Business 101: Passion Before Planning
by Karri Flatla
Published on this site: December 8th, 2005 - See
more articles from this month

Summary: There is much more to small business planning than
a good marketing mix and solid financials. You must "know
thyself" before you can attain small business success.
Contrary to what myriad Internet sites would have you believe,
there is much more to small business planning than a good
marketing mix and solid financials. Whether you want to sell
the next big thing or you simply want to rev up sales and
profits for an existing operation, no business plan template
will adequately address the complex psychology of being an entrepreneur, especially
a successful one.
To illustrate what I mean, let's pretend you aspire to be
the next coffee shop ingénue. You have articulated
a comprehensive business plan; you have chosen your product
lineup, location, promotion plan, and pricing strategy; and
you have snagged some decent financing to keep you running
for at least a year. On paper, you are a coffee empire in the making. "Great!"
you think to yourself. "Let's get started!"
You proceed to sign the lease, shell out some bucks to a
lawyer and an accountant, order a few gazillion pounds of
coffee beans in anticipation of your success, and open for
business. About six months and a few hundred lattes later,
you realize that you do not possess high tolerance levels
for the teen angst, high extra-hot-no-whip-non-fat-double-mocha-latte-now-or-I'll-go-post
turnover, and sleep deprived yet incredibly nitpicky about
al cranky clientele that have suddenly become an intimate
part of your life. You despise this situation but also realize
that it will probably be your reality for many years to come,
or at least until you can make enough margin to take a day
off and enjoy a five-dollar coffee poured for you across the
street at Starbuck's.
Perhaps this all too common scenario points to one explanation
for the alarmingly high failure rate of small business start-ups
in North America. The Business 101 textbook explanation of
this phenomenon would state that failure to plan is the root
cause of most small business shutdowns. Indeed, without some
kind of road map, inspiration can quickly turn to chaos if
not complete financial ruin. But even the most well crafted
business plan cannot cement the road to success, and an entirely
fabulous product is no guarantee either.
Work-at-home business gurus, Paul and Sarah Edwards, cite
two independent studies involving a number of successful entrepreneurs.
Both studies concluded that business plans are overdone in
many cases and their importance even overemphasized. What
is needed, the Edwards say, is a succinct plan that uncovers
key aspects of the market you wish to pursue and a simple
roadmap for pursuing them www.workingfromhome.com/pages/faq.htm.
Of course, in approaching the planning process this way, you
are more apt to make strategic changes when necessary because
you will be less "invested" in the document itself
and more interested in doing whatever it takes to succeed.
Failure to plan is a symptom, not a root cause, of small
business collapse. The true "illness" lies within
the heart of western entrepreneurship and the bizarre twists
and turns it has taken in the information age. Get-rich-quick
schemes abound in magazines and on the Internet, yet the only
ones getting rich from these programs are the passionate individuals
who envisioned the intricate pyramid of wealth in the first
place. However, one need not take such an unethical path of
deception toward financial independence.
My overpriced but thankfully small "l" liberal
education taught me something I have not seen in any business
textbook: Determine the correct questions before seeking answers.
In saying this, I am not at all trying to sound literary,
highfalutin or Stephen Covey-esque (loved "7 Habits"
by the way). I write only what I know from observation and
experience, and it would seem to me that you cannot derive
health, happiness, or wealth from something that does not
reflect your personality, your vision of your best self, or
your basic code for living.
Money in the hands of an entrepreneur who does not know himself
might as well be lumps of coal. And a business plan written
by such a person is not worth much more. No bank loan or angel
moneys can replace the value of introspection. Some questions
you must ask yourself:
- What are my reasons for pursuing this venture?
- Will those reasons be enough if I don't turn a profit
in the first five years?
- What will I have lost if the business fails? What will
I have gained?
- Does this venture reflect who I am? Or am I only trying
to be someone I think I "should" be?
Such questions should be fleshed out long before you begin
typing up that business plan. How you honestly answer those
questions should subsequently color every element of your
marketing mix. Passion must precede planning. This authenticity
will shine through in everything you do and say thereafter,
and-in this day-there is nothing so irresistible to your prospects as
authenticity.

Karri Flatla is a business graduate of the University
of Lethbridge and principal of snap! virtual assistance inc.,
a small business consulting firm providing online marketing
services to the progressive entrepreneur. Karri also produces
Outsmart, the newsletter for small business with big purpose.
Visit http://www.snap-va.com
for more information.

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