Site icon Startup Connection

How Poor Forecasting Can Sabotage Your Business Plan

business planHow to Avoid the Pitfalls!

Introduction

I met with a friend recently who shares my interest in launching and funding startups.  He told me an interesting story that resonated at many levels.  It went something like this:

Back in the 1980s, when he was seeking his first financing, my friend had lunch with a senior partner at one of Silicon Valley’s top venture firms.  During lunch, the VC paused, looked my friend, and said,

“There are three types of companies we end up investing in whether we like it or not:

The VC went on… watching my friend wonder which category his company might fit in to.

“Most of our portfolio companies end up in the first two categories — “The Dead and the Un-Dead”…  Nine out of ten, I’d say, and these are the ones we didn’t reject off-hand!  But, once in a great while, we’re lucky enough to  invest in a “Home Run” — a really great startup that helps us to absorb all of the losses from the others, and make a handsome return for our partners and for us.  That’s why I’m buying you lunch!”

The VC paused, then asked my friend, “But do you know what one thing all of these companies have in common?”  My friend put his fork down and shrugged his shoulders, waiting for the VC’s answer.

The VC smiled and took a deep breath…

“None of these entrepreneurs had the faintest idea about how to realistically forecast their company’s financial performance!”

“If I see another hockey stick forecast this week, I’m going to throw something at somebody.”
Exasperated Venture Capitalist

My friend learned from that lunch what I have also learned in my years of launching and helping fund startups — that few, if any, good investors believe the forecasts presented to them, due mainly to the fact that few entrepreneurs understand the importance of realistic forecasting.

In the words ahead, I will share with you some of the major ways poor forecasting can sabotage your business plan and your financing.  I will also share some of the lessons I have learned about how to avoid these pitfalls, and secure the financing you need to launch and grow your enterprise.

Forecasting: The Forgotten Part of the Plan

I frequently read detailed multi-page start up business plans with pages of description and financial detail of every line including details such as paper supplies and print ink.  However, one of the most important drivers of the plan — the forecast — is often comprised of a few paragraphs or less.  In point of fact, forecasting is often relegated to a minor role in the business plan, and often key elements are overlooked.  Examples include:

The process of giving the business plan forecast its deserved place is not easy.  This is so for many reasons, including:

Avoiding the Pitfalls of Poor Forecasting

So how does one develop a good forecast with little market data, no history and a brand new product or service?  My approach — developed over many years of experience — is to utilize a variety of time-tested tools, and then to develop a most likely scenario based on the best information available.

Before starting this process, you must learn to avoid what is generally called “confirmation bias.”  Here’s where things can easily go wrong in most forecasts and market testing.  It’s human nature:  we usually test to prove our hunches right.  We start our forecasting with a favored option and try to build a case around it.  We may deny this tendency, but it is all too common among hopeful entrepreneurs.  The result is that the less-favored alternatives usually get short shrift — and these are often the more probable scenarios.  The more that there is at stake in the test, the more susceptible we are to Confirmation Bias.

[pullquote]Never state that you have no competition. Such a statement means one of two things to investors: either your business sucks, or you haven’t done your homework and you don’t know your business. Even the most amazing disruptive game-changing plans have competition, if not now, then tomorrow. [/pullquote]Once you have addressed the pitfalls of your confirmation bias, it’s time to take an honest look at your market or markets.  Today it is easy to generate “market data” — it’s a keystroke away on the internet.  There is abundant market and census information on total markets, such as how many pizza parlors, on line apparel retailers, or fitness centers exist in the country, and, sometimes, even in a state or local area.  However such information is not always current or accurate, and even the best of market data can be too broad or generalized for your plan, which may target a narrow segment or area of a market or location.

Some suggestions for mediating this dilemma are:

Other key elements of realistic market assessments pertaining to your forecasts include:

A final word about Market Assumptions

The first stage in creating the sales forecast is to estimate Market Demand.  Market Demand for a product is the total volume that would be bought by a defined customer group, in a defined geographical area, in a defined time period, in a given marketing environment.

Once you have estimated the total market demand, you can estimate your company’s share of that demand:

Company Demand = Market Demand X Company’s Market Share

The final element in forecasting market demand is to look at future demand for your products or services.  Future demand is based on the growth of sales in the industry and changes in the market share.

Sales Forecasting

Accurately predicting future sales is perhaps the most difficult aspect of the forecasting process.  This is based on what management expects to happen to the company’s market share, coupled with the estimated demand for the company’s products or services at the proposed price points.

Specific sales forecasts can be based on a integrating a variety of information and efforts:

Conclusion

[pullquote]“Investors aren’t looking for specific revenue numbers or profit margin benchmarks. What they are looking for is a business strategy that makes good, practical sense. Angels would rather invest in a business with a reasonable shot of generating $20 million in sustainable revenues than the $100 million fantasy.”

Seasoned Angel Investor[/pullquote]While forecasting is never a precise science, there are numerous causes and efforts that can be used to mitigate the pitfalls and optimize the probability that your forecasting will support — not erode — your chances for successful financing:

Summary
Article Name
How Poor Forecasting Can Sabotage Your Business Plan
Description
One of the most important drivers of the business plan -- the forecast -- is often comprised of a few paragraphs or less. In point of fact, forecasting is often relegated to a minor role in the business plan, and often key elements are overlooked. Here's how to avoid that problem.
Author
Exit mobile version