Business Plan
Capital Costs
Capital and Goods Costs
In addition to the expense table, you'll also need to develop a capital
requirements table that depicts the amount of money necessary to purchase
the equipment you'll use to establish and continue operations. It also
illustrates the amount of depreciation your company will incur based on all
equipment elements purchased with a lifetime of more than one year.
In order to generate the capital requirements table, you first have to
establish the various elements within the business that will require capital
investment. For service businesses, capital is usually tied to the various
pieces of equipment used to service customers.
Capital for manufacturing companies, on the other hand, is based on the
equipment required in order to produce the product. Manufacturing equipment
usually falls into three categories: testing equipment, assembly equipment
and packaging equipment.
With these capital elements in mind, you need to determine the number of
units or customers, in terms of sales, that each equipment item can
adequately handle. This is important because capital requirements are a
product of income, which is produced through unit sales. In order to meet
sales projections, a business usually has to invest money to increase
production or supply better service. In the business plan, capital
requirements are tied to projected sales as illustrated in the revenue model
shown earlier in this chapter.
For instance, if the capital equipment required is capable of handling the
needs of 10,000 customers at an average sale of $10 each, that would be
$100,000 in sales, at which point additional capital will be required in
order to purchase more equipment should the company grow beyond this point.
This leads us to another factor within the capital requirements equation,
and that is equipment cost.
If you multiply the cost of equipment by the number of customers it can
support in terms of sales, it would result in the capital requirements for
that particular equipment element. Therefore, you can use an equation in
which capital requirements (CR) equals sales (S) divided by number of
customers (NC) supported by each equipment element, multiplied by the
average sale (AS), which is then multiplied by the capital cost (CC) of the
equipment element. Given these parameters, your equation would look like the
following: CR = [(S / NC) * AS] * CC
The capital requirements table is formed by adding all your equipment
elements to generate the total new capital for that year. During the first
year, total new capital is also the total capital required. For each
successive year thereafter, total capital (TC) required is the sum of total
new capital (NC) plus total capital (PC) from the previous year, less
depreciation (D), once again, from the previous year. Therefore, your
equation to arrive at total capital for each year portrayed in the capital
requirements model would be: TC = NC + PC - D
Keep in mind that depreciation is an expense that shows the decrease in
value of the equipment throughout its effective lifetime. For many
businesses, depreciation is based upon schedules that are tied to the
lifetime of the equipment. Be careful when choosing the schedule that best
fits your business. Depreciation is also the basis for a tax deduction as
well as the flow of money for new capital. You may need to seek consultation
from an expert in this area.
Create a Cost of Goods Table
The last table that needs to be generated in the operations and management
section of your business plan is the cost of goods table. This table is used
only for businesses where the product is placed into inventory. For a retail
or wholesale business, cost of goods sold--or cost of sales--refers
to the purchase of products for resale, i.e. the inventory. The products
that are sold are logged into cost of goods as an expense of the sale, while
those that aren't sold remain in inventory.
For a manufacturing firm, cost of goods is the cost incurred by the company
to manufacture its product. This usually consists of three elements:
1. Material
2. Labor
3. Overhead
As in retail, the merchandise that is sold is expensed as a cost of goods,
while merchandise that isn't sold is placed in inventory. Cost of goods has
to be accounted for in the operations of a business. It is an important
yardstick for measuring the firm's profitability for the cash-flow statement
and income statement.
In the income statement, the last stage of the manufacturing process is the
item expensed as cost of goods, but it is important to document the
inventory still in various stages of the manufacturing process because it
represents assets to the company. This is important to determining cash flow
and to generating the balance sheet.
That is what the cost of goods table does. It's one of the most complicated
tables you'll have to develop for your business plan, but it's an integral
part of portraying the flow of inventory through your operations, the
placement of assets within the company, and the rate at which your inventory
turns.
In order to generate the cost of goods table, you need a little more information in addition to what your labor and material cost is per unit. You also need to know the total number of units sold for the year, the percentage of units which will be fully assembled, the percentage which will be partially assembled, and the percentage which will be in unassembled inventory. Much of these figures will depend on the capacity of your equipment as well as on the inventory control system you develop. Along with these factors, you also need to know at what stage the majority of the labor is performed