Describing Intellectual Property in Your Business Plan
Focus on the Benefits of and Applications of the IP: The
business plan should not discuss the confidential aspects of the
IP. Rather, the plan should discuss the benefits of the IP.
Remember that even the most amazing of technologies will not
excite investors unless it has tangible benefits to customers.
The business plan first needs to discuss the products and
services into which the IP will be integrated. It then must
detail the benefits that these products and services have to
customers and differentiate them from competitive products. When
applicable, it is helpful to include non-confidential drawings
and backup materials of the products and services in the
Appendix.
Focus on Customer Needs and the Relevant Market Size: The
business plan must also discuss how the benefits of the IP
fulfill a large customer need. To accomplish this, the plan
needs to detail customer wants and needs and prove that the
company's offerings specifically meet these needs.
Secondly, the plan needs to discuss the marketplace in which the
IP is offered and the size of this marketplace. Critical to this
analysis is determining the relevant market size. The relevant
market size equals a company's sales if it were to capture 100%
of its specific niche of the market. For example, a medical
device's market size would not be the trillion dollar healthcare
market, but rather the sales of all competing medical devices.
Focus on Competition and Competitive Differentiation: Your
business plan must also prove that your IP is better than
competitive inventions. In identifying competitors, note that
listing no or few competitors has a negative connotation. It
implies that there may not be a large enough customer need to
support the company's products and/or services. On the other
hand, should there be too many competitors, then the market may
be too saturated to support the profitability of a new entrant.
The answer -- any company that also serves the customer needs
that you serve should be considered a competitor.
The business plan should detail both the positive and negative
aspects of competitors' IP and products/services and validate
that your offerings are either superior in general, or are
superior in serving a specific customer niche.
Prove that you can Execute on the Opportunity: As importantly as
proving the quality of the IP and that a vast market exists for
its applications, the business plan most prove that the company
can successfully execute on the opportunity.
The plan should detail the company's past accomplishments,
including descriptions and dates when prior funding rounds were
received, products and services were launched, revenue
milestones were reached, key partnerships were executed, etc.
When a company is a complete start-up, and no milestones have
been accomplished, the plan should focus on past accomplishments
of the management team as an indicator of the company's ability
to execute successfully.
Results: Getting Investors to Sign the NDA: If you are able to
convince the prospective investor that the IP is integrated into
a product/service which yields real customer benefits in a large
market, then the investor will take the quality of the invention
for granted when reviewing the plan. Later, during the due
diligence process, the investor will review the actual
technology. At this point, a discussion regarding signing an NDA
would be appropriate.
About the author:
GT Business Plans has
developed over 200 business plans for clients that have
collectively raised over $750 million in financing, launched
numerous new product and service lines and gained competitive
advantage and market share. GT Business Plans is the sister site
of GT Venture Capital.