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Developing
Realistic Financial Assumptions in Your
Business Plan
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by:
Dave Lavinsky
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Many investors skip straight to the financial
section of the business plan. It is critical that the assumptions and
projections in this section be realistic. Plans that show penetration,
operating margin and revenues per employee figures that are poorly
reasoned, internally inconsistent or simply unrealistic greatly damage
the credibility of the entire business plan. In contrast, sober,
well-reasoned financial assumptions and projections communicate
operational maturity and credibility.
For instance, if the company is categorized as a networking
infrastructure firm, and the business plan projects 80% operating
margins, investors will raise a red flag. This is because investors can
readily access the operating margins of publicly-traded networking
infrastructure firms and find that none have operating margins this
high.
As much as possible, the financial assumptions should be based on
actual results from your or other firms. As the example above
indicates, it is fairly easy to look at a public company’s operating
margins and use these margins to approximate your own. Likewise, the
business plan should base revenue growth on other firms. Many firms
find this impossible, since they believe they have a break-through
product in their market, and no other company compares. In such a case,
base revenue growth on companies in other industries that have had
break-through products. If you expect to grow even faster than they did
(maybe because of new technologies that those firms weren’t able to
employ), you can include more aggressive assumptions in your business
plan as long as you explain them in the text.
The financials can either enhance or significantly harm your business
plan’s chances of assisting you in the capital-raising process. By
doing the research to develop realistic assumptions, based on actual
results of your or other companies, the financials can bolster your
firm’s chances of winning investors. As importantly, the more realistic
financials will also provide a better roadmap for your company’s
success.
About the author:
GT Business
Plans has developed over 200 business plans for clients that
have collectively raised over $750 million in financing, launched
numerous new product and service lines and gained competitive advantage
and market share. GT Business Plans is the sister site of GT Venture Capital
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