Posts Tagged ‘Pizza Business’

How to effectively use a business plan

What do you do with your old business plan? Do you dust it off and use it, or do you throw it into the trash? What ever gave you the idea that you knew enough about business to have tackled such a choree? These two years later, you are not going into a car-dealership business, but have decided to open up your own pizza shop. Writing full time isn’t paying your bills. How can you convert your business plan to now fit your new plans? Very carefully, but there are areas that, broadly speaking, will be the same. A license will be required, so check out to get this, whether a franchise or an independent little pizza business.

Check out the Small Business association for help in converting your plan into an obsolete pack of papers, to a guideline for success. Read about the business of selling pizzas. What you cannot afford not to do is to ignore your balance sheets, and your cash flow statement. It will take a lot of money just to stay afloat for a year or so, so be sure you will have the money for this. This is critical.

Plan, plan, plan, now that your dream of owning your own business is a reality. The map to your success could very well be your dusty old business plan. It will at least remind you how to start writing a new one, should this be necessary. Personally, I think a pizza business, with a new angle that is, sounds like a better than a car-dealership.

While adjusting your old business plans to meet the needs of your new business plan may sound like a waste of time, it will not be if you read it carefully. It will show you your flaws and your weak spots and help you make new plans that will take into consideration your new venture.

Yet, even if it is worthless, don’t despair; create another that is more reality based. If you have no idea how to go about writing a plan since the one you dusted off is of no use for you now, why not have the expert business planner help you. One online source, Business Plan Pro will sell you a standard version of a workable plan for $99.95; or a premier plan for $199.95. This will already have been written but since you will have to personalize it and make it your own, why not use this money and take a short business course.

Then another option is to contact the Small Business group, The SBA. Their website is impressive and their goals are to take young business entrepreneurs and teach them how to start a business and how to run their business. In fact from start to finish, they have you covered. They start out by helping you find a mentor. This seasoned business person will help you decide whether you are the kind of person that will most likely succeed in business. Then the will help you with financing and will show you how to buy a business or start one from scratch.

Then after you are up and running the business they will help you with any problems you have. And finally, after you have enough they will show you how to successfully close your business. Hopefully this will not happen until you have had a very successful business and now have grown too old to keep it going. Besides, you have put away enough money where you can comfortably retire.

EasyEntrepreneur Suffers Brand Blow

easyEntrepreneur Suffers Brand Blow
Posted on: 22/06/2006

Newly knighted easyEntrepreneur, Sir Stelios Haji-Ioannou, has been forced to concede defeat in a three-year legal battle against a local takeaway pizza business in North London.

The Times reports that Sir Stelios, whose interests include the easyPizza delivery franchise, had sought to prevent Karl Kahn from using the EasyPizza brand on his stores in Crouch End and Muswell Hill, claiming his own “easy” trademark had been breached. Mr Kahn, who opened his first store in 1997, was contacted by easyGroup three years ago and offered £400 for the EasyPizza name.
Mr Kahn remortaged his home and borrowed money to fund his legal costs of £135,000. This week, however, he is celebrating a victory for the Davids of this world after Sir Stelios decided to settle out of court.

Mr Kahn said: “There are thousands of other businesses with ‘easy’ in the name. They didn’t invent the word.” Sir Stelios said: “We wish him well in trading using this name inside the very narrow geographical territory.”
One wonders if Sir Stelios may be granted the title of Duke of York in next year’s honour list. The title comes with its own song – something about marching up a hill.

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