Business Planning Will Always Be Relevant To Success

Jim Blasingame

First, The Age of the Customer disrupted and made obsolete many older practices. More recently, a global pandemic – and our response to it – reset our businesses and the marketplace even more. But neither of these diminished, replaced, or made obsolete the requirement for business planning, especially cash flow.

A business plan is the result of thinking, researching, strategizing, and reaching conclusions about how to pursue opportunities. It may exist only in the head of the planner, but it’s better when written down.

Whether elaborate or simple, a written business plan is an assembly of facts, ideas, assumptions, and projections about the future. Here are three ways to use a written plan:

1. Document the due diligence on a new business venture or the future of an existing one.

2. Evaluate opportunities and challenges and compare them with your strengths and weaknesses.

3. Assist when getting a bank loan and courting investors.

So how does a static, written plan work when a business is always in motion? It works when you turn your plan into planning. A plan is like a parked car; planning is taking that car on a trip.

Planning is measuring your business motion against the baseline of assumptions and projections you made in your plan. Planning allows you to see how smart you were when the plan was written, or where your research and assumption skills need work. Planning also highlights the external forces you face.

Written business plans often become collateral damage during challenging economic times. But you can’t allow planning to meet the same fate. Indeed, when things slow down there is an even greater need to check your position than when things are rockin’ and rollin’.

Here is a critical two-step planning activity that’s the heart of a business plan and the essence of planning. Beginning with these will help you operate more successfully anytime, but especially when business slows down.

1. Build a 12-month cash flow spreadsheet in a program like Excel so that you can project and track the monthly relationship between cash collections and cash disbursements from all sources. This planning tool will provide a rolling picture of cash flow in any given month.

2. Look at the “Ending cash” number at the bottom of each month’s column. A negative number in any month means you’ll need to take additional actions like increasing sales and/or accounts receivable collection, reducing expenses, or acquiring cash from another source, like a bank loan. But before you ask for a loan, if you have time, make sure you’ve pursued all the other options listed, which could either eliminate or reduce the loan amount. And that “if you have time” thing? That’s what planning is for. Otherwise, you’ll be seen as a crisis manager, and crisis managers don’t get a lot of loans.

A banker once told me that if I could bring him only one financial document with a loan request, it should be a 12-month cash flow projection that included both how the borrowed cash would be used, and how and when it would be repaid.  

I always listen to my banker, and you should, too.  

Write this on a rock … A business plan is important, but planning is essential.


Jim Blasingame is the author of The 3rd Ingredient, the Journey of Analog Ethics into the World of Digital Fear and Greed.

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