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©
Venture Planning Associates.
Reproduced by permission.
What Is Venture Planning?
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Venture Planning is a personal assessment of your
feelings and the feasibility of a venture.
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Venture Planning answers the question, should I
be doing this and why?
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The Venture Feasibility process examines seven
key factors in any venture.
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The Founders' Compelling Interest: The force
that drives you.
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Customer Opportunities based on customer wants
and needs.
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Customer Profiles defines the target market and
potential customers
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Venture Concepts evaluates alternatives to
filling those needs.
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Financial Resources identifies and evaluates the
financial resources need to pursue alternative venture models.
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Entrepreneurial Assessment to find out if the
entrepreneur and the venture are in alignment with respect to goals rewards,
compelling interests and the ventures mission.
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Final venture evaluation of feasibility and
comparison of alternatives.
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What Venture Planning is not? It is not about
writing a Business Plan. Sometimes a business plan is not needed.
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Venture Planning does not require detailed funding
source analysis, professional opinions, entity formation or detailed market
analysis.
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Venture Planning is development of a means
of comparing various business models, usually through financial modeling to
answer the following questions:
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Which venture concept produces the most sales,
the best margins, the highest net profit and the lowest breakeven?
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Which model requires the least investment by
entrepreneurs and others?
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Which concept requires equity as opposed to debt
financing?
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Which produces the highest "Return on
Investment" and the best liquidity?
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Which model requires the entrepreneur to give up
the least equity?
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Identify and quantify the risks involved with
execution of each model.
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Venture Formation involves all of the following
stages:
Idea - Concept Development - Venture Development
- Monitoring Progress - Initiating new changes - Venture Feasibility Analysis
- Business or Operational Plan - Budget vs. Actual - New Plans.
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There are four keys to good venture planning:
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Focus on one venture at a time in one business
area at a time.
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Discover the opportunity first, and then
evaluate how to exploit it.
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Develop three cases good, bad & likely for each
scenario of a venture concept.
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Identify what type of venture you want. Each
type has an entirely different model, implementation and end result. Each
demands a different entrepreneurial approach and each requires different
management and style. Do you want:
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a Lifestyle Business with $1 million in annual
sales, 1-4 employees and a solo operation?
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a Smaller High Profit Business with $1-$20
million in sales, 5 - 50 employees, where partners are required?, or
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a High Growth Business with $20-50 million or
more in sales with more than 50 employees, that requires venture capital,
investment banks and a public company?
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There Are 11 Keys To a Good First Venture
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Founder's alignment with the mission. Do you
have the attitude and skills to do it?
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Guaranteed or qualified customers. Can you get
pre-orders or buy-in by a major client?
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Lifestyle of High Profit smaller business. It
is best to get your feet wet here first.
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Routine concept: Is there a currently
successful model already in operation?
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Available product. Is the product available, or
do you have to develop it?
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Advantageous Cash Flow. Can you run positive
cash flow right away? Bragging about “Burn Rates” is a thing of the past
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Supportive local environment. Don't try to put
a power plant in the high rent district.
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Neutral State and Federal Environment. Can you
avoid environmental impact studies and restrictive and time-consuming legal
and public relations battles?
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Equity Control. Will you have control and can
you maintain control?
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Relevant Experience, do you have it now?
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Low Overhead. What is the least you can spend
on infrastructure and turn a profit?
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What To Do After the Feasibility Study of Numerous
Concepts
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Pick three of the best with the "snap" of
customer needs and pick the least costly concept.
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Decide to go or not. If you decide to go
forward, do a detailed business plan or operational plan and then start.

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