Skip to main content

How to Use Your Business Plan to Be a Better Manager

business plan managementWhen you get down to its bones, management is about setting expectations, tracking results, and managing the difference.

True story: As my software business began to grow, as we went from two employees to five, then 10, I discovered how hard real management is with startups and small business that grow organically.

In a startup, those first few people who join feel like friends, not employees. What they taught in my MBA courses on organization and management didn’t apply. We worked together, shoulder to shoulder. How was I going to step back and review performance?

Maybe it was the ex-hippie in me, but I think it happens to most founders, in most startups, and most small businesses. Organizational structure and structured reviews come later after you’ve grown the business further. In the beginning, it’s a bunch of mice eating at a big piece of cheese.

Download the Business Plan Template today!

The management magic of business planning

This is how I discovered the management magic of business planning. I don’t mean necessarily a formal, written business plan for outsiders, but rather real business planning—Lean Planning—which is a matter of setting goals, tracking results, and following up with reviews and revisions. For best results, use the plan to set milestones, tasks, performance measurements, and numbers to track.

Then get the people together once a month (or so) to review results. And, management will follow; so will accountability. It becomes automatic, a part of the process. Plus, nobody has to suddenly step back and change roles to go from friend to boss and back.

Again, management is about setting expectations, tracking results, and managing the difference. And it’s about saying no sometimes and yes other times. Why build a separate system of employee review and the extra structure around it when that’s all built into proper business planning? It’s natural, and it works better.

It starts with a Lean Business Plan

You don’t need a formal business plan document, with its longer summaries and descriptions, to use your business planning process as a management tool. Start with a simple Lean Business Plan:

1. Use your Lean Plan to set and execute strategy

Business strategy out in the real world of small business and startups isn’t academic or subtle—it’s focus.

Strategy is a matter of saying no often and yes only at the right time. I believe in a Lean Business Plan that summarizes strategy in a few bullet points. Then you can use it as a reminder when you’re distracted by the next shiny new thing.

2. Use your plan to align tactics with strategy

Tactics execute strategy.

Marketing tactics include pricing, distribution, messaging, promotion, presence in social media, branding, and content. And they include product plan tactics like launch dates, features, versions, and packaging. They might include team recruiting tactics and financial tactics.

Make sure the tactics match the strategy.

3. Set concrete specifics

List your assumptions, set realistic major milestones, assign tasks, set performance measurements and standards, set items to track, and set a review schedule of at least once a month to review results and revise as necessary.

4. Project your essential business numbers

That’s a sales forecast, spending budget, and cash flow plan. Regularly looking at your financials keeps your business on track.

No one has a crystal ball, but setting realistic forecasts can help you and your team better understand what they’re working toward and whether their tactics have been effective.

The magic is in the regular review

What I discovered, in actual practice with a real startup, is that when people are involved in the planning process, the review becomes automatic. The monthly review meeting starts with reviewing assumptions, to see what’s changed.  Then it reviews milestones, to see what milestones have been passed and what progress has been. And then it reviews the performance measurements.

What happens is human nature. People care about what they have to show to their peers. If they wanted a budget for an activity two months ago, then they’re proud or embarrassed about results this month, during the meeting. Peer pressure is automatic. Nobody has to jump into boss mode. People care about what they have or haven’t done.

Conclusion: Good business planning is good management

It’s too bad that business planning gets undervalued sometimes because some people think a business plan is just a use-once-and-throw-away document related to getting loans or investment. Business planning is the best way to get what you want from your business. It coordinates strategy, tactics, business activities, and teamwork, and it pushes results to the forefront.

If you’re reading to start using your business plan as a management tool, download our Lean Plan template to get started.

How do you use your business planning in conjunction with management strategies?

Editor’s note: This article originally published in 2015. It was revised in 2018.

from: Bplans BlogBplans Blog
via Tim Berry

Source: How to Use Your Business Plan to Be a Better Manager Via Business Advice.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

7 Ways to Grow Your SaaS Startup Faster

Every startup looks for ways to catapult a business to success. Here are some tips for accelerating growth for SaaS (software as a service) companies. 1. Start charging early SaaS startups are often hesitant about charging customers. They think that their product is not yet ready, that it’s necessary to get traction and focus on expanding their customer base rather than on growing revenue. Deep inside, however, they often don’t just have enough faith in their product and are not sure if someone will buy it at all. They prefer keeping hundreds or thousands of free users to attempting to win a few serious customers. Big numbers are comforting but the product remains an unverified idea. Building a product should imply increasing revenue. So don’t hesitate too much—put it to the test by charging and see if it works in the real conditions. This is one way to minimize your risk too. Instead of waiting to launch until you’ve invested huge amounts of time and money, launch early. If...

How to Add Web Push Notification to Your WordPress Site

Do you want to add push notifications to your WordPress site? Push notifications allow you to send notifications to users even when they are not visiting your website. In this article, we will show you how to easily add web push notifications to your WordPress site. We will also talk about the best WordPress push notification plugins and how to send desktop & mobile push notifications from your WordPress site. What is Push Notification? Push notifications are clickable messages displayed on top of user’s desktop or notification area on their mobile device. They can be shown even when the user’s browser is not open. Aside from desktop, web push notifications also work on mobile devices. This allows you to reach your users across devices with latest updates and offers. Web push notifications have proven to be a very effective way to convert website visitors into customers and loyal followers. Why Add Web Push Notifications to Your WordPress Site? We have already discussed tha...

7 Best WordPress Job Board Plugins and Themes

Are you looking for the best WordPress job board plugin? There are several WordPress job board plugins that you can use to easily create a job board and charge other companies to post jobs. It is one of the ways to make money from your blog , and you can even use it to post your own job openings. In this article, we have picked the best WordPress job board plugins and themes that you can use. Building a Job Board Website with WordPress WordPress is currently one of the most popular website builders in the market, powering more than 30% of all websites on the internet. It can be used to build almost any kind of website including a job board website. There are two types of WordPress websites which often confuses new users. First, there is WordPress.com which is a hosted solution. Second, you have WordPress.org also called self-hosted WordPress. See our article on WordPress.com vs WordPress.org for a side-by-side comparison. We recommend using self-hosted WordPress.org because it g...