If you are enrolled in a course associated with this page, you are in a writing course, not a business course. Our focus is on good writing, well-designed documents, documents that accomplish their purpose, and documents that meet common expectations as to their content, organization, and format. A business plan is obviously an important application of writing and one that may contain substantial technical information about the business operations or products. That's why it's a good option for the final project in a technical- writing course.
You can write a business plan if you actually are trying to start a business or if you'd merely like to do some constructive daydreaming about a business you'd like to start. Beware, however, if you are just playing around with the business-startup notion: the business plan you write for this course must be every bit as serious, realistic, specific, factual, well-researched, and well-thought-out as a business plan for a real situation.
Business plans can be very large documents containing information that you may have no way of getting. Work with your instructor to reach an agreement on the scope of the business plan you write. Remember too that your instructor is probably not a professional business-startup consultant and probably won't be able to help you on the finer points of planning a business.
For this unit, CCH Incorporated has kindly agreed to let us link to its SOHO Guidebook: A Practical Guide to Starting, Running and Growing a Small Business. This guidebook contains a wealth of information; but, for the purposes of the business plan document, please study the following:
You'll probably have lots of questions for your instructor about what would work and how to construct your own business plan; contact hcexres@io.com.
The World Wide Web has other resources for people writing business plans: