industry

Industry Aspects and Consideration for Your Business Plan

Everyday I speak with Entrepreneurs about their business, whether they are in the process of starting, buying, expanding their existing, or trying to survive the current economy, and I marvel at the Entrepreneurs that are able to understand the fundamentals of the industry their business are classified as a part of, but I am also dismayed at the Entrepreneurs that tend to overlook or ignore the importance of staying current with their industries trends, new technology, and shifting markets, especially the importance of gathering the most current Industry information as part of the Business Plan process.

The service industry fundamentally sells units of time or labor, and a service is therefore perishable since it is directly linked to time, and any excess labor capacity cannot be stored for later use as it must be used now or forever lost, a fact that is true because production and consumption cannot be separated.

Another strategic issue of a service based business involves the variation in quality that exists through the delivery of the service itself, since unlike a product where manufacturing processes can be tightly controlled to ensure certain tolerances of quality, and a service is based on the “difficult to standardize” nature of human behavior.

The last major attribute that makes service based businesses unique, is their intangibility since there are little if any physical characteristics to the output, which causes many marketing professionals to call this problem “selling the invisible.” Of course, there are many ways to make a service tangible with a little marketing imagination.

For a service based business plan you need to focus heavily on the issues including minimizing the problem of excess capacity and perish ability, determining the staffing levels you need to deliver your service, maximizing their delivery capacity, developing processes to minimize service variations and maximize service quality levels, determining how you will market your service effectively, since it can’t be pictured in an advertisement or displayed in a store, and determining which tangible cues will you use.

A retailer is an organization that purchases products for the purpose of reselling them ultimately to consumers, and the many times location may be the single most important factor in the consideration of what makes a successful retail business, since as they say in the retail industry, “location, location, location.” A business plan for a retail business must contain a thorough location analysis covering such issues as selling square footage, access, visibility, signage, costs, renovations, lease terms, available parking, traffic counts, area demographics, and so forth.

Emergence of new types of stores and expansion of product offerings by traditional stores have intensified retailing competition, and retail positioning involves identifying an under served market niche and serving the through a strategy that distinguishes the retailer from others in the mind of the consumer, and a retail business plan should thoroughly discuss its positioning strategy in the market place.

Store image refers to the physical elements in a store’s design that appeal to consumers’ emotions and encouragement to buy, while merchandising refers to the inventory mix a store will provide and how it is displayed out across the store’s floor plan, and the marketing section of a retail plan needs to discuss both the image and merchandising strategies that will be employed.

The last critical consideration a retail business plan should address is the inventory requirements, and you should detail how much inventory you have or will require in both cost and retail dollars. The retail industry usually works on several key inventory metrics including sales per square foot and inventory turns, which is the number of times the inventory walks off of the shelf in a year, and you should be aware of such metrics and how they are presented and in your business plan, since most trade associations collect and report such data.

In the manufacturing industry a supply chain is all the organizations that are responsible for bringing your products to market, and it might be shallow to say when a supplier sells raw material to a manufacturer which then sells direct to a consumer, or it may be deep to say when a sub-supplier provides a prime supplier with the parts who then sells to a manufacturer, to a wholesaler/distributor, to a retailer and so on. Understand that your business plan should discuss in detail, both your supply chain and any coordination and communication issues related to its management.

The competitive environment in manufacturing has made high product quality essential to success, and you should discuss any quality processes, programs, or certifications that you have or require, in order to successfully compete in the global market place.

With regard to materials and labor you should present a discussion in your plan about its supply and availability as well as how the cost will be controlled, and you should also present some details about what margins you are expecting, which is the calculation of taking price minus cost of producing your product.

Finally, how you sell your products and take them to market is obviously as important as how you make them, and be sure and don’t skimp on the marketing section and present only product production and manufacturing processes, as your discussion should include your sales and distribution strategy through such channels as sales agents, sales representatives, direct marketing tactics, distributors, or retailers. Make sure your plan discusses the pricing expectations that each channel member expects to realize, along with the associated costs, as the channels move from your business toward the consumer, and remember during the process that you are not only creating the information for potential lenders or investors, but for yourself as well, since it will be the beginning of your detailed operations and management procedures, and the information must be clear, concise and focused to increase the changes of achieving the goals you will set in the financial projections and feasibility section of the Business Plan.

Researching Your Industry

mkt-market-researchAn industry is a basic category of business activity and the turn industry is sometimes used to describe a very precise business activity (e.g. wind farms) or a more generic business activity (e.g. durable consumer goods), and if a company participates in multiple business activities, it is usually considered to be in the industry in which most of its revenues are derived.

Within any industry there are driving forces at play and best practice set in place and not only must you recognize these facts that most businesses plans require some sort of industry analysis including industry size (how big is the industry and how fast is it growing?), industry threats (what five or six industry trends most threaten our continued success?), barriers to entry (how hard is it to get into our business?), switching costs (how easy is it for a customer to change from one business to another?), and threat of substitute products and services (how big of a threat our products and services that could be substituted for ours, and what are they?).

Three the US Census Bureau, every business and industry category is placed into a numerical industry classification formally called the North American Industry Classification System (NAICS), and NAICS was developed jointly by the US, Canada, and Mexico to provide new comparability in statistics about business activity across North America, and knowing your NAICS code is helpful since most government and private sector secondary data is grouped according to this classification system.

To quickly find your NAICS code, visit www.census.gov/epcd/www/naics.html and enter a keyword or two as to what your business does, and you may then have to work through the returned results to find the category that best describes your primary business activity. Once you locate your primary NAICS code, click on the underlined number and the website will display the full description of your industry segment.

Once you have your NAICS code you can begin instantly researching your industry at the Census Bureau’s American Factfinder website located at www.factfinder.census.gov/servlet/BasicFactsServlet and look under the category heading labeled Economic Census where you will be able to instantly pull industry and geographic quick reports or more detailed statistical data concerning your industry.

mkt-howitworks_copyThe national data book contains a collection of statistics on social and economic conditions in the United States and selected international data are also included, and the Abstract is also your Guide to Sources of other data from the Census Bureau, other Federal agencies, and private organizations. An immense amount of industry data can be found in this reference, and you can research it online at www.census.gov/compendia/statab/.

Within most industries, you can find what are known as trade associations which are organizations that act as greenhouses for industry information and produce industry trade magazines, reports, and trade shows, and there are literally tens of thousands of trade associations in the US alone and there are basically two ways to track them down. The first is to visit your local public library and ask a reference librarian for the Encyclopedia of Associations, or visit the American Society of Association executives at www.asaecenter.org.

Outside of trade associations, there are few big producers of industry reports and information which include the US Office of Trade and Economic Analysis at www.ita.doc.gov/td/industry/otea/, the Bureau of Labor Statistics Guide to Industries www.bls.gov/oco/cg/cgindex.htm#A, and there are a number of online databases and industry surveys available through most libraries for doing industry related research including ABI/Inform Global’s Business Source Elite, Gale’s Business and Industry and InfoTrac databases, and Standard and Poor’s Industry Surveys.

Many industries put on annual or semi-annual tradeshows as forms were industry buyers and sellers can meet and do business together, and to find such tradeshows in your industry visit www.tsnn.com/.

To find suppliers for a particular industry, a great place to start is with The Thomas Register at www.thomasnet.com/ which lists over 170,000 manufacturers and distributors, and ReferenceUSA which can be found at most public libraries.

There are a few databases that record the valuation and sale of privately held businesses and industry transactions including Pratt’s Stats, BizComp’s, and DoneDeal’s, and though these databases are not free, most business appraisers have access to the data reports.

Business Plan – Industry Aspects and Considerations

bus-planningThe service industry fundamentally sells units of time or labor, and a service is there for perishables since it is directly linked to time, and any excess capacity cannot be stored for later use as it must be used now or forever lost, a fact that is true because production and consumption cannot be separated.

Another strategic issue of a service based business involves the variation in quality that exists through the delivery of the service itself, since unlike a product where manufacturing processes can be tightly controlled to ensure certain tolerances of quality, a services based on the difficult to standardized nature of human behavior.

The last major attribute that makes service based businesses unique is their intangibility since there are little if any physical characteristics to the output, which causes many marketing professionals to call this problem “selling the invisible.” Of course, there are many ways to make a service tangible with a little marketing imagination.

For a service based business plan you need to focus heavily on the following issues: Minimizing the problem of excess capacity and perish ability, determining the staffing levels you need to deliver your service, maximizing their delivery capacity, developing processes to minimize service variations and maximize service quality levels, determining how you will market your service effectively since it can’t be pictured in an advertisement or displayed in a store, and which tangible cues will you use.

A retailer is an organization that purchases products for the purpose of reselling them ultimately to consumers, and the location may be the single most important factor in the consideration of what makes a successful retail business, and as they say in the retail industry “location, location, location.” A business plan for a retail business must contain a thorough location analysis covering such issues as selling square footage, access, visibility, signage, costs, renovations, lease terms, traffic counts, area demographics, and so forth.

Emergence of new types of stores and expansion of product offerings by traditional stores have intensified retailing competition, and retail positioning involves identifying an underserved market niche and serving the segment through a strategy that distinguishes the retailer from others in the mind of the consumer, and a retail business plan should discuss its positioning strategy in the market place.

Store image refers to the physical elements in a store’s design that appeal to consumers’ emotions and encourage buying, while merchandising refers to the inventory mix a store will provide and how it is displayed out across the stores floor plan, and the marketing section of a retail plan needs to discuss both the image and merchandising strategies that will be employed.

The last critical consideration a retail business plan should address is the inventory requirements. You should detail how much inventory you have or will require in cost and in retail dollars. The retail industry usually works on several key inventory metrics including sales per square foot and inventory turns, which is the number of times the inventory walks off of the shelf in a year, and you should be aware of such metrics and how they are presented and in your business plan, as most trade associations collect and report such data.

In the manufacturing industry a supply chain is all the organizations that are responsible for bringing your products to market, and it might be shallow to say when a supplier sells raw material to a manufacturer which then sells direct to a consumer, or it may be deep to say when a sub-supplier provides a prime supplier with the parts who then sells to a manufacturer, to a wholesaler/distributor, to a retailer and so on. Your business plan should discuss in detail your supply chain and any coordination and communication issues related to its management.

The competitive environment in manufacturing has made high product quality essential to success, and you should discuss any quality processes, programs, or certifications that you have or require in order to successfully compete in the global market place.

With regard to materials and labor you should present a discussion in your plan about its supply and availability as well as how the cost will be controlled, and you should also present some details about what margins you are expecting, which is the calculation of taking price minus cost of producing your product.

How you sell your products and take them to market is obviously as important as how you make them, and don’t skimp on the marketing section and present only product production and manufacturing processes, as your discussion should include your sales and distribution strategy through such channels as sales agents, sales representatives, direct marketing tactics, distributors, or retailers. Make sure your plan discusses the pricing expectations that each channel member expects to realize as it moves from your business toward the consumer.

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