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How to Write a Business Plan Executive Summary That Sells Your Idea Here's an easy-to-follow outline to create an impactful business plan executive summary.
By Eric Butow
Key Takeaways
- The purpose of an executive summary
- Common mistakes to avoid
Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own.
This is part 4 / 9 of Write Your Business Plan: Section 3: Selling Your Product and Team series.
The first part of your plan that anybody will see, after the title page and table of contents, is the executive summary. This could be considered an expanded table of contents (in prose form) because it's more than an introduction to the rest of the plan. It's supposed to be a brief look at the key elements of the whole plan—and it's critical.
Executive Summaries Sell Ideas
The actual executive summary should be only a page or two. In it you may include your mission and vision statements, a brief sketch of your plans and goals, a quick look at your company and its organization, an outline of your strategy, and highlights of your financial status and needs. If you've ever read a CliffsNotes version of a classic novel, you get the idea. Your executive summary is the CliffsNotes of your business plan.
Related: Executive Summary
Labor over your summary. Polish it. Refine it. Ask friends and colleagues to take a look at it, and then take their suggestions to heart. If your plan isn't getting the response that you want when you put it to work, suspect a flaw in the summary. If you get a chance to look at another plan that was used to raise a pile of cash, give special scrutiny to the executive summary.
The summary is the most important part of your whole plan. Even if a plan is relatively short, it's difficult for most people to keep that much information in their minds at once. It's much easier to get your arms around the amount of information—just one or two pages—in an executive summary. Your plan is going to be judged on what you include in the summary and on how well you present it.
A good rule of thumb for writing an effective and efficient business plan is to avoid repeating information. Brief is better and clearer, and needless repetition may annoy some readers and confuse others. Take extra care when writing your summary. You'll be glad you did.
Related: How to Craft a Business Plan That Will Turn Investors' Heads
Ultimately, you want the executive summary to be as strong as possible because it is also the first thing people read in your plan, and we all know the power of a strong first impression. This is where you want to wow people and make them think. This is like the coming attractions, or trailers, at the movie theater. You want that trailer to be enticing and bring the audience members back to see the film. Likewise, you want your readers to want to read your plan.
Your Business Plan's Elevator Pitch
As Tim Berry writes in his article How to Write an Executive Summary : "The executive summary is like an elevator pitch. You're selling someone on reading your full plan while quickly summarizing the key points. Readers will expect it to cover certain areas of your business—such as the product, market, and financial highlights, at the very least. While you need to include what's necessary, you should also highlight areas that you believe will spark the reader's interest. Remember, you're telling the brief but convincing story of your business with this summary. Just be sure that you're able to back it up with the right details with the rest of your business plan."
Related: How to Write a Business Plan
When Should You Write Your Executive Summary?
Because the executive summary comes first in your plan, you may think you should write it first as well. Actually, you should write it last, after you've spent considerable time mulling over every other part of your plan. Only then will you truly be able to produce a summary of all that is there. Returning to the CliffsNotes analogy, it's impossible to summarize a book until the book is written.
Purposes of the Executive Summary
The executive summary has to perform a host of jobs. First and foremost, it should grab the reader's attention. It has to briefly hit the high points of your plan. It should point readers to questions requiring detailed responses to the full-length sections of your plan where they can get answers. It should ease the task of anybody whose job it is to read it, and it should make that task enjoyable by presenting an interesting and compelling account of your company.
The first question any investor has is, "How much?" followed closely by, "When will I recoup my investment?" Perceived risk and exit strategies are supportive information, and these in turn are supported by the quality of the management team and the proposed strategies.
Related: Why You Shouldn't Send Your Business Plan to Investors
It doesn't much matter whether you are presenting the plan to a family member, friend, banker, or sophisticated investors such as investment bankers or venture capitalists. They all need the same information. Concealing the amount and terms will only lessen your chances of successful financing.
How Long Should an Executive Summary Be?
Five minutes. This is how long an average reader will spend with your plan. If you can't convey the basics of your business in that time, your plan is in trouble. So make sure your summary, at least, can be read in that time and that it's as comprehensive as possible within that constraint. If you are using a deck, limit yourself to one slide and one minute of comments.
Related: How to Create a Business Plan Investors Will Love
Points to Include in an Executive Summary
A suggested format for an executive summary:
The business idea and why it is necessary. What problem does it solve?
- How much will it cost, and how much financing are you seeking?
- What will the return be to the investor? Over what length of time?
- What is the perceived risk level?
- Where does your idea fit into the marketplace?
- What is the management team?
- What are the product and competitive strategies?
- What is your marketing plan?
- What is your exit strategy?
If you can address each of these in two or three sentences, you will have a twenty to twenty-seven-sentence executive summary.
Company Description
If your company is complex, you'll need a separate section inside the plan with a heading like "Company Description" to describe its many product lines, locations, services, or whatever else it is that makes it a little too complicated to deal with quickly. In any event, you provide a brief description, no longer than a few sentences, of your company in the executive summary. And for many firms, this is an adequate basic description of their company. Here are some one- or two-sentence (mock) company descriptions:
John's Handball Hut is the Hamish Valley's leading purveyor of handball equipment and clothing.
Boxes Boxes Boxes Inc. will provide the people of the metropolitan area with a comprehensive source for packing materials, containers, and other supplies for the do-it-yourself move.
Salem Segway Witch Tours offers tourists the only Segway tours of the infamous home of the seventeenth-century witch trials.
Related: Turn Your Business Plan Into Money!
Optional Information
The following items are not a necessity in your business plan: mission statement and corporate vision. If you have honed either down to a clear and concise sentence, by all means, use it in your plan.
Mission Statement
A mission statement is a sentence or two describing the company's function, market, competitive advantages, and business goals and philosophies.
Many mission statements communicate what your business is about and should include a description of what makes you different from everybody else in your field. Mission statements have a place in a plan: They help investors and other interested parties get a grip on what makes your company special. A mission statement should be clearly written. Here are some (again, mock) examples:
River City Roadsters buys, restores, and resells classic American cars from the 1950s and 1960s to antique-auto buffs throughout central Missouri.
Captain Curio is the Jersey Shore's leading antique store, catering to high-quality interior decorators and collectors across the tri-state area.
August Appleton, Esq., provides low-cost legal services to personal- injury, workers' compensation, and age-discrimination plaintiffs in Houston's Fifth Ward.
Related: How to Use Your Business Plan Most Effectively
Corporate Vision
A mission statement describes the goals and objectives you could "reasonably" expect to accomplish. A small software company whose mission statement included the goal of "putting Microsoft out of business" would be looked upon as foolishly naive.
In a vision statement, however, just those sorts of grandiose, galactic-scale images are perfectly appropriate. When you "vision"—to borrow the management consultant's trick of turning nouns into verbs—you imagine the loftiest heights you could scale, not the next step or several steps on the ladder.
Does a vision statement even have a place in a business plan? You could argue that it doesn't, especially because many include personal components such as "to love every minute of my work and always feel I'm doing my best." But many investors deeply respect visionary entrepreneurs. So, if you feel you have a compelling vision, there's no reason not to share it in your plan.
Related: 6 Tips for Making a Winning Business Presentation
Extract the Essence
The key to the executive summary is to pick out the best aspects of every part of your plan. In other words, you want to extract the essence. Instead of describing everyone in your company, talk only about your key managers. Instead of talking about all your products, mention only the major ones or discuss only product lines instead of individual products. It's a highlight reel, so to speak.
Article Tools and Summarizing the Summary
Within the overall outline of the business plan, the executive summary will follow the title page. The summary should tell the reader what you are planning to do. All too often, the business owner's desires are buried and lost when the reader scrolls through. Clearly state what you are planning to do (your ideas) and what you are seeking in the summary.
The statement should be kept short and businesslike, ideally no more than half a page. It could be longer, depending on how complicated the use of funds may be, but the summary of a business plan, like the summary of a loan application, is generally no more than one page. Within that space you'll need to provide a synopsis of the entire business plan. Key elements that should be included are:
Financial requirements. Clearly states the capital needed to start or expand the business. Detail how the capital will be used and the equity, if any, that will be provided for funding. If the loan for initial capital will be based on security instead of equity within the company, you should also specify the source of collateral.
Related: The One-Paragraph Start-Up Plan
Business concept. Describes the business, its product(s), and the market it will serve. It should point out just exactly what will be sold, to whom, and why the business will hold a competitive advantage.
Financial features. Highlights the important financial points of the business including sales, profits, cash flows, and return on investment. Current business position. Furnishes relevant information about the company, its legal form of operation, when it was formed, the principal owners, and key personnel.
Major achievements. Details any developments within the company that are essential to the success of the business. Major achievements include items like patents, prototypes, location of a facility, any crucial contracts that need to be in place for product development, or results from any test marketing that has been conducted.
When writing your statement of purpose, don't waste words. If the executive summary is eight pages, nobody's going to read it because it will be very clear that the business, no matter what its merits, won't be a good investment because the principals are indecisive and don't really know what they want. Make it easy for the reader to realize at first glance both your needs and capabilities.
Related: The Main Objectives of a Business Plan
Owner of Butow Communications Group
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Everything you need to write a killer executive summary for your business plan
What is Executive Summary—and Why Should You Care?
Executive Summary is the first and most important section of a business plan, providing a snapshot of the overall plan with the aim to compel the reader to continue reading the full document by highlighting its most important components and strengths .
Keep reading for insider tips from a professional business writer on how exactly to write a captivating executive summary that will maximize the impact and success of your business plan.
You’ll discover:
- Why: Critical importance of an executive summary
- What: The key elements you need to include
- How: The best structure—length, layout and components
Importance: Why is Executive Summary Important in a Business Plan?
Executive summary is the most important part of a business plan because it is the first and only opportunity to grab readers’ interest as they review this section prior to deciding whether or not to read the rest of the document.
No matter how excellent your business idea, it is the executive summary alone that persuades a reader to spend more time with the plan to find out more about your venture.
Some financiers receive hundreds of business plans every month. Understandably, they do not read them all . Instead, they can tell in a couple of paragraphs if it is something they may be interested in.
The Executive Summary is so important, in fact, that some investors and lenders prefer to receive just the summary and financials before requesting the full business plan. So if you can hook your readers here, they will ask for more.
Similarly, senior decision-makers on many company or bank boards and committees will often read nothing else than an executive summary when approving a decision to back a business.
In other words, your Executive Summary is the first impression many readers will get of your business. Make sure it is a great one. Only a clear , concise , and compelling summary of your business right up front twill persuade readers to wade through the rest of the plan.
Contents: What Should an Executive Summary for a Business Plan Include?
Executive summary brings the separate parts of a business plan together to sum up what the business is, where it is going, why it will be successful – and why it is worthy of backing . Highlight the most important and impressive facts about the company , management , offering , market , strategy and financials .
When completed, your executive summary will answer these questions for your readers:
- What is your business all about ?
- What are the most compelling qualities?
- Is the business likely to succeed and why?
Executive summary is an introduction to your business, which provides a brief snapshot of your plan as a whole. To that end, concisely highlight the most important concepts and impressive features from each section of your completed plan, addressing the following areas:
Essentially, you should make it crystal clear to the that a compelling market opportunity exists for your product/service and demonstrate that your business is well-positioned to exploit it .
Remember to be brief and concise . Organize the information in a way that gives the best impression of your business to your target reader. Combine related topics if that improves the flow of the document.
If the readers of your executive summary conclude that the above elements exist in your business, they are likely to commit to reading the rest of your business plan.
So, let’s examine each of the key elements in more detail to make the reader excited about the potential of your business plan and interested to read further:
Mission Statement
Answer this question for your readers:
- What is your business on a mission to create and why?
Aim: Convince the reader that your basic business concept makes sense.
Give a concise overview of your business idea, purpose and goals. Summarize why you have created this company and what your business is all about in one or two sentences, but no more than a paragraph.
Products and Services
Answer these questions for your readers:
- What product(s) and/or service(s) does your business provide?
- What problems are you solving for your target customers and how?
- What makes your product/service different and compelling for the customers to buy?
Aim: Demonstrate to the reader that your product/service solves a real problem in the market and that the problem is worth solving.
Briefly describe the products and services your company provides and what problems you solve for your target customers, making the case for why your product will be successful:
Description:
List the products or services your company sells or plans to sell.
Problem & Solution:
Explain the need for the products or services:
- Problem: Summarize the problem your product/service solves and why it is worth solving. In other words, what is it that your customers need and cannot find elsewhere.
- Solution: Summarize how you will solve the problem that your customers face.
Value Proposition:
Outline why your product or service will be valuable to your customers and the advantages that will make it compelling enough for them to purchase.
Market Opportunity
- Who are your (ideal) target customers?
- Is there a real market demand for your product/service?
- What is the size of the market opportunity?
Aim: Convince the reader that large and compelling market demand opportunity exists for your product/service.
List the target market you intend to reach and explain why you chose it:
Target Market:
Provide a brief description of your ideal customers and how do they break down into recognizable types or segments.
Market Analysis:
Indicate that you have done thorough market analysis by providing a summary of your market research results, including:
- How many potential customers are there for your solution (target market)
- What proportion of the market your company can reasonably capture (market share)
- Forecast estimating what the future holds for the industry and market demand
Competitive Advantage
- Who are your competitors?
- How is the market currently divided?
- What advantages does your company have over the competition?
Aim: Convince the reader that your business has a significant competitive edge to succeed in your target market.
This section is where you describe the gap in your target market, how your solution can fill it, and the competitive advantages that will enable you to exploit this market gap.
Hence, include information about your competition and what differentiates your business:
Competitors and Market Distribution:
Who are you up against? What other options do your customers have to address their needs? Indicate the nature of your competition and how the market is currently divided.
Competitive Advantage:
What comparative advantage does your product/service have?
Show your conclusions on your company’s competitive position and why your company will be able to compete successfully. Remember to list any important distinctions, such as patents, major contracts, or letters-of-intent.
Unique Selling Proposition:
What unique selling proposition will help your business succeed?
What makes your solution better for your customers compared to the competition?
Is competition going to get tougher?
Summarize your conclusions on whether competition is going to intensify going forward.
Company Description
Company information:.
- Is the management team capable?
- What are the basic details of your business?
- What is the company’s current stage of development?
- What are some of the milestones you’ve met?
Aim: Convince the reader that your business has the right structure and capable management team in place to succeed.
Your goal is to demonstrate that you are well-positioned to exploit the market opportunity by highlighting the positive factors in your company’s management, structure and history.
Company Details:
Include a short statement that covers the basic company details, such as the company name, when your business was formed, the names of the founders and their roles, number of employees, business location(s), and legal status.
Stage of Development:
State whether your company is a startup or continuing business, when it was founded, how far along the product or service is in its creation, and if you’ve already made sales or started shipping.
Track Record:
- If you are an established business, provide a brief history of the company’s trading activity to date, including financial and market growth highlights.
- If you are just starting a business, you won’t have as much information as an established company. Instead, focus on your experience and background as well as the decisions that led you to start this particular enterprise.
Management:
Briefly describe the bios of the key members of your management team , particularly those of company founders/owners , as well as the key professional advisors .
What do they bring to the table that will position your company well to take advantage of the market opportunity and make the business a success?
Highlight management’s vision and passion , along with the relevant skills , experience , qualifications , subject-matter expertise , business acumen , industry connections and other capabilities as they relate to the venture.
Operations:
Showcase the key operational features that will give the business a competitive edge.
This could include anything from an advantageous location, through innovative manufacturing technology and processes, to preferential supplier and distribution agreements – and anything in between.
Outline the strategy to achieve the company’s goals and continuously strengthen its competitive position.
Next, indicate the keys to success that you intend to use in order to implement that strategy, such as:
- Marketing and Sales: Briefly describe the methods you will utilize to reach your target customers to market your offering and secure sales.
- Operations and Resources: Summarize the most important resources and operational features your company will deploy to implement its strategy.
Address your plans for where you would like to take your business in the future.
Spell out the objectives you have for the company, what you plan to do:
- Where do you expect the business to be in 1 year, 3 years, 5 years ?
- What are some of the key milestones you plan to meet?
- What are your long-term goals ?
- What is your potential exit strategy ?
Make an educated projection for the expected performance of your business, including:
- Sales volume and value
- Cash flow position
- Profitability
- Number of employees
- Number of locations
- Market share
- New products
Financial Forecast
Summarize the expected financial outlook and performance for your business, answering the following questions for your readers:
- How much do you expect to make in the first year of your business?
- What kind of growth do you expect to see in the following years?
- If you do not expect your business to be profitable , do you have a strategic reason for running at a loss?
- What are the key metrics that you need to watch?
- Will your backers (if any) be able to get their money back and when ?
- Are your financial projections realistic ?
In general, it is customary to indicate financial information for years one through three or five , depending on the requirements of the business plan reader. Typically, this includes Year 1 and Year 3 / 5 results; and Year 10 / long-term goals.
However, your readers can find the detail of the projected financials further on in the plan. In this section, only provide the highlights of your forecast and encourage the reader to keep reading to learn more about your company.
Funding Requirements
How will you fund your business to get it started and grow it to the next level?
- Is it already self-sufficient?
- Do you plan to invest your own money?
- Do you seek outside financing?
If the business does not require any outside financing, you can note that here or just remove this section from your plan altogether.
When you are using the business plan for financing purposes, explain how much money is needed, from whom, and how you will utilize it to grow your business, hinting at an exit opportunity:
- Existing Source of Funds: Include information about your current lenders and investors, if any.
- Funding Requirements: Indicate how much money you are seeking, from what sources, and perhaps even under what conditions.
- Use of Funds: Specify how the raised funds will be used.
- Exit Strategy: Hint at how the backers will get their money out, with the expected timing and returns.
Tips: How Do You Write an Executive Summary?
Writing an executive summary is arguably the most fun – and important – part of writing a business plan.
You have already completed all the research, thinking and writing about market demand, competition, strategy, operations and financials.
All that is left to do now is to summarize the key conclusions into a coherent narrative , answering the million-dollar question:
Why is your plan worthy of backing?
Here are 7 tried and tested tips to prepare a compelling summary of your business that will convince the readers to read through the rest of your plan:
Target Audience (Tip #1)
Ask yourself: “Who will be reading my business plan?”
Since the summary is what the reader reads first, and may be the only section read at all, you can significantly improve your chances of a positive reception if you know the answer to that question before you prepare your executive summary.
Remember, your reader is only going to spend a few minutes , or even seconds , on your executive summary. This is especially true if you are targeting busy investors or lenders for whom it is not unusual to review more than 1,000 each year.
Naturally, the readers are going to focus on the issues that interest and concern them most . If you understand their priorities, you will be better able to craft the summary to “push the right buttons”. For example:
- Bankers are likely to look for aspects of your business that minimize risk to make sure the loan is secure and they will get their money back.
- Investors are focused on aspects that maximize the potential of your company scaling significantly and rapidly, because they will receive a share of that success.
- Management may be interested in accessing new markets for the company.
Do your homework to discover the interests and concerns of your most likely business plan recipients, and then write and organize the summary in a way that most appeals to your target audience:
- Place the issues most important to the reader near the top of your summary.
- Order the sections in any way that gives the best impression of your business to your target reader.
- In the text itself, give more emphasis to those aspects that concern your reader most.
If you are not able to identify the specific person who will read your plan, just focus on the general type of a person that is most likely to receive it and their concerns.
However, it is not a good idea to tailor the executive summary for just one specific person or organization, especially if your plan is likely to end up in the hands multiple and/or unknown recipients.
To be on the safe side, target your summary to address general institutional concerns rather than individual preferences.
Insider Tips: Writing a Winning Executive Summary
Convey your enthusiasm (tip #2).
The Executive Summary enables the readers to quickly understand the highlights of your business and decide whether to commit more of their time to reading the full plan.
To that end, you need to motivate and entice the readers by your own optimism about how well-positioned your business is to exploit a compelling market opportunity, conveyed in a dynamic , positive and confident tone.
Write Executive Summary Last (Tip #3)
Your executive summary will be the last chapter of the business plan that you prepare.
Even though the executive summary always appears first in the completed document, it is usually crafted last after you have had a chance to carefully consider all key aspects of your business throughout the rest of the plan.
The executive summary is the place where you bring all your planning together and sum up the separate parts of your business proposal to provide an overall outline and highlight the strengths of your entire plan.
Therefore, you will find it much easier and faster to come back and produce this section once you have completed the rest of your business plan.
That way, you will have thought through all the elements of your business, work out the details, and be prepared to summarize them. This approach will not only increase the consistency and accuracy of the plan, but also help make it more compelling .
So, if you have not yet finalized the other sections of your plan, proceed to the next section, and return to the executive summary when you have completed the rest of your plan.
Once finished, the executive summary will become “ Chapter 1 ” of your business plan document.
Summarize Highlights (Tip #4)
A good summary contains highlights from all of the subsequent sections of the business plan.
To achieve that, select the key points from each section of your completed plan by summarizing conclusions you have reached in each area. Remember to focus only on the most important and impressive features of your business.
What sets your business apart from the competition? Early on in your summary, showcase your distinguishing qualities and make sure you describe your winning concept in a way that any reader can easily grasp .
Use logical writing to tell a story, freely changing the order of sections and combining related topics if that helps to improve the flow and make a good impression.
Make Each Word Count (Tip #5)
The executive summary provides a brief snapshot of your business, casting a spotlight on the most important facts and concepts from your entire business plan.
As a result, this section should be clear , concise and to the point. Make each word should count.
Avoid Jargon (Tip #6)
In case the summary read by people unfamiliar with your industry, avoid any technical jargon or provide sufficient explanatory notes .
Edit, Edit, … And Edit Some More (Tip #7)
By the time you reach the executive summary, you may be tired from all the planning and writing. However, remember that this really is the most important section of the business plan.
The best investment you can make is to spend sufficient time to perfect the summary, including ruthless editing . There are professional editors who can help you make it flawless.
Design: How Do You Design an Executive Summary?
Looks matter. Your business plan will be well researched, analysed and written, but it must also be well presented. While your plan will ultimately be judged on the quality of your business concept and strategy, you also want to make sure it gives the best first impression possible.
And nowhere is presentation more important than in the executive summary, because for all readers it will be the first page(s) they read – and some will read nothing else.
The key advice here is: Break it Up . Large, dense blocks of text intimidate readers.
Dividing the Summary text with paragraph headings, bullet points and white space makes the information on a page more inviting and appealing:
- Paragraphs: Break up the Summary into paragraphs that roughly mirror the sections of your business plan
- Brief: Keep each topic as brief as possible
- Subheads: Insert informative topic headings at the beginning of each paragraph to help readers’ quick comprehension
- Bullets: Use bullet points to highlight the most compelling information
- Numbers: Use numbers instead of words where appropriate
- Visuals: Include a (small) chart or graph if it helps to clarify an important point
- Spacing: Use white space to break up the text to make the page look less intimidating. Single space text, but leave an extra line of space between paragraphs.
Because you are limited to so few pages, it may seem counterintuitive to give up space for visual considerations, but these effective techniques make your Summary much more accessible to the business plan readers.
The way you prepare and present the executive summary is an indicator of your professionalism. A polished Summary sheds a favourable light on your business. A sloppy one works against you.
Length: How long is an executive summary?
The executive summary in a business plan should be no more than 2-3 pages in length, with 1 page being perfectly acceptable and often preferable. The advantage to the busy business plan reader is that they are able to skim through this short summary in a few seconds and read it in full in less than 5 minutes .
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