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Setting up the project team

Process of writing a Business Plan

 

In order to write a successful business plan, the process we suggest might look as follows:

 

1. Make sure you know what support is available to you (who/when/where) and make good use of it!

2. Spend some time in your first meeting on getting to know each other and agreeing on how to approach the assignment. Read the BSP manual together for more tips and details.

3. Following the instructions you got during TPM, spend some time on defining your product.

4. According to the agreed roles and tasks, work out the chapters of the business plan and check with your project team members on progress and consistency every week.

5. Finalise the plan.

6. Prepare a presentation for prospective customers (buyers of your product) OR for prospective investors in your company.

Remember:

“Shoot for the moon. Even if you miss it you will land among the stars”.

 

“You look at any giant cooperation, and I mean the biggies, and they all started with a guy with an idea, doing it well” (Irvine Robbins, entrepreneur).

 

“The best way to have a good idea is to have a lot of ideas” (Linus Pauling, chemist).

 

“If you cannot say it simply and clearly, keep quiet, and keep working on it till you can” (Karl Popper, philosopher).

 

“Writing a business plan forces you into disciplined thinking if you do an intellectually honest job. An idea may sound great in your own mind, but when you put down the details and numbers it may fall apart” (Eugene Kleiner, venture capitalist).


Chapter 2 - The team, roles and tasks in the project plan

2.1 Why team work?

 

A lot of work will be done by the team or will be a result of what the team has agreed to do. Working in a team is an incredible learning opportunity and in this chapter we will give you some guidelines on how you might want to make this work for you.

There are three reasons why writing the business plan is done in a team. Now but also in your future job:

- There is a lot to do, more than an individual could deliver

- You will find that new problems come up all the time, a well performing team will sooner find the best solutions than an individual

- A team provides complementary skills by working together. Nobody masters all of the skills required individually

 

Therefore in this project the work of a well organized team is a very important element in the assessment, so make your team work !

Setting up the project team

 

A project group consists of 6 to 8 members and is formed based on diversity during the first training. Your project team is like a management team. Everybody brings in his or her individual qualities and skills, and together they can develop into a dream team. Questions you may answer in your team before getting started are:

1. Who are the members of your team and what distinguishes them in terms of background, education, qualities and experience?



2. What specific experience or background does the team possess that would be useful in realizing a business idea?

3. What experience or skills does the team lack?

4. What motivates team members? What demotivates them?

 

In your timetable you will see that three hours per week have been scheduled for meetings. Here the progress discussions are held, at which your project tutor is present. At these meetings all project team members must be present.

 

The discussions have a formalcharacter. You are free to assign roles the way you want, however, we recommend you to use the following roles;

1. The chairman: he/she is responsible for drawing up the agenda, running the meeting and making sure decisions are made.

2. The person taking the minutes: he/she is responsible for writing the minutes of the team meeting. Usually the minutes include the main points of the discussion and an action list.

 

The agendas and minutes have to be kept in a project file. To give everyone the opportunity to learn about project work we recommend you to rotate these roles. Make sure you give each other feedback on the way each team member leads the meeting!

 

 


The project plan

 

A project plan is a necessary first step in clarifying the outcome of the work, all the individual contributions to the outcome, and the process of getting there.

The project plan is the ‘basic document’ of the project team. It contains detailed information about your objectives and about how and when you want to achieve these. It is the first document to be compiled by the team. You can ask your tutor to check if it is realistic.

 

Below you will find a short description of the basic components of the project plan.

 

Project plan: Components Description
Objectives and activities Intended final result, problem definition, definition of research, stages of the project, research method, intended secondary (interim) and final products.
Timetable and distribution of activities Planning of activities (required reading, execution of the project, consultation with professionals, intended secondary (interim) and final products), who will do what?
Project organisation What are roles and tasks in the project and how is each role going to deliver to an agreed deadline? How is the communication organised, virtually as well as physically, what consultations does the team take part in.
Budget and time allocation Distribution of time and budget available.
Information Which information is supplied to whom and by whom at what point in time?
Evaluation of process and contributions How and how frequently are the project approach and the contribution of team members evaluated and assessed by the team? What if people are absent or do NOT perform up to standard?

 


Date: 2015-12-18; view: 973


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