The Death Of The Business Plan And The Successor

Posted on Feb 26 2014 - 10:04am by Editorial Staff

Business

“Plans are only good intentions unless they immediately degenerate into hard work”

–   P. Drucker

Intro

Dear friends,

There is something that I’ve wanted to tell you for a long time. It’s something that we’ve been taught all those years (during university and post-graduation) repeatedly and I am afraid that might sound a bit odd in the beginning.

It would be about a topic that is been conditioned in our minds as prerequisite for start building/structuringour startup and if we skipped that step there is a good chance to be perceived by the so-called experts as either amateur or fool.

Well, because time is money I will dive immediately to the topic of interest. Is about the business plan and its role in the success or not of a startup business.

It’s a cure all isn’t it? If you want to launch a startup undoubtedly this is the path to follow am I right?

Or…………is not the path to follow?

The last many decades there is an obsession/hype about business plans and why they are so important.Is a process that been indicated for anybody considering to start a business, is something that you must have; based on the mainstream idea. Otherwise how you will be able to create a plan for this complicated project (starting a business), it make’s sense isn’t it?

After all the famous phrase/quoteNo battle was ever won according to plan, but no battle was ever won without one.”I presume didn’t became famous for no reason, is been reiterated so many times because it’s correct.

Anyhow, give me some time and in the following paragraphs I will explain what kind of different plan is needed in particular for startups and I can assure you this plan has nothing to do with the old-fashioned, outdated and ineffective business plan.

Whether you know it or not Business Plans don’t work for startups

First allow me to start with the individual that is considered as the top-expert in startup creation, the noted entrepreneur and academic Steve Blank. Steve Blank noticed from the very begging of his career that something goes wrong with how startups think and operate and created the Customer Development Movement.

Steve Blank 3 famous quotes/comments about why Business Plans don’t work for startups are the following:

a) “Traditional Business Plans presume no trial and no errors”.

In other words the vast majority of startup businesses create this plan and they follow it with religious devotion until to find out that the Critical Important Assumptions (CIAs) and hypotheses that they believed about were wrong. Even more unfortunately when they recognize that divergenceit’s already too late to change their startup destiny because of the delayed identification of the problem (deviation between reality and their assumptions; this point is reiterated again in my blog but us crucial).

b) “No Business Plan Survived first contact with Customers”

Steve Blank here points out that sadly the most of the startups create this plan and the 1st contact of the strategies and tactics that are indicated by their plan it happens when they launch their startup and try to market their business product/service. This is the ultimate recipe for failure and I will explain why in a while.

c) “Entrepreneurs often mistake their business plan as a cookbook for execution, failing to recognize that it is only a collection of unproven assumptions”.

Fortunately or unfortunately the vast majority of time our assumptions are just guesses. Regardless how much educated and well-informed we are about our market, until to test these assumptions with real customers and validate them we don’t know for sure that they will become true or not.

The fundamental difference between startups and established businesses, is that startups are looking to convert their business assumptions into facts and established businesses they already did that job (they have known customers, problems that their customers want to solve and how to deliver their solution). Startups don’t have that answers and are looking via experimentation and searching to figure out what are those answers to those questions.

This is the reason why millions of startups adopt and follow the movement that Steve Blank created and lead to an unprecedented shift how startups plan and operate.

As Mr. Blank often describes startups have to be in a search mode and established businesses in the execution mode.

Today will immerse ourselves only to the 1st element of the severalstages that compose the Customer Development Model.

The successor (Business Model Canvas)

Thiswas the solution to the problem that the startups were facing. Is theBusiness Model Canvasthat created by Alexander Osterwalder and was incorporated to the Customer Development model of Mr.Blank.

The reason why this model; is because startups from their nature as Steve Blank points out have a completely different purpose than established businesses “A startup is a temporary organization designed to search for a repeatable and scalable business model”.

Only after they validate all of their business model assumptions in the market can be converted and called themselves real business. Thereby given that reality there was a need for a model that will be used in the begging of their life (startup development phase) and only after they passed successfully that stage they can use the conventional business Plan.

Ok now that we set the framework let’s outline briefly the elements that describe the business model canvas.

  • Value Proposition: (What is the value that you will offer)
  • Customer Segments: (Who are your customers)
  • Distribution Channels (How to deliver your product/service)
  • Customer Relationships (Build Demand)
  • Revenue Streams (Revenue Model)
  • Resources needed
  • Activities necessary to implement the business model (Tactics that constitute your Startup action plan)
  • Partners
  • Cost structure

You might say that these elements somehow are covered by the conventional business plans. Although that there are numerous multi-dimensional and multi-level differences I will stick with one. The one huge difference that make this business model to be in a complete different level is the following.

This model is been used in conjunction with the Customer Development model which guide startups through a targeted and methodic way to test, improve, change, and iterate the business model canvas elements in a weekly basis. This will have as a result when approaching their launch day to have a business model with facts and not guesses and increase dramatically the possibilities for a successful startup and not belong to the category of 6 out of 10 startups that fail after they launch their startup businesses.

That’s it for now, I wish to enjoy the post and don’t forget to take some actions.

Best

Andreas

P.S. Please take a second and tell us if you believe the Business Model Canvas is the right model for you and if yes why?

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“Talk about it and it’s a dream, envision it and it becomes exciting, when you start to have a plan is possible but when you schedule it is real”.

T.Robbins

About the Author

Editorial Staff at I2Mag is a team of subject experts.