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Tuesday, 4 September, 2001, 16:35 GMT 17:35 UK
Student guide
It doesn't grow on trees
You'll need a good business plan if you want to grow
Trudie and Sharon came up with their idea when the baby bumped its head.

How do other businesses begin?

It's often when someone spots a gap in the market or a new way of doing things. Just think about some of the famous names out there.

How did they begin?

  • EasyJet - the low cost airline.
  • Carphone Warehouse - selling mobile phones.
  • Dyson - making vacuum cleaners.

    These businesses all got past the first hurdle of coming up with an idea.

    How were they different from the competition?

    What did they have to do to get going?

    Turning an idea into reality takes planning - it doesn't just happen!

    Let's go back to Trudie and Sharon: make a list of all the things they had to think about before they set up their business.

    Try some of these questions and see if you can answer them from the Bumpas story:

  • What's the product?
  • Is it safe?
  • Will people buy it?
  • What price will they pay?
  • How will we make it?
  • What much will it cost to make?
  • How will we let people know it's for sale?
  • Will it make a profit?
  • How do we make the business legal?
    The answers to all these questions go into a business plan.

    Paper trail
    Your bank should help you with a plan
    Whenever anyone is setting up a business - or developing a business, this plan is the blue-print for development.

    If Trudie and Sharon plan to expand Bumpas, they may have to borrow money from the bank.

    Any bank will want to know that the loan will be repaid, so they will want all the low down on the business.

    What's in a plan?

    Most banks help customers to prepare a business plan by providing them with a guide containing the questions that they have to answer.

    The questions you answered about Bumpas are just the sort of information a bank will be looking for: but in more detail.

    The bank will want to know:

  • All about the product or service that you are going to sell
  • How many you think you will be able to sell
  • Why people will buy the product or service
  • How much competition you face
  • How you will be marketing the product or service
  • Who will work in the business
  • What resources you will need
  • How much profit you will make in the first 6 or 12 months
  • All about your plans for the future of the business
  • How much money you will put in
  • How much you want the bank to lend
  • If you are a sole trader, partnership or a company
    While you are learning about business, you will cover all these aspects.

    You could build up a plan for a business that you would like to run.

    If you are brimming with ideas - have a look at the Big Zipper Challenge. You might be a winner!

    If you want to check on any of the terms we have used here you should take a look in our special education section Jargon Buster.

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    22 Aug 01 | Education
    The Big Zipper Challenge

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