- Legend Business
Business Plans That Get Investment: A Real-World Guide on How to Write a Business Plan
Key Metrics
- David Bateman
- Legend Business
- Paperback
- 9781785079320
- 8.9 X 5.9 X 0.4 inches
- 0.5 pounds
- Business & Economics > Business Writing
- English
Book Description
Your business plan: turn ten minutes of attention into investment.
'David's book is an invaluable resource for any entrepreneur seeking to raise funding. Based on years of experience, David shows how to keep things short and clear!' -- Thomas Hellmann, Professor of Entrepreneurship and Innovation, Sa�d Business School, University of Oxford
'Anyone interested in this subject should read this book, ' -- Tim Hames, Director General of BVCA (British Venture Capital Association)
The Business Plan is an essential tool for attracting an investor's attention. They receive hundreds of plans every week and spend no more than ten minutes on each one before deciding if it is of further interest. This means that the plan needs to be a short, snappy document that conveys the facts about your business quickly and clearly.
David Bateman's template has developed through years of successful deals and in just 15 slides, with just a few sentences on each, it provides everything an investor needs to know. No more long business plans full of text - this is a 'one-size-fits-all' solution avoids confusion and keeps it simple but successful.
Business Plans That Get Investment is a clear and comprehensive guide to writing a plan that turns those ten minutes of investor attention into major investment deals.
Author Bio
David Bateman is an Associate Professor of Government. His research focuses broadly on democratic institutions, including legislatures and political rights, and as well as on ideas and ideologies of democracy, race, and racism. He has published articles in Studies in American Political Development, the American Journal of Political Science, Public Choice, Perspectives on Politics, and The Forum.
His co-authored book, Southern Nation: Congress and White Supremacy after Reconstruction, examines the role of southern members of Congress in shaping national policy from the end of Reconstruction until the New Deal. His second book, Disenfranchising Democracy: Constructing the Electorate in the United States, the United Kingdom, and France, examines the concurrent expansion of political rights alongside mass disenfranchisement in these three countries. He is currently researching Black political and labor organizing in the early 20th century and its impact on US state-building and ideologies.
Source: Cornell University
Videos
Community reviews
Write a ReviewNo Community reviews