO KNOW ABOUT BUSINESS PLAN
Implementing IT in Hospital
Hospital Name: Landstuhl Regional Medical Center
Address: Dr. Hitzelberger Strasse
Landstuhl / Kirchberg, Rhineland-Pfalz, 66849
Germany
Hospital Link: https://landstuhl.tricare.mil/
Scenario
You are a General Manager for the Patient Administration Division (PAD). This division keeps track (Patient data) of all inpatient and outpatient coming to the hospital. PAD is also responsible to maintain their medical records, insurance information, emergency contacts, living will (advanced directive) etc.
Currently, the hospital don’t have electronic Kiosk for Check-In/Check-Out. Every patient has to fill out lengthy registration form if they are new patients. Patients have to visit Medical Record department to get their inpatient/outpatient records. Patients aren’t able to download their medical records online and they also don’t have the ability to update Health Insurance Information, Emergency Contact, living will (advanced directive) etc. online. At present, the available online patient portal is only limited to making primary care appointments.
Business plan would be to have electronic Kiosk at all wards that can take photos and scan various forms of IDs like state ID, drivers license, Passports etc. This will help patient for faster check in as the Kiosk autofill their data based on the scanned ID and patients can take photos of their insurance card and living will (advanced directive). The other plan is to provide online access to the patients so they can view and download records when needed, make appointments, send secure message to the primary care doctor. Patient can easily update their address information, email, phone numbers etc. from the comfort of their electronic devices.
Benefits of electronic Kiosk
· Live updates of the number of patients coming to the hospital, no manual reports required at the end of the day that should be sent to the Hospital director.
· Instant updates will be available to the Hospital director for all patients to include US military, their dependents and NATO soldiers.
· Easily track patient based on the Kiosk they Check-In. For instance, if they Check-In at Emergency department they the Kiosk record their presence at Emergency department and likewise if they Check-In at Optometry then the Kiosk record their presence at Optometry
· Minimum to No staff needed for Check-In, reduce cost
Benefits of Online Access to Patients
· Patient Satisfaction
· Current medical records backlogs of over 1500 medical records requests will be gone.
· Minimum staff needed that reduce cost
· Patient can complete medical history online and don’t have to spend time filling out forms which expedites the process of patient care
The main goal of the hospitals is patient care and 100% patient satisfaction. Having Kiosk that have multiple uses and providing an Online Access to patients would change the game at the hospital. Also, these features can be adopted by all military hospitals in future that will increase the overall patient satisfaction across the Continental United States (CONUS) and Outside Continental United States (OCONUS)
Landtuhl Regional Medical Center may receive monetary incentives from the Department of Defense for outstanding staffs and 100% patients satisfaction.
Final Project: Business Plan Deliverable Project
DIRECTIONS:
Overview:
Once in management, you will have a team and will be responsible to drive an organization to success. The tool used in this case is a “Business Plan”. There are many different versions but most depict the same areas as key to the plan formulation.
As an ITM specialist, you need to be able to build and IT business plan showing that you can manage an organization from the mission and vision of the organization to controlling your finance budget. This is a skill that is greatly valued by companies today – to have an employee that can drive a group/team to successfully run their sector of the business and be able to help a company capitalize on it. Equally, if you are an entrepreneur, most banks or investors would not invest without such a business plan as it helps them to know if you really can manage the organization and manage their investment well.
Thus, the final project for this class consists of developing a business plan for company or department or group. The plan must be scalable to the course timing (which is the last 8 weeks). Thus, all topics for this deliverable must be approved by the professor in advance of delivering a finished product. Your plan is yours to develop but it MUST have an IT sector. Discussion on ideas for plans will be held in class or as discussions (one-on-one) with the instructor but you should be thinking about your topic from the first day of class.
IT Governance:
Because you are in ITM, you will need to add in a technology governance model. There are many out there but REQUIRED for this project is to have the following 5 items showing how you plan to govern your IT solution:
Resources:
There are many resources that can be helpful to use, including talking to the professor. For this class, there is a LIBRARY GUIDE that has been developed which has information on business plans. There are several You-Tubes and books that might be of help by simply “googling” business plans. There are equally great books on this as well. I highly recommend “The Definitive Business Plan” by Richard Stutely (3rd) and is it a great reference book for the future as well. There are many databases within the school library that can provide you historical and current data to assist you in this project
Syllabus Instructions: Development of a Business Plan for a selected product
.
Development of a Business Plan for a selected organization. The
project outcome will be a detailed Business Plan
including sections on the company, market and competitor analysis, product strategies, market plan, manufacture plan, financial data, investment data, compliance. “5-Pillar Model”, and overall executive summary. This plan will be formally submitted and should be error free and typed with no more than 20-25 pages excluding attachments and bibliography (at least 10 bibliography sites are required); font at 10-11; spacing at 1.5; margins- normal. The student will present their Business Plan in the form of a formal presentation of no more than 20 minutes with 10 minutes for questions This presentation and PPT/paper will be due on the last day of class.
NOTE: I NEED PPT SCRIPT/SPEAKER NOTES LIKE LAST TIME
Table of Contents Format
(this table of Contents is a process and serves as a logic check on your work. All bold items MUST BE in your paper/table of contents as these are critical sections in this type of paper. You can add more sections but can NOT remove sections.)
Cover Page
Preface
Table of Contents
Sections:
1. Executive Summary (should be no more than 1-2 pages)
0. Brief overview of what the reader expects to see as they read further into the plan – highlighting key areas)
1. Analysis of the company: (What the company/department does in brief )
1. History of the organization (company OR department)
1. Company/Department Strategies, Mission, Vision, Metrics
1. Business Drivers
1. Business Model Used
1. Product and Services Delivery Model
1. Tools that maybe used.
5. SWOT Analysis
5. PESTLE Analysis (see below)
5. Others…Google this topic but your choice but remember data drives this section
1. Market and Competitor Analysis: (Overview of key competitors and industry the company OR department resides in. So, if doing an IT Department within Google for Data Security, the market is “Data Security” and not what Google does. Your competitor is an outsourcing company that does data security and NOT a major search engine company who competes with Google)
2. Industry Environmental Scan
2. Major Competitors and Their Status in the Industry (what are they doing you are not? Should you be doing the same thing?)
2. Tools Used;
2. SWOT Analysis
2. Porter’s 5 Forces
2. PESTLE Analysis (see below)
2. Others…Google this topic to see other ways to analyze this section
1. Operating Plans (Marketing, Manufacturing, and Department Plans (Major section for the Plan and requires a large devotion of the paper here)
3. In General – Operating Plan:
0. Value Analysis of the Plan
0. Risk Analysis (make sure to give mitigation for any risk, how would you mitigate the risk?)
0. Process Value Analysis (here you might consider how outsourcing might help or hinder your processes. What are your major processes?)
0. Key Assumptions and Options Analysis (what are 3-5 assumptions for the plan and what are 2-3 options that you looked at in the plan)
0. Leadership and Management Styles
0. Organizational Chart
0. IT Governance Plan (see above & MUST BE IN PRESENTATION
)
3. Marketing and Manufacturing Plans (these are only needed if you are doing a company or if you are an entrepreneur doing a new business. In either of these cases, please see the instructor for further explanation. If you are not in this category, you do not need to submit a Marketing or Manufacturing Plan for this exercise but note that it is required in real life.)
1. Financial Analysis
(MUST BE IN PRESENTATION)
4. Operating Expense Proposed Budget
4. Capital Expense Proposed Budget
4. ROI, Profit and Loss Statement (these are only needed if you are doing a company or if you are an entrepreneur doing a new business. In either of these cases, please see the instructor for further explanation. If you are not in this category, you do not need to submit these for this exercise but note that it is required in real life.)
1. Conclusion – in detail
5. Plan Recap (restated what your plan is about and why it is important for the executives to release resources to help you run your business)
References (at least10 sites)
Appendices
Appendix A-1: Papers, articles, readings that contribute to this business plan
Appendix A-2: Business Plan analysis process used and other detail documentation needed to for “proof points”
Business Analysis:
https://www.forbes.com/sites/bernardmarr/2016/02/04/the-18-best-analytics-tools-every-business-manager-should-know/#325f284d5d39
https://www.business-to-you.com/scanning-the-environment-pestel-analysis/