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Old_Meets_New_in_the_Web_Store_Business_Plan
| Old Meets New in the Web Store Business Plan
E-commerce may be revolutionizing the way the world does
business, but it shouldn’t change your approach to writing a
business plan. Whether you’re starting a Web store from scratch
or taking an existing outfit online, the basic elements of your
business plan will be no different from a traditional
small-business plan.
Those basic elements, according to the Small Business
Administration, are a description of the business, a marketing
plan, a management plan and a financial plan. Consider each
element in the context of a Web store and you’ll develop a
business plan that can’t lose. Here are some tips to get you
started:
Business Description Define the products and services you’ll be
selling online and evaluate your strengths against online and
offline competition. Describe your Web store content — the
information on your site that merchandises your product or
service. Exactly what kind of content do you expect to provide,
and how will it relate to your product or service?
Marketing Plan Clearly define your target customers, and define
the advertising and sales plans required to reach them. As you
formulate your marketing strategy, consider the online surfing
and shopping habits — as well as the general usability concerns
— of your customer base. For example, what Internet technologies
(browser brands and versions, connection speeds, etc.) do your
customers probably use? Do they want community features, such as
message boards and live chat? Are they open to “push” marketing,
such as e-mail promotions and newsletters? (Find out more by
visiting www.workz.com/attract/home.asp.)
Management Plan Identify the key players who will plan, build
and maintain your online operation. Don’t forget to include
personnel in charge of your back-end systems, such as customer
service (check out www.workz.com/manage/cs.asp), order
fulfillment, warehousing, and shipping. Determine what tasks
will go to existing staff and what tasks you will outsource to
consultants, so your business plan clearly states where these
responsibilities will lie.
Financial Plan Decide what technical functions are necessary to
your Web site and research the costs of delivering those
functions. You can use a turnkey solution to get your site up on
the Internet (such as AOL or Yahoo! Store), or you can pay for
technical expertise and bring these functions in-house. (Try
www.workz.com/build/vendors/host.asp.)
Once you’ve determined your technical requirements, calculate
how far your existing capital will go and then decide whether to
seek additional capital investment. If you’ve been thorough in
developing the rest of your plan, you ’ll be able to project
income versus expense based on estimated site traffic and
visitor-to-order ratios (the number of visitors compared to the
number of buyers on a site). Your investors will require this
type of forecasting.
Remember the old saying, "The more things change, the more they
stay the same." E-commerce strategy combined with a traditional
small-business format is the winning formula for your Web store
business plan.
About the author:
David Johnson is the founder, president and director of
workz.com. He is a lifelong entrepreneur, small-business expert,
and Internet pioneer. He decided to create a trusted resource of
objective how-to information to help other small businesses.
Because of David's experiences, workz.com continues to provide
answers and solutions to the overwhelming issues and challenges
facing small businesses on the Web.
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