Health Care Pharmaceutical Business Plan/ Medical Office Start-up Businss Plan
The process of thinking and writing the plan
provides clarity to your business
If capital is needed from beyond your savings, investors want to see a plan that demonstrates a solid understanding and vision for your business
The plan will help you to prioritize the tasks that are most important
With growth, the plan offers a common
understanding of the vision to new leaders
It is something you should continually review
and update over time
A simple business plan for a product or service company
that is just forming, can be completed rather quickly. Write it simply keeping
in mind who the audience might be. It needs to be understandable, readable,
and realistic.
This template is organized into seven sub-plans or sections
to be completed.
1. Executive Summary
2. Company Overview
3. Business Description
4. Market Analysis
5. Operating Plan
6. Marketing and Sales Plan
7. Financial Plan
It is recommended to complete the Executive Summary last
once the other sections have been completed. As you move from the Company
Overview to the Financial Plan, the writing should tell the story of your
motivation, your vision, why you will be successful, how you will achieve
success, and how you will measure it.
It will be important to keep your plan up to date so you can see your progress, celebrate success, and adjust where you missed the mark. This is best done on a quarterly, if not monthly basis.
EXECUTIVE
SUMMARY
Think of this as the first thing a potential investor reads
so it must capture their interest in the first five minutes.
You may choose to organize it using some of the headings
below.
·
·
·
·
·
COMPANY
OVERVIEW
Provide a brief summary of your intended business including
what it uniquely delivers, your mission, how you got started, market
positioning, operational structure and financial goals. After reviewing this
section, the reader should have a broad understanding of what your business is
setting out to do and how it is organized.
This section is not meant to be lengthy. Keep it short and succinct.
This is a snapshot of your business.
Depending on the type of business you are operating, you
may or may not need the following sections. Only include what you need and
remove everything else.
·
Company Summary:
·
Mission Statement:
·
Company History:
·
Location:
·
·
Operational
Structure:
·
Financial Goals:
BUSINESS DESCRIPTION
This section will first frame the business opportunity. It
should answer the question: what problem are you trying to solve? Potentially
use a case example to describe the customers’ pain point and how they solve it
today. If your product or service addresses something the market hasn’t
identified as a problem (E.g. a dental office that provides evening hours of
operations for the working families), they also describe how your solution
reduces stress, saves money, or brings joy to the customer.
After framing the opportunity, describe in detail your
solution (product or service) and how it solves that problem and benefits
your customers. This portion should also describe in more detail the product
or service, how it will be supplied, pricing, and if there is an upgrade or
extension for it in the future. If there are other important participants in
the market, such as suppliers or distributors or others, describe them in this
section.
·
Opportunity:
·
Product Overview:
·
Key Participants
and Management Team:
·
Clinical/Regulatory:
·
Pricing:
MARKET
ANALYSIS
The Market Analysis provides the reader an understanding of
how well you know your market and if it’s big enough to support your business
objectives. The section provides an overview of the industry that your
business will participate in. As you narrow this sector down to the ideal
customer based on your business strategy, you will define your target market.
A detailed description and sizing of the target market will help the reader
understand the market value you are pursuing (the number of potential customers
multiplied by the average revenue for your product or service).
In defining the target market, you will identify key
elements such as geographic location, demographics, buyer characteristics,
your target market's needs and how these needs are being met currently. If
there are any direct competitors, these should be compared to how your
offering will solve it in the future.
This section may also include a SWOT (Strengths,
Weaknesses, Opportunities, and Threats) Analysis as necessary, to better
assess your business’ position against the competition.
Depending on the type of business you are operating, you
may or may not need the following sections. Only include what you need and
remove everything else.
·
Industry Type:
·
Market Segmentation:
·
Competition:
·
SWOT Analysis:
STRENGTHS · Advantage · Capabilities · Assets,
people · Experience · Financial
reserves · Value
proposition · Price,
value, quality |
|
WEAKNESSES · Disadvantages · Gap
in capabilities · Cash
Flow · Suppliers · Experience · Areas
to improve · Causes
of loss sales |
OPPORTUNITIES ·
Areas to improve ·
New segments ·
Industry trends ·
New products ·
New innovations ·
Key partnership |
THREATS · Economy
movement · Obstacles
faced · Competitor
actions · Political
impacts · Environmental
effects · Loss
of key staff · Market
demand |
OPERATING PLAN
Furthermore, you need to outline how you currently and will
continue to develop and maintain a loyal customer base. This will include
management responsibilities with dates and budgets, and to make sure results
can be tracked. What are the envisioned
phases for future growth and the capabilities that need to be in place to
realize growth?
The operating plan describes how your business works.
Depending on the type of business you have, important elements of this plan
should include how you bring products or services to market and how you
support customers. It’s the logistics, technology, and basic blocking and
tackling of your business. Depending on the type of business you are starting,
you may or may not need the following sections. Only include what you need and
remove everything else. Remember, try to keep your business plan as to short as
possible, so too much detail here could easily make your plan much too long.
·
Sourcing and Order
Fulfillment:
·
Payment:
·
Technology:
·
Key Customers:
·
Key Employees and
Organization:
·
Facilities:
MARKETING
AND SALES PLAN
Promoting your business, whether generating leads or
traffic to a website or store, is one of the most important functions of any
business. In this section of the plan, provide the details of how your market
your business. Describe the key messages and channels you use for generating
leads and promoting the business. This section should also describe your sales
strategy. Depending on the type of business you have, you may or may not need
the following sections. Only include what you need and remove everything else.
·
Key Messages:
·
Marketing Activities:
o Media
advertising (newspaper, magazine, television, radio)
o Direct
mail
o Telephone
solicitation
o Seminars
or business conferences
o Joint
advertising with other companies
o Word
of mouth or fixed signage
o Digital
marketing such as social media, email marketing or SEO
o Free
initial consultation or cleaning for new clients
o Health
group seminars and meetings
·
Sales Strategy:
FINANCIAL
PLAN
Creating a financial plan is where all of the business
planning comes together. Up to this point, you have identified the target
market and target customers, along with pricing. These items along with your
assumptions will help you estimate your sales forecast. The other side of the
business will be what expenses you expect to incur. This is important on an
ongoing basis to see when you are profitable. It is also important as you
start your business, to know what expenses you will need to fund before
customer sales or the cash they generate is received.
At a minimum, this section should include your estimated
Start-Up Costs and Projected Profit and Loss, along with a summary of the
assumptions you are making with these projections. Assumptions should include
initial and ongoing sales, along with the timing of these inflows.
Here is how you set up your financial plan:
1.
Projected Start-Up
Costs:
2.
Actual Budget:
3.
Projected
Profit/Loss:
4.
Choose your
experts, financial and administrative setup, and credentialing:
a.
Get your payer credentialing done properly
b.
Set up, plan and help you execute your
marketing
c.
Serve as a single point of contact for you,
vendors, and project managers
d.
Negotiate with vendors
e.
Hire and train staff
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Projected
Profit and Loss Model:
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APPENDIX
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ESTIMATED START-UP
BUDGET |
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INSTRUCTIONS
FOR GETTING STARTED WITH ESTIMATED START-UP COSTS
Determining a business's startup costs is critical to
ensure enough cash is available to begin business operations within the
budgeted time frame as well as within the cost budget. Startup costs typically fall within two
categories, monthly costs and one-time costs.
Monthly costs cover costs that occur each month during the startup
period and one-time costs are costs that will be incurred once during the
startup period.
Steps for Preparation:
Step 1:
Step 3:
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INSTRUCTIONS
FOR GETTING STARTED ON PROFIT & LOSS PROJECTIONS
Completing projections for Profit and Loss of a new company
is a good exercise to understand and communicate when the company will begin
to break-even and see how sales and profits will grow. The top portion of the model to the left,
Revenue, is a good way to forecast sales, month by month for the first year.
The lower portion then applies estimated expenses for the same period of time to
derive the business' profitability.
Steps for Preparation:
Step 2:
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Ohhhhh man Thank You good Knowledge, May I have your e-mail.?
ReplyDeleteYeah sure, It's : aliabbasisana@gmail.com
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