How to Write a Business Plan

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134 | HOW TO WRITE A BUSINESS PLAN


replacement, so they won’t be covered
by the amounts you have written for
purchases resulting from your cost of
sales. Include those extra purchases
here.


  1. Other Cash items. Here is where you
    place any cash receipt or expenditure
    that is not covered in the Profit and
    Loss Forecast or elsewhere in your Cash
    Flow Forecast. For example, perhaps
    you anticipate an investment in your
    business in a few months and you need
    to show the positive cash infusion. Or
    you might plan to buy a new piece of
    equipment sometime down the road.
    If your total is negative, make sure you
    put brackets around it. Otherwise, your
    Cash Flow Forecast will be incorrect.

  2. Monthly Net Cash. Take a moment to
    review your work to make sure you
    have understood the cash flow effect of
    each of the entries and that they are all
    on the right lines. Make a final check to
    be sure that any negative numbers have
    brackets around them.
    Then add and subtract the various
    entries on the Cash Flow Forecast form
    to derive the monthly net cash for
    each of the 24 months. Positive cash
    numbers represent additions to your
    bank account, while negative cash
    numbers represent money you’ll have
    to add to the business. Remember that
    numbers with brackets around them
    are subtracted from the total and that
    numbers without brackets are added to
    the total.


If the monthly cash flow figure is a
negative figure, make sure you place
a bracket around it. Do that as you
complete each month’s calculations;
otherwise, you’ll forget which numbers
are positive and which are negative and
you’ll have to do all the arithmetic again.
Year Total. Add up each of the rows (lines
1 through 13). Enter the yearly totals
under the Year Total column. Check
your arithmetic by seeing if the total
monthly net cash figures add up to the
same figure as your yearly total. If your
answer is the same whether you add
vertically or horizontally, your math is
correct. If not, you’ve made a mistake
somewhere.

CAUTiON
Don’t use line 13 to check your math.
It won’t work in the second and later years
because those years start with a previous
balance.


  1. Cumulative Net Cash. This line shows
    how the monthly negative or positive
    monthly net cash numbers add across
    to derive the total cash required for
    working capital. Most businesses
    will show several months of negative
    cash flow followed by months of
    positive cash flow. By adding the
    monthly figures together, you’ll see the
    maximum negative cash—that’s the
    amount you’ll need for working capital.
    For month one, simply copy the net
    cash amount listed in line 12 for that

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