Texas Investment Network

Business Plan Tips

What Investors Are Looking For In A Plan

Investors, whether angels or VC's, are looking for the same things when reading a business plan. They want to know how big the opportunity is, whether this is the right team to exploit the opportunity, who the competition is, what the risks are, and why they can expect this team to implement successfully. Your job in writing the business plan is to address these questions convincingly and clearly.

Emphasize Your Real Strengths

Highlight what your team brings to the table. If your business hinges on a particular competency (for example, understanding the procurement process), your plan will be more persuasive if one of your team members knows something about it and that is brought out in your plan. Rather than including generic resumes of team members, tailor the resumes to draw out the experience each member has that will make him or her a valuable contributor.

Get To The Point And Make It Clear And Comprehensive

Investors see many business plans. A 20-page plan which clearly lays out your business is far more likely to be read than a 100 page plan. Today, some entrepreneurs are using a 15 slide Powerpoint presentation. If your text is short and punchy, you won't need to repeat yourself, because the reader won't be bogged down keeping ten chapters in their head. Reading the same thing over and over, even if it's in different words, can get really tiring. The more you use brevity and give each concept a single home in your document, the more people will want to read it.

Write In Plain English

If you can't explain your idea in English, either you don't understand what you're talking about (What is a transaction enabled atomic journaling database server, anyway?) or you haven't simplified the idea enough. Think, revise, and try again.

Get Rid Of The Hype

Yes, we know you will be the "premier insert product category here of the Internet, achieving 99% market penetration with 60% customer retention in 3 months". Your product will reach "new heights in customer experience through the use of personalization and one-to-one profiling and customization". It will be "user friendly" because you will be creating a truly "ecstatic customer experience". It is a "quantum leap forward" in the marketplace for product category here. Um, yeah. Believe me, we've read it before. About a dozen times today, in fact. (And by the way, the phrase "quantum leap" really doesn't mean anything.) Stick to a tight, simple explanation of your idea. Convince your reader you'll be the best because your idea is the best, not because you can string a dozen buzzwords together.

Use Quantifiable Information

In each section, back up your assertions with solid facts. Even if you are a new venture and cannot give specific figures on the performance of your business, quote figures for the industry or your competitors. These real figures carry more weight than your assumed projections and give more reality to your plan.

Choose A Huge Market

Especially in the internet world, investors are looking more at the market than at the detailed specifics of your financials. Choose a market that is big enough to be an obvious good opportunity. A business which targets teenage girls who listen to music and has a reasonable chance of capturing 90% of the girls that are online is a huge opportunity. A business which targets net-savvy SAAB mechanics who need prosthetic limbs is not.

Texas Investors

Texas > Austin

The investor is a natural person whose individual gross income (excluding that of spouse) exceeded $200,000 in the last two calendar years, and who reasonably expects individual gross income exceeding $200,000 in the current calendar year; or for such periods, the combined income of the investor with spouse exceeded and is expected to exceed $300,000. Has net worth in excess of $1,000,000, or had and expects to have a gross income (not including spouse's income) for the last two years and the current year in excess of $200,000, or for such periods, had and expects to have all gross income including that of a spouse in excess of $300,000.

$100,000 to $1,000,000

Texas > Dallas

Individual Investor with an MBA in Strategy and Marketing. Background is CPG Brand Management but have experience advising on multiple industries. Open to be silent or partially hands-on.

$5,000 to $20,000

Texas > Houston

I am single and 34 years old. I live in Houston. I am an experienced energy industry individual investor looking for equity investments and drilling deals. I am currently an executive in an upstream Oil and Gas company. I am looking for a passive investment. I trust that the people I invest with know their company or opportunity better than I do.

$50,000 to $3,000,000

Texas > South Houston

Petroleum Geologist working in the Oil & Gas industry in Houston, TX. I have a BSc in Geology from Sam Houston State and a MSc in Geology from Missouri S&T. I am looking into get into diversifying my investments where I can generate passive income. I currently have invested in an oil and gas well. I can be hands on or silent varies on product and my expertise.

$0 to $50,000

Texas > The Woodlands

Represent 5th Avenue Acquistions and Venture Capital and have access to funding sources that can fund most deals

$1,000,000 to $500,000,000

Texas > Georgetown

42 year old entrepreneur with investment capital for generating cashflow, not for engaging in political discourse. Currently running a social media company with 6M+ subcribers on YouTube, 2M+ on Instagram, and 1M+ on Facebook and TikTok. Located in central Texas/Austin area.

$5,000 to $100,000

Texas > Georgetown

Construction project manager. Motivated investor located in central Texas.

$1,000 to $150,000

Texas > Bowie

Educated investor with backgrounds in Oil/Gas Drilling, Financial Services, Securities Trading, Government Operations and Corporate Management. Looking to enable growth and add value both directly and indirectly.

$250 to $250,000