Topic 1: Business fundamentals - how does planning support successful business creation?
Business planning for a new venture - the purpose and components of a business plan (executive summary, business description, market analysis, marketing plan, operations plan, financial plan), feasibility analysis, and the role of planning in reducing the risk of business failure
A focused answer to the QCE Business Unit 1 dot point on business planning. The purpose and components of a business plan, feasibility analysis, and how planning reduces the risk of new-venture failure, with worked Queensland and Australian examples.
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What this dot point is asking
QCAA wants you to explain why a new venture should plan before it trades, describe the components of a business plan, and show how feasibility analysis reduces the risk of failure. Unit 1 is about business creation, and planning is the bridge between an idea and a trading business. Short-response and extended-response items frequently ask you to justify the value of planning or to outline what a plan should contain for a given scenario.
The answer
What a business plan is and why it matters
A business plan is a formal written document that states the goals of a proposed business and the strategy for achieving them. It does two jobs.
- Internal discipline. Writing the plan forces the founder to test assumptions, quantify costs, set measurable objectives and sequence the start-up tasks. The act of planning often exposes flaws in the idea.
- External persuasion. Banks, investors and grant bodies read the plan before committing finance. A credible plan is often a precondition for funding.
Components of a business plan
| Component | What it covers |
|---|---|
| Executive summary | A one-page overview of the venture, written last but placed first |
| Business description | The product or service, the structure, the vision and the objectives |
| Market analysis | Target market, market size and trends, customer needs, competitor analysis |
| Marketing plan | The marketing mix and positioning to reach the target market |
| Operations plan | Location, suppliers, production process, equipment, staffing |
| Financial plan | Start-up costs, break-even, cash-flow forecast, projected profit, funding sought |
The executive summary is the section most often read in full, so it must stand alone and make the case quickly.
The financial plan is the section finance providers scrutinise most closely. It typically includes:
- start-up (establishment) costs;
- a break-even analysis showing the sales volume at which total revenue equals total cost;
- a cash-flow forecast (often monthly for the first year), since profitable businesses still fail when they run out of cash;
- projected profit and loss.
Feasibility analysis
A feasibility analysis is conducted before or alongside the plan to test whether the idea is genuinely viable. It examines four dimensions.
- Market feasibility. Is there real, sufficient and sustainable demand? Who are the competitors?
- Financial feasibility. Can the numbers work? What is the break-even, and how much capital is needed before the business is self-funding?
- Operational feasibility. Can the product be produced and delivered at the required quality and scale?
- Legal feasibility. Are the required licences, the chosen business structure, and the regulatory obligations manageable?
How planning reduces the risk of failure
A large proportion of new businesses fail within their first few years. Common causes include inadequate demand, undercapitalisation, and poor cash-flow management. Planning and feasibility work address each of these on paper, where mistakes are cheap.
- Demand problems surface during market analysis, before a lease is signed.
- Undercapitalisation surfaces in the financial plan, prompting the founder to raise more capital or scale back.
- Cash-flow timing problems surface in the cash-flow forecast, prompting an overdraft facility or revised payment terms.
Planning does not guarantee success, but it converts unknown risks into identified, costed risks that can be managed or avoided.
Examples in context
Example 1. Who Gives a Crap pre-launch crowdfunding (Melbourne, 2012). The founders ran an Indiegogo campaign that required pre-orders to reach a funding target before the first product shipped. This functioned as a real-world feasibility test of market demand: the campaign confirmed there was enough willingness to pay before any large production commitment was made. The validated demand and the funding then fed the financial and operations sections of the business model.
Example 2. A Brisbane food truck business plan. A founder planning a Brisbane food truck would size the lunchtime CBD and event-circuit demand (market analysis), confirm council permits and food-safety registration under the Food Act 2006 Qld (legal feasibility), forecast that the truck reaches break-even at roughly a set number of meals per trading day (financial plan), and secure suppliers and a commissary kitchen (operations plan). Each section maps to a specific risk the lender wants addressed before approving an equipment loan.
Try this
Q1. State two purposes of a business plan. [2 marks]
- Cue. Internal: forces the founder to test assumptions and set measurable objectives. External: persuades banks and investors to provide finance.
Q2. Describe three components of a business plan and explain what each contributes. [6 marks]
- Cue. Market analysis (confirms demand and maps competitors); financial plan (break-even, cash-flow forecast, funding need); operations plan (location, suppliers, production process). Each contributes a piece of the viability case.
Q3. Explain how feasibility analysis reduces the risk of business failure. Use an example. [4 marks]
- Cue. Feasibility tests market, financial, operational and legal viability before money is committed; problems are found cheaply on paper. Example: a feasibility study revealing a regional gym catchment is too small to reach break-even lets the founder relocate or abandon before losing capital.
Exam-style practice questions
Practice questions written in the style of QCAA exam questions on this dot point, with worked answer explainers. The year tag is the paper they imitate, not the source.
2023 QCAA5 marksExplain the purpose of a business plan and describe three components it should contain for a new Queensland small business.Show worked answer →
A 5-mark answer needs the purpose plus three clearly described components.
- Purpose
- A business plan is a formal written document that sets out the goals of a proposed business and the strategy for achieving them. It serves two audiences. Internally, it forces the founder to test assumptions, set measurable objectives and sequence the start-up tasks. Externally, it is the document banks and investors read before committing finance, so it must demonstrate that the venture is viable and the founder credible.
- Component 1: market analysis
- Identifies the target market, its size and growth, customer needs, and the competitors. For a Brisbane cafe this would size the local catchment, profile the customer (commuters, students), and map nearby competing cafes.
- Component 2: marketing plan
- Sets out the marketing mix (product, price, promotion, place) and the positioning the business will pursue. It links the offer to the identified customer need.
- Component 3: financial plan
- Projects start-up costs, a break-even point, cash-flow forecasts and projected profit. This is the section finance providers scrutinise most closely because it shows whether the venture can repay borrowings.
Markers reward a clear statement of purpose (internal discipline plus external persuasion) and three correctly described components.
2022 QCAA4 marksExplain how conducting a feasibility analysis can reduce the risk of failure for a new business.Show worked answer →
A 4-mark answer needs a definition of feasibility analysis plus the mechanism by which it lowers risk.
Feasibility analysis tests whether a business idea is viable before significant money is committed. It examines market feasibility (is there genuine demand?), financial feasibility (can the numbers work, what is the break-even?), operational feasibility (can the product be produced and delivered?) and legal feasibility (are licences, structures and regulations manageable?).
How it reduces risk. A large share of new businesses fail in the first three years, frequently because of inadequate demand, undercapitalisation or poor cash-flow planning. Feasibility analysis surfaces these problems on paper, where they are cheap to fix or to walk away from, rather than after the founder has signed a lease and bought stock. For example, a feasibility study for a regional Queensland gym might reveal the catchment population is too small to reach break-even, allowing the founder to abandon or relocate the idea before losing capital.
Markers reward the definition (a viability test across market, financial, operational and legal dimensions) and the risk-reduction mechanism (problems found early and cheaply).
Related dot points
- External business environments and the PESTEL framework - political, economic, social, technological, environmental and legal factors - and their influence on business creation in Australia
A focused answer to the QCE Business Unit 1 dot point on external business environments. The PESTEL framework applied to Australian business creation, with worked examples from Atlassian, Who Gives a Crap and a Queensland mining-services scenario.
- Business structures - sole trader, partnership, company (Pty Ltd, Ltd), trust - and the implications of each for liability, taxation, capital raising, regulatory compliance and ownership transfer
A focused answer to the QCE Business Unit 1 dot point on business structures. The four main Australian structures (sole trader, partnership, company, trust), their implications for liability, taxation, capital raising, regulatory compliance and ownership transfer, with worked Queensland and Australian examples.