Ending Soon! Save 33% on All Access

To Make Business Planning Less Daunting, Let's Call It Something Else We need new vocabulary for business planning. Just don't call it a 'business plan.'

By Tim Berry Edited by Dan Bova

Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own.

Just Don't Call It a Business PlanWhat typically comes to mind when you read or hear the phrase "business plan"?

For many people, the mental image is a big boring formal document. It's like a high-school term paper or a university thesis, a daunting task to be finished with a huge sigh of relief, then stored away in a drawer and quickly forgotten.

That's why many young people say, "Don't bother to plan." And if you ask successful entrepreneurs whether they had a business plan to start, many will say they didn't simply because it's cool to say no. It's sort of like asking people whether they studied in high school.

But probe further, and you'll find that many people who suggest bypassing a business plan will recommend that you set strategy, goals and priorities and follow up with frequent course corrections. Which, of course, is business planning. It just doesn't sound like the popular image of a business plan.

Smart entrepreneurs develop a streamlined plan--straight to the point, but built to be managed and changed. Form should follow function. If you don't need to show a document to investors, bankers or other outsiders, why even bother to print anything out? Keep the plan simple and easy to deal with--an electronic PDF that you review and revise at least once a month. It should set forth your strategic focus, target market and point of differentiation, as well as specific steps to implement your strategy, including assumptions, tasks, milestones, responsibilities, dates, deadlines and key measurements.

Now that we've laid out what to do, we ought to find a better way to refer to the planning needed to start, run and expand a business. Should we call it "business management" maybe? Or even better, how about "Steering the business"? I've asked about this wording problem on Twitter and in my blog, but I'm afraid nobody has come up with a suggestion that grabs me.

I have been playing off a post on Amex OPEN forum by Ivana Taylor, under the title, A New And Improved Goal Setting Process For Your Business (And Life). She's writing about business planning, and I think she gets it right with the idea of establishing goals. So instead of "business planning," maybe "goal management"? Or "goal keeping"?

Further suggestions are welcome in the comments section below, or @timberry on Twitter or through the contact page on my blog.

Tim Berry

Entrepreneur, Business Planner and Angel Investor

Tim Berry is the chairman of Eugene, Ore.-Palo Alto Software, which produces business-planning software. He founded Bplans.com and wrote The Plan-As-You-Go Business Plan, published by Entrepreneur Press. Berry is also a co-founder of HavePresence.com, a leader in a local angel-investment group and a judge of international business-plan competitions.

Want to be an Entrepreneur Leadership Network contributor? Apply now to join.

Business News

Now that OpenAI's Superalignment Team Has Been Disbanded, Who's Preventing AI from Going Rogue?

We spoke to an AI expert who says safety and innovation are not separate things that must be balanced; they go hand in hand.

Franchise

What Franchising Can Teach The NFL About The Impact of Private Equity

The NFL is smart to take a thoughtful approach before approving institutional capital's investment in teams.

Employee Experience & Recruiting

Beyond the Great Resignation — How to Attract Freelancers and Independent Talent Back to Traditional Work

Discussing the recent workplace exit of employees in search of more meaningful work and ways companies can attract that talent back.

Business News

Scarlett Johansson 'Shocked' That OpenAI Used a Voice 'So Eerily Similar' to Hers After Already Telling the Company 'No'

Johansson asked OpenAI how they created the AI voice that her "closest friends and news outlets could not tell the difference."

Business Ideas

Struggling to Balance Your Business and Your Relationship? This Company Says It Has a Solution.

Jessica Holton, co-founder and CEO of Ours, says her company is on a mission to destigmatize couples therapy so that people can be proactive about relationship health.

Marketing

Marketing Campaigns Must Do More than Drive Clicks — Here's How to Craft Landing Pages That Convert Clicks into Customers

Following fundamental design principles will ensure that your landing pages lead potential customers from clicking on an ad to completing a purchase.