TL;DR: A business plan does not need to be a 50-page document — a clear one-page plan covering your market, revenue model, costs, and milestones is enough to start.
Many new founders treat the business plan as something you write for the bank or an investor, then never look at again. This is a missed opportunity. A well-made business plan is a thinking tool — it forces you to test your assumptions, identify where you could fail, and create a baseline against which you can measure your actual performance.
The requirement for a business plan varies by context. For registration purposes, no country requires a business plan. For a business bank account, most banks want to see one. For external investment, a more detailed plan is expected. For your own sanity and accountability, even a simple one-page version is valuable.
This guide covers what a business plan should include, how detailed it needs to be at different stages, and country-specific resources that new founders in the UK, France, Sweden, Australia, New Zealand, Canada, and the United States can use.
A business plan is a written document that describes your business — what it does, who it serves, how it makes money, and what it needs to reach its goals. It includes financial projections that test whether the model can work at scale.
A business plan is not:
The most useful business plans are living documents that founders refer to regularly, update as circumstances change, and use to hold themselves accountable to their own projections.
1. Executive Summary
A one-paragraph overview of the business. What does it do? Who does it serve? What is the market opportunity? This section is written last but placed first.
2. Business Description
What is the business? What problem does it solve? What is your product or service? What is your legal structure and country of registration?
3. Market Analysis
Who are your target customers? What is the size of the market you are targeting? Who are your competitors, and what do they do? What is your competitive advantage — why would customers choose you?
Be specific and realistic here. "Our market is everyone who uses the internet" is not a market analysis. "Our market is small accounting firms in the UK with under 10 employees, of which there are approximately 25,000 according to the ICAEW" is a market analysis.
4. Products and Services
Describe your offering in detail. What is included? What is the pricing? What is your cost to deliver? What is your gross margin?
5. Marketing and Sales Strategy
How will customers find you? How will you convert them? What channels will you use (online, word of mouth, direct sales, partnerships)? What is your customer acquisition cost and how does it compare to the customer lifetime value?
6. Operations Plan
How will the business operate day to day? Who will do the work? What suppliers do you depend on? What technology do you use? What are the key operational risks?
7. Management and Team
Who is running the business? What relevant experience do they have? If there are gaps in the team, how will they be filled?
8. Financial Projections
This is where you test whether the business model works. At minimum, include:
The financial projections do not need to be precise — they are projections, not certainties. But they need to be honest. If the numbers only work under wildly optimistic assumptions, the plan is telling you something important.
For personal use (accountability and planning): A one-page plan or a simple spreadsheet is enough. Update it monthly.
For a business bank account: Most banks want to see a short narrative (1–3 pages) plus 12 months of financial projections. Keep it simple and professional.
For a startup loan or grant: Government schemes and loan funds vary in their requirements. Check the specific requirements of the programme. In the UK, for example, Start Up Loans (https://www.startuploans.co.uk) has a specific application process.
For angel investment or venture capital: Investors see hundreds of plans. They want a clear problem, a compelling solution, an evidence-based market size, and realistic financial projections showing the path to strong growth. A 15–20 page plan plus a financial model is typical at this stage.
One-page business plan / Business Model Canvas: Excellent for early-stage thinking and internal use. The Business Model Canvas (https://www.strategyzer.com/canvas/business-model-canvas) is a widely used template.
Traditional business plan (10–30 pages): Required by most banks and investors. Includes all sections above in full.
Pitch deck (10–15 slides): Used for presenting to investors. Usually accompanied by a separate financial model.
Use our free tool: Cost Calculator
Try it free →| Country | Business Plan Required for Registration? | Business Plan for Bank Account? | Key Resource |
|---|---|---|---|
| UK | No | Usually yes | https://www.startuploans.co.uk/business-support/business-plan-template/ |
| France | No | Usually yes | https://bpifrance.fr/nos-solutions/startup |
| Sweden | No | Usually yes | https://www.almi.se/globalassets/filer/mallar/mall-for-enkel-affarsplan.pdf |
| Australia | No | Usually yes | https://business.gov.au/planning/business-plans |
| New Zealand | No | Usually yes | https://www.business.govt.nz/planning/business-plans/why-write-a-business-plan/ |
| Canada | No | Usually yes | https://www.bdc.ca/en/articles-tools/entrepreneur-toolkit/templates-business-guides/business-plan-template |
| USA | No | Varies by bank | https://www.sba.gov/business-guide/plan-your-business/write-your-business-plan |
Most national business development agencies in these countries offer free business plan templates that are designed for their local banking and regulatory environment.
Once your business plan is in place, the next step is choosing your structure and registering. MmowW Scrib🐮 helps you prepare the registration documents efficiently.
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MmowW Scrib🐮 is a document preparation service, not a law firm. We do not provide legal advice. For investment decisions and strategic planning, consult qualified professional advisors.
Q: How long should my business plan be?
It depends on the purpose. For personal use, one page is sufficient. For a bank account, one to three pages plus financial projections. For investors, ten to twenty pages plus a financial model. There is no benefit to length beyond what is needed to make the case clearly and completely.
Q: Do I need a financial advisor to write my financial projections?
Not necessarily, but a qualified accountant's input significantly improves the credibility and accuracy of your projections. They can also identify tax implications and cost structures you may have overlooked. For complex businesses or investment-focused plans, engaging an accountant is strongly recommended.
Q: Can I use an AI tool to write my business plan?
AI tools can help with structure and drafting, but the underlying analysis — market research, competitive assessment, financial modelling — must reflect genuine research and your own judgment. A plan written entirely by AI without this foundation will not withstand scrutiny from a bank manager or investor.
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