Startup Advisory — Business Plan

A business plan that opens doors, not just drawers.

A compelling business plan is more than a compliance document — it is a strategic roadmap for your own team and a credibility-builder for banks, investors, and partners.

Banks<br> Loan Approvals

Investors<br> VCs, Angels & Grants

Partners<br> Strategic Alliances

Strategy<br> Leadership Clarity

What Is This Service

A business plan that does real work

A business plan outlines your strategy, market opportunity, operational structure, financial roadmap, and growth path. It serves simultaneously as a strategic compass for your team, a funding instrument for investors and lenders, and a credibility signal to potential partners and enterprise customers.
  • A 20–40 page written document covering market analysis, competitive landscape, operational plan, and CA-built financial projections — built for banks, investors, or government grant applications.

  • Tailored for your specific audience — bank submissions emphasise cash flow and repayment certainty, while investor versions lead with market size, unit economics, and scalability.

  • Doubles as a strategic clarity tool for your own team, forcing rigorous thinking about every part of the business before you sit across from a lender or investor.

The hard truth: Most business plans are written to satisfy a requirement — a bank’s checklist, a grant application, a partner’s request. They sit in a drawer. A plan built with financial rigour and a clear strategic thesis does the opposite: it sharpens the thinking of the team that wrote it, and signals credibility to everyone who reads it. Avaron builds plans that do both.

What Investors Look For

The 10 questions every deck must answer

# Investor's Question Slide
1What problem do you solve?Problem
2How does your solution work?Solution
3How big is the opportunity?Market
4Why will you win?Why Us
5What's the business model?Revenue
6Is there real traction?Traction
7Who is the team?Team
8Where are you going financially?Financials
9Who is the competition?Competitive
10How much and for what?The Ask
How Avaron Adds Value

Why founders choose Avaron

Quick Answers

Business plan questions we hear most

What's the difference between a pitch deck and a business plan?
A pitch deck is a visual presentation of 12 to 15 slides designed for a live investor meeting — it’s built for quick impact, not comprehensive reading. A business plan is a written document — typically 20 to 40 pages — that provides the detail behind the story: the full market analysis, the competitive landscape, the operational plan, the financial model with assumptions, and the team background. Banks and government bodies almost always require a full business plan. VCs primarily use the pitch deck for first conversations, but may request the business plan before completing diligence.
A well-prepared business plan with CA-built financial projections typically takes 10 to 15 working days from our initial briefing with the founders. The timeline depends on how quickly we can collect operational data, existing financial records, and your input on the market strategy. If you have an existing financial model or earlier draft, the timeline can be shorter. We recommend beginning the process at least three to four weeks before any bank submission or grant application deadline.
Most VCs will not read a full business plan in the early stages of their evaluation. They use the pitch deck and, if interested, the financial model. However, some angel investors — particularly individuals with domain expertise — do request a business plan before agreeing to a pitch meeting. More importantly, a business plan forces the founders to think rigorously about every part of their business. Founders who have prepared one answer due diligence questions with more confidence and precision than those who haven’t.
Not without tailoring. A bank’s primary concern is repayment certainty — it will focus on cash flows, collateral, promoter backgrounds, and existing revenue. An investor’s primary concern is return on capital — they will focus on market size, competitive moat, unit economics, and scalability. While the underlying business analysis is the same, the emphasis, the language, and the financial section need to be adapted for the specific audience. Avaron prepares business plans that are either built for a specific purpose or structured with dual-purpose flexibility, depending on your needs.
Our Process

From brief to board-ready in 10 days

Founder Deep-Dive
(Day 1–2)

We conduct a structured session covering your business model, target customers, traction to date, competitive landscape, and funding thesis. We extract what makes your story compelling.
Step 01

Narrative Architecture
(Day 2–3)

We build the story arc — the sequence of slides, the flow of logic, and the emotional hooks that turn an information deck into a conviction-building presentation.
Step 02

Financial Slide Integration
(Day 3–6)

Our CA team integrates the financial model into the deck — revenue projections, unit economics, burn rate, and use-of-funds — with every number traceable to underlying assumptions.
Step 03

Review & Refinement
(Day 7–10)

We share a draft, incorporate your feedback, and conduct a mock Q&A to anticipate the questions investors will ask. The final deck is investor-ready before it leaves our hands.
Step 04
What You Receive

Your complete pitch package

Business Plan

Need a business plan that works across every table?

Book a free 30-minute consultation. We’ll identify the critical gaps, and outline exactly what we’ll build together.