by William A. Sahlman
Every seasoned investor knows that detailed financial projections for a new company are
an act of imagination. Nevertheless, most business plans pour far too much ink on the
numbers - and far too little on the information that really matters. Why? William Sahlman
suggests that a great business plan is one that focuses on a series of questions. These
questions relate to the four factors critical to the success of every new venture: the
people, the opportu-nity, the context, and the possibilities for both risk and reward.
The questions about people revolve around three issues: What do they know? Whom do they
know? and How well are they known? As for opportunity, the plan should focus on two
questions: Is the market for the venture's product or service large or rapidly growing (or
preferably both)? and Is the industry structurally attractive? Then, in addition to
demonstrating an understanding of the context in which their venture will operate,
entrepreneurs should make clear how they will respond when that context inevitably
changes. Finally, the plan should look unflinchingly at the risks the new venture faces,
giving would-be backers a -realistic idea of what magnitude of reward they can expect and
when they can expect it.
A great business plan is not easy to compose, Sahlman acknowledges, largely because
most entrepreneurs are wild-eyed optimists. But one that asks the right questions is a
powerful tool. A better deal, not to mention a better shot at success, awaits
entrepreneurs who use it.
Reprint 97409
Harvard Business Review Article. July 1997