NO is an acceptable result

I’m sure almost everyone is familiar with the story that Thomas Edison discovered 99 ways to NOT make a light bulb. That’s 99 no to reach 1 yes. The point here is that a negative result, proving something didn’t work or was not so, is just as valuable as a positive result. Sadly, scientific research has become so expensive, and so heavily subsidized/sponsored by corporations, that it has become the expected norm that every result must be a commercially marketable yes result.

That “always yes” attitude has come to shade the development and use of business plans as well. It’s gotten to where people think that every business plan has to show exorbitant profits and wild success. And to reach that end, all that they need to do is overestimate the financial tables a bit, or a lot, until the Profit and Loss and Balance Sheet show the desired results. This is a bad and dangerous tack, in my opinion.

For instance, we saw one plan for a tennis club with indoor court rentals. The financial tables looked good until we divided the rate per hour into the sales forecast. Seems those courts were rented continually, 28 hours a day, every day, 365 days a year. Not possible I’m afraid.

Or the mobile auto oil change business in a large mid-western city. Again, closer inspection of the sales forecast showed that the one worker was changing the oil in a car every 45 minutes, with no travel time between jobs, in all weather, every month of the year. Now, I’ve tried to change my oil in Illinois in January, outdoors, lying on my back in the snow and below-freezing temperatures. Let me tell you from experience that 45 minutes is painfully unrealistic.

Final example: there was the apartment rental company with five vice-presidents but no employees in the personnel forecast, and they never showed how or when they paid for the buildings they said they purchased.

These business plans all said YES in the financials — if you didn’t look too closely.

Now, I say that NO is an acceptable result from a business plan. A business plan for a start-up company that shows huge losses, or negative cash flow is an OK result. It tells you that the business as planned will fail. It tells you that some of your basic assumptions are wrong. It tells you that you are missing something immensely important.

And this is better than OK! Rather than starting up with unrealistic expectations and then hitting bottom in an excruciating crash, you can stop right now and reassess, before you make a financial commitment. Don’t ‘embellish’ the financials by boosting the sales forecast. Look at your market, your competition, your expenses, and everything about your plan and be realistic.

Honest reflection may tell you that this isn’t the business to start right now. Or, you might revise the plan and discover if you put some of those vice-presidents out on the production line, it reduces your costs of goods to a point where you really can make a modest profit on steady sales, without hockey-stick growth. After your revisions, you still might not make a profit until year three. But in going through this process, you may become convinced that the business is viable with adequate start-up funding and second-round investment.

NO is an acceptable result for a business plan if the plan exposed the flaws and showed the way to a realistic YES.

Steve Lange
Senior Editor
Palo Alto Software

Resources - Follow up from the Webinar

For those of you who attended Monday’s Back to the Fundamentals webinar, you heard a lot of references to some websites, books and blogs.

For the reference of those people looking for more information and for those of you who weren’t able to make it to the webinar, I’m going to put a reference list here.

If there are any that I fail to include here, please leave a comment and I’ll track it down and get it for you.

Tim Berry

Blogs : Planning, Startups, Stories, Up and Running,  Tim’s posts at HuffingtonPost, Tim at Anita Campbell’s Small Business Trends, Planning Demystified at AllBusiness.com

BooksThe Plan-As-You-Go Business Plan book and website, Three Weeks to Start-up

Slides: Download the slides from Monday’s webinar as well as other presentations Tim has given over the years.

The webinar itself will be available for download starting today at our video site   eta: This link is fixed now, sorry about that!

Resources: Palo Alto Software productsBusiness and Marketing calculators, more planning video’s.

I hope that was helpful, again, if I’ve missed anything or you’re wondering about a particular resource or website, just comment!

‘Chelle Parmele
Social Media Marketing Manager
Palo Alto Software

Hello and welcome to Global Entrepreneurship Week!

Palo Alto Software is pleased to be a small part of this amazing global effort to help young entrepreneurs, small business and growing businesses succeed with their business dreams.

This week, all over the world, businesses, universities and thought leaders in the business community are celebrating the power of the entrepreneur. As Tim Berry, the president of Palo Alto Software will tell you, in this time of economic difficulties it’s important to get back to the things that are important. Back to the things that work. The basics. The ABC’s of business.

The Business in General blog and Bplans.com will be bringing you video’s, articles, tips, special offers and a webinar on how to take your business back to the fundamentals.

If you’re starting a business or growing your business, we’re going to hopefully touch on a topic you are interested in.

We’re kicking off the week with Tim Berry hosting a webinar. Registration is closed for “Business Planning: Back to the Fundamentals” webinar at this point, but we will be posting portions of it all week long. Look for more information on that later today.

Thanks for stopping by, and if you have any suggestions or comments, I want to hear them. Please get in touch with me at hello (at) paloalto.com

Have a great week everyone!

‘Chelle Parmele
Social Media Marketing Manager
Palo Alto Software

Are You in Cost-Cutting Mode?

Interesting article today on Businessweek.com about the importance of recognizing your business costs and getting them under control now verses later, when it could be too late:

“…by recognizing the problem early and making moderate reductions, small firms can avoid more severe cuts later on, financial experts say. Companies that ignore warning signs can erode their profits with rising costs, and those that borrow to meet those costs can wind up insolvent.”

How many of you are looking at your personal or household budgets and cutting expenses? Change vacations plans? Did you dump those magazine subscriptions that you don’t need?

Why wouldn’t you do the same thing at your business?

The answer is, you would! No question. Right?

Now, here’s the next question. Are you being smart in your cuts, or are you looking at the highest costs and slashing them without really looking down the road and seeing what the cut is going to do to you later on? How many of you immediately shut down your advertising campaign? Canceled all your trade show appearances? Eliminated a position or two on your staff?

Let me say this again. Cutting your business costs now verses later is a good idea… but making sure you make the right cuts is going to make the difference between having a strong and functioning business and a “just hanging on” business down the road.

You are in business now because you made smart choices. Keep that up. Pull open your budgets, study your cash flow, your planned vs actuals, your forecasts. Adjust them for the good, the bad and the really really ugly. Be brutal in your projections and then look at your costs.

Make a plan. A good plan.

Now is not the time for guess work and hasty decisions. You can’t afford it.

‘Chelle Parmele
Social Media Marketing Manager
Palo Alto Software

Have you signed up for the Back to the Fundamentals webinar with Tim Berry? There’s still time! Register Right Now by clicking this button Logo for Back to Fundamentals webinar

Business 101

There’s a lot of talk in the media and the blogsphere about the economy and how businesses will be reacting to the climate. Many are guessing there will be layoffs coming in the next several months. PR and Marketing departments are tightening their belts and some companies are cutting those departments altogether. Pretty scary times. But they don’t have to be.

If you look carefully, you’ll find a small but very vocal group of business advisers and business owners who are being smart and not reacting blindly to what is happening in the world.

They’re sitting down with their budgets, their management teams and consultants and really looking at what needs to happen to ensure their businesses survive.

If business is slowing down, what are you doing to ensure your customers keep coming back? If your competitor slashed their advertising budget, isn’t this the time for you to add a couple more budgeting dollars to pick up where they’ve left off? That expensive marketing tool or reporting system that costs you thousands of dollars a month - have you checked to see if there’s a low cost alternative that does pretty much the same thing?

Don’t doom your business by reacting too strongly to what’s going on. Sit down and make good decisions about where your money is being spent and where it will do even more good in the future.

Please join us November 17th, 2008 for a special webinar by Tim Berry on the importance of going Back to the Fundamentals of business.

Sign up for Tim Berry’s Webinar!

Palo Alto Software - Items of business

Taking a little time out here to make a couple announcements:

1)  We had a bit of an issue with our blog and some of you were not getting any of the blog posts in your RSS feeds for a while. We’ve fixed that and you should be able to see all of them now. We apologize for the rush of posts all at once, but hope you enjoy all the great “new” content you missed! Things should be smooth sailing from here on out.

2)  We’re going to be participating in the Global Entrepreneurship Week, November 17th-23rd. We’re getting all the specifics put together, but I’m going to give you a sneak peek!

Keep checking back for more details and some outstanding articles and posts all centered around getting back to the basics of your business. (If you’re interested in attending Tim Berry’s webinar on the 17th, make sure to register soon! It’s first come first serve and space is limited! Click the picture for more information.)

3) Palo Alto Software’s product Email Center Pro has released version 2.0!   Internally, several Palo Alto Software employee’s are participating in a “solidarity experiement” where we’ve all committed to … well, I’ll let Jason tell you all about it. Head over to our Dead-Simple Software blog to read all about the things we’ve decided to give up or do in the coming weeks.

That’s it! That wasn’t so bad now, was it?

‘Chelle Parmele
Social Media Marketing Manager
Palo Alto Software

Boost your Business 2008 - Forbes.com

The 2008 Forbes.com Boost Your Business competition is nearing it’s final deliberations. Next week in New York City the final five finalists will present their business plans–including how they intend to invest the prize money to boost their prospects–to an expert panel of judges. One of those expert judges is Palo Alto Software’s own Tim Berry.

According to the Forbes.com Boost your Business blog: In addition to next week’s presentations, each finalist also must submit two written business plans: a full-length plan (20 pages max), that only the judging panel can see, and a condensed 3-page version which will be posted–along with videos of the presentations–on Forbes.com during the final voting period in November.

Palo Alto Software sends their good wishes and congratulations to all the finalists of the Boost your Business competition.

‘Chelle Parmele
Social Media Marketing Manager
Palo Alto Software

Free Book Giveaway - 3 Weeks to Startup

3 Weeks to Startup by Tim Berry and Sabrina ParsonsTo celebrate the new release of the book 3 Weeks to Startup by Tim Berry and Sabrina Parsons, the Business in General blog is giving away three copies of the book signed by the authors.

Eliminate the exhausting, time-consuming legwork involved in traditional startup plans, and instead fast track your business using a wealth of online tools and services. Berry and Parsons help you build your business step by step, including establishing your business plan, making your business legal, financing your venture, hiring your staff and more-using online tools and resources at every stage.

Discover how easy it is to reach your dream of opening your own business faster than you ever thought possible. Let the countdown begin-you’re just 3 weeks away from opening the doors to your new business!
If you’d like to enter to win a free book written by the founder of Palo Alto Software, Tim Berry, and the CEO of Palo Alto Software, Sabrina Parsons-  just email hello@paloalto.com with your name.

And to make this interesting, include a paragraph, no less than 100 words, of the business you always dreamed of starting but never did.

I’ll keep this offer available until Thursday at 9am, Pacific Time Zone.

‘Chelle Parmele
Social Media Marketing Manager
Palo Alto Software

Bumpy ride ahead

We are having our home’s old bathroom remodeled. We were at the plumbing supply business with our general contractor, looking over and choosing our fixtures and accouterments.

When we got to the toilet paper holder I commented on the infamous, incomprehensible, inability of guys to replace the empty TP core with a new full roll. After all, the spindle is pretty simple. A two-piece nested-sleeve, telescoping cylinder with an internal reciprocating spring. Just like a basic shock absorber on a car or truck or mountain bike!

Now, one of the characteristics of higher cognitive function is the ability to deduce a general principle from a specific instance and then apply that general principle to new situations. Since almost every guy I’ve ever met knows about shock absorbers, I just don’t understand how they seem incapable of applying that understanding to the daily encounter with the mysterious, inscrutable TP holder.

I suggested that we should make this similarity apparent to all men. My contractor threw up his hands in mock horror. “You can’t do that! You’d put the shock absorber industry out of business and we’d all be driving bouncing, banging cars on a real bumpy ride.”

Now, humor aside, I suggest that your business plan is the shock absorber for your business. Build it, develop it, and every single month review your plan to see if what you thought would happen actually occurred. Use your plan to continue your planning as you go along every month, adjusting your business’ goals and outlooks to your real world experience. Use your plan to develop “what-if” scenarios, from newly paved to detours, and that living plan becomes a shock absorber, cushioning your business as it dips into the potholes, encounters the unexpected obstacles, and dodges the roadkill of daily operations.

In today’s economy your business plan must become an integral part of your company’s suspension and running gear. Don’t become one of the wrecks of businesses littering the shoulders of the highway of commerce. Plan now or you’ll be shocked by the bumpy ride.

Changing my name to Banks

This latest round of government bailout of big industry reminds me how history seems to repeat itself.

Tom Paxton wrote the song, I’m Changing My Name to Chrysler in 1980, after the U.S. government bailed out auto maker Chrysler Corporation, some 18 years before it was merged with Daimler-Benz. Here’s a short excerpt from the lyrics.

I am changing my name to Chrysler
I am going down to Washington D.C. …

…If you’re a corporate titanic and your failure is gigantic
Down to congress there’s a safety net for you…

… So when they hand a million grand out
I’ll be standing with my hand out
Yes sir I’ll get mine

Click here to listen to a performace of the song by Arlo Guthrie.

Other bailouts have helped Lockheed, Penn Central Railroad, New York City, and Continental Illinois National Bank. And so it continues with the current AIG rescue and $700 billion bank bailout attempt.

After the current bailout bill failed to pass the House of Representatives, Indiana congressman Mike Pence warned that the bailout ran counter to the principles of American government, (recent history notwithstanding).

“Economic freedom means the freedom to succeed and the freedom to fail,” Pence said.

Now, that’s not news to some businesses in the United States. The potential and “freedom to fail” is a reality, a constant care for the millions of small- and medium-sized businesses that form the basis and lifeblood of our daily lives, in every town across the country.

You won’t see national rescue bills being put forward for local restaurants, muffler repair shops, shoe stores, or book shops. Nope. Sorry. We are on our own. And short of all of us changing our names to Banks and heading off to D.C. to lobby for hand-outs, our recourse is to plan for our future, including how to weather our financial storms.

And I mean serious, concerted planning, on a frequent and ongoing basis. Planning cannot be a simple once-a-year budget exercise any longer. If you haven’t looked at your business plan, your marketing plan, and your cash flow in the last month, you are way behind the curve. The economic environment is changing daily and you are out of date. By neglecting to plan you are exercising your freedom to fail.

You have the freedom to succeed! Plan on it!

Steve Lange
Senior Editor
Palo Alto Software