Episode 0186
Summary
A person, Speaker 1, expresses frustration with their current job and declares their intention to quit and start their own company, believing that writing a business plan will be a simple task. Speaker 2 then thoroughly explains the complex and detailed requirements of a comprehensive business plan, covering an executive summary, company description, goods and services, market analysis, strategy and implementation, and financial analysis. Overwhelmed by the extensive details, Speaker 1 decides against starting a business and chooses to remain in their old job to avoid the hassle.
Transcript (Click timestamp to jump)
I've had it. I'm done working for a company that is taking me nowhere.
So what are you going to do? Just quit?
That's exactly what I'm going to do. I've decided to create my own company.
I'm going to write up a business plan, get some investors, and start working for myself.
Have you ever written off a business plan before?
Well, no. It can't be that hard. I mean, all you have to do is explain your business, how are you going to do things and that's it, right?
You couldn't be more wrong. A well-written business plan will include an executive summary which highlights the idea of the business in two pages or less.
Then you need to describe your company with information such as what type of legal structure it has, history, et cetera.
Well, that seems easy enough.
Wait, there's more! Then you need to introduce and describe your goods or services. What they are and how they're different from competitors.
Then comes the hard part: a market analysis. You need to investigate and analyze hundreds of variables. You need to take into consideration socio-economic factors from GDP per capita to how many children on average the population has.
All this information is useful so that you can move on to your strategy and implementation stage, where you will describe in detail how you will actually execute your idea.
Jeez, is that all?
Almost. The most important piece of information for your investors will be the financial analysis. Here you will calculate and estimate sales, cash flow, and profits. After all, people will want to know when they will begin to see a return on their investment.
Uhm, I think I'll just stick to my old job and save myself all the hassle of trying to start up a business.
Summary
The audio is a podcast episode from 'English Pod' discussing the intricacies of creating a business plan. It features a dialogue between two speakers: one, a frustrated employee planning to start his own company, and the other, a friend who meticulously details the complex requirements of a well-structured business plan, covering everything from executive summary and company description to market analysis, strategy, implementation, and financial projections. Overwhelmed by the extensive process, the aspiring entrepreneur decides to stick with his current job. The hosts then analyze key business terms like 'business plan,' 'investor,' 'executive summary,' 'socioeconomic factors,' and 'GDP per capita,' and delve into idiomatic expressions like 'write up a business plan,' 'return on investment,' and 'save yourself the hassle.' The episode concludes with a debate on whether a business plan is always necessary, with the hosts emphasizing its value for clarifying goals and objectives.
Transcript (Click timestamp to jump)
Hello everyone and welcome back to English Pod. My name is Marco.
My name is Catherine and today we have an upper intermediate level lesson for all of you.
That's right, we're going to be talking business on this occasion on English Pod, but specifically about planning a business.
Right, so before a business opens, a lot of planning has to happen. That means people will decide what kind of a product they want to sell, what kind of a market they want to sell to, etcetera.
So that is the focus of today's lesson. Let's take a listen to the dialogue for the first time and we'll be back in a minute to talk about what's going on.
I've had it. I'm done working for a company that is taking me nowhere.
So what are you going to do? Just quit?
That's exactly what I'm going to do.
I've decided to create my own company. I'm going to write up a business plan, get some investors and start working for myself.
Have you ever written off a business plan before?
Well, no.
It can't be that hard. I mean, all you have to do is explain your business, how are you going to do things and that's it, right?
You couldn't be more wrong. A well-written business plan will include an executive summary which highlights the idea of the business in two pages or less.
Then you need to describe your company with information such as what type of legal structure it has, history, etcetera.
Well, that seems easy enough.
Wait, there's more!
Then you need to introduce and describe your goods or services, what they are and how they're different from competitors.
Then comes the hard part, a market analysis. You need to investigate and analyze hundreds of variables.
You need to take into consideration socioeconomic factors from GDP per capita to how many children on average the population has.
All this information is useful so that you can move on to your strategy and implementation stage, where you will describe in detail how you will actually execute your idea.
Jeez, is that all?
Almost. The most important piece of information for your investors will be the financial analysis. Here you will calculate and estimate sales, cash flow, and profits.
After all, people will want to know when they will begin to see a return on their investment.
Um, I think I'll just stick to my old job and save myself all the hassle of trying to start up a business.
All right, we're back. So the guy wanted to open up a business, but his friend explained that it's not so easy and gave a lot of interesting words and phrases there.
He did, he seemed a little naive, like he didn't really know how much work is involved in opening a business.
Exactly. So I think we should take a look at some of the words used on language takeaway.
The first word is the heart and soul of the process before you open a business, it's the business plan.
All right, so the business plan, as you said, it's a noun. And it's basically a document that explains what's going on in the business.
Exactly, it's a, it's a paper that you write about the business that you want to open and it's a plan.
So, as the name says, you have to tell what you will do, how much money you will spend, how much money you will need, you know, because if you're asking people for money, they want to know where the money will be spent if it's going to be spent on wise decisions.
Exactly. And as you mentioned, so you show this business plan maybe to a bank, but also maybe to an investor.
That's right. So investor is our next word. It's another noun, but this noun is a person. A person is an investor if he or she gives money to someone else and expects more money to come back.
Right. So a person that's starting out a business maybe has enough money himself to open up a business, but sometimes you need extra money so you look for investors, people who are interested in giving you money.
For example, I have a cupcake company. I want to sell cupcakes to people and I need $1,000. So Marco, do you want to be an investor? Do you want to invest some money?
Yes, for sure. A cupcake company, that sounds great.
I know, but what happens if I don't sell cupcakes? That's the problem for you because you have made a risky investment.
That's right. So that's what happens with investors. But now if you want to attract the attention of your investors with your business plan, I think part of the most important aspects of this plan is the executive summary.
A summary is usually an outline of the important points of a paper or document.
So in this case I could say, um, Catherine's Cupcake Company will sell delicious cupcakes of 10 different flavors to um the market of five-year-olds to 55-year-olds. People will love them. She has a great secret recipe and she plans to triple her investments by next year.
Right. That's exactly it. So if an investor reads the executive summary, which shouldn't be more than two pages long, you can pretty much get the idea of what the business is about. So if you want more details, you have to read the rest of the business plan, but mainly with the executive summary you can more or less know what it's all about.
Exactly. So a summary, like I said, is something that should be short and it should give you all of the most important information about something.
Exactly. And well, they were talking more in-depth about, you know, analyzing things and doing some research. And among those things, the girl mentioned the socio-economic factors.
Okay, when I said we're going to um sell cupcakes for my company to people between the ages of 5 and 55, um we need to analyze, we need to look at those, there's socio-economic factors.
Socio comes from the word social, it means um where in society they are, they're upper class, middle class or lower class. Economic means how much money do they make? Do they make $10,000 a year or $100,000 a year?
And so, the, the kind of people we want to sell my cupcakes to, um will be, will change according to their socio-economic factors.
That's right. So as you mentioned, socio comes from the word social or from society. So you're analyzing these factors from society.
And uh, well, part of these factors is the GDP per capita. So we have two different words there, an acronym, GDP.
GDP, Gross Domestic Product, okay? That might seem confusing because gross means different things at different times. But um, in this case, domestic means our country. So within a country, all of the products added up together.
Right. And gross is basically that. Just all the products added up together without taking into consideration any other thing. So the GDP is basically all the goods and services produced in a country within a given time.
And what about per capita though?
So per capita comes from Latin. Per means for or each, and capita is a head. So, um, this is per person.
So GDP per capita means how much, how many goods and services are made divided by the number of people in that place.
Exactly. So you, you probably have these uh, these indicators in your country or your own language as well. Um, but that's basically it and the acronym is gross domestic product.
And just to explain a little bit, if you see this in Wikipedia or in an encyclopedia, um normally a very low GDP per capita is $500 US dollars. And a high one would be $35,000.
$35,000, yeah. And that's usually per year, right? Because you, um, that's usually how it's taken into consideration, the time is a year.
All right. So those are the words that we have for you on language takeaway. Now, why don't we move on to a couple of different phrases on fluency builder?
Okay, so this important first phrase Marco has to do with our last first phrase. Uh, we had a business plan. So what do you do? You write up a business plan.
Right. And that's a common way of saying to write or to create, to work on a business plan, to write up.
Right. So it's uh, it's something that we say that's very colloquial, something that is very spoken and uh, I can't explain why we say it, but you'll sound very fluent if you say I'm going to write up a business plan or why don't you write up a business plan?
Right. So it would be correct to say, I'm going to write a business plan or I have to write a business plan. But if you use this phrase, I'm going to write up a business plan, it just, it's more fluent, right? It's just more native-like.
All right, and our next phrase is a return on investment.
Okay, so earlier we talked about investors. The money that they invest is called an investment. Okay, these words are all very closely related.
And um, when Marco decided to give money to my cupcake company, uh he, he expects the money to come back um, and he expects more actually to come back than what he put in.
So that's called a return on investment, the money that's the difference. So if he gives me $1,000 and I give him back $1,500 in a year, he made $500. That means it's a good return on his investment.
Right. So that's the, that's the term that we use, a return on investment to, so you don't say to return on investment, you say a return on investment.
Exactly. It's a thing, it's a number, it's a quantity, it's something you can count.
Right. And well, in the end after seeing that this uh business plan is not so easy, the guy said, you know what? I'm not going to quit my job and just save myself the hassle.
What's the hassle?
The hassle. That's a that's an interesting word. So if I'm going to save myself the hassle, a hassle is like the problem or the, the hard work that it involves.
It's a lot of trouble.
So I was going to cook some dinner tonight, but I'm going to save myself the hassle of going to the grocery store and buying it and cooking it by just ordering food.
Right. So that's a good example. Instead of doing all the work of cooking, you just save yourself the hassle, pick up the phone and get food delivered to your house.
Right. And the word we change here, you can say save myself, save yourself, save hisself. So you change that pronoun.
The pronoun, exactly. So you can save yourself the hassle or I'm just going to save myself the hassle.
Okay, so that's about it for fluency builder. Let's listen to today's dialogue one more time and we'll be back in a minute to talk about business.
I've had it. I'm done working for a company that is taking me nowhere.
So what are you going to do? Just quit?
That's exactly what I'm going to do.
I've decided to create my own company. I'm going to write up a business plan, get some investors and start working for myself.
Have you ever written off a business plan before?
Well, no.
It can't be that hard. I mean, all you have to do is explain your business, how are you going to do things and that's it, right?
You couldn't be more wrong. A well-written business plan will include an executive summary which highlights the idea of the business in two pages or less.
Then you need to describe your company with information such as what type of legal structure it has, history, etcetera.
Well, that seems easy enough.
Wait, there's more!
Then you need to introduce and describe your goods or services, what they are and how they're different from competitors.
Then comes the hard part, a market analysis. You need to investigate and analyze hundreds of variables.
You need to take into consideration socio-economic factors from GDP per capita to how many children on average the population has.
All this information is useful so that you can move on to your strategy and implementation stage, where you will describe in detail how you will actually execute your idea.
Jeez, is that all?
Almost. The most important piece of information for your investors will be the financial analysis. Here you will calculate and estimate sales, cash flow, and profits.
After all, people will want to know when they will begin to see a return on their investment.
Um, I think I'll just stick to my old job and save myself all the hassle of trying to start up a business.
So it was pretty interesting that he wanted to quit his job and just, you know, set up a business, but actually many people say that business plans are unnecessary.
Really? Do these people have lots of money and they don't need investors or?
I think the problem is that there are many books out there that give you clear examples of companies, Fortune 500 companies that started out without a business plan.
So I think uh many people take this as a, well, you know, a rule, like, well, they didn't need one or it's not really necessary or why should I write up a business plan?
Well, I'm not an entrepreneur and I'm not a business person, but my feeling is that uh a business plan is as much for investors as it is for yourself. It helps you clarify your goals. It helps you um explain your objectives to your future colleagues. And I think it's just a really good way to map out the first year of a business because it, it tends to a lot of businesses fail in that first year. So I think this is a really important step.
Yeah, exactly. So it's very interesting. We've talked a little bit about business here, but we would like to know your ideas or your comments or any other suggestions that you have about this topic or any topic on English Pod. So why don't you send us a comment or a personal message. We are at Englishpod.com and we'll see you guys there.
Bye everyone. Bye.
Bye.
Summary
The audio is a vocabulary lesson featuring a male narrator and a female speaker. The narrator introduces segments, while the female speaker pronounces vocabulary words and phrases such as "organization of the business," "legal structure," "to execute," "financial analysis," "return on investment," and "hassle." For each term, an example sentence illustrating its usage is provided. Emotions range from neutral to happy when discussing positive financial outcomes and angry when expressing frustration about additional responsibilities.
Transcript (Click timestamp to jump)
The English pod audio review.
Listen to the meaning, then say the vocabulary word.
Organization of the business.
Legal structure.
To put into effect, carry out.
To execute.
Reports on financial stability and profitability.
Financial analysis.
Profit made from one's investment.
Return on one's investment.
A great deal of trouble, difficulty, nuisance.
Hassle.
Let's try that faster.
Profit made from one's investment.
Return on one's investment.
To put into effect, carry out.
To execute.
Reports on financial stability and profitability.
Financial analysis.
A great deal of trouble, difficulty, nuisance.
Hassle.
Organization of the business.
Legal structure.
Now say the word and hear it in a sentence.
Legal structure.
The legal structure of a business includes proprietorship of the business, whether it be one person, a partnership, or a company.
Legal structure.
When he wrote up his executive summary and considered the type of legal structure, he decided that he would need to get liability insurance.
Legal structure.
When they presented their business plan, they highlighted the legal structure of the business, which they considered to be innovative.
To execute.
Having looked over the business plan one more time, the partners agreed that it was time to execute their plan.
To execute.
The execution of the new marketing technique would begin in the new year.
To execute.
The captain of the ship decided that it was time to execute plan B.
Financial analysis.
A financial analysis is not only performed when a business is starting up, but also throughout the lifetime of the business.
Financial analysis.
The management of a business will consult the financial analysis to make sure the business is making profits and all the finances are in place, as well as deciding where to spend money to improve the business.
Financial analysis.
When the financial analyst presented his financial analysis, he highlighted that the business was making 10 times the profits it was making at the same time last year.
Return on one's investment.
I got a huge return on my investment with that company.
Return on one's investment.
In my experience, investors are fickle and change loyalties very quickly, depending on how often and how much return is made on their investment.
Return on one's investment.
This company is fast becoming a big name in the industry, so I would suggest investing in them. It is pretty much guaranteed you will get a good return on your investment.
Hassle.
My boss wants me to take over my co-worker's responsibilities on top of my own during her sick leave. It is going to be such a hassle!
Hassle.
I'm going to save myself the hassle of going to court and just pay her the damages.
Hassle.
I hope taking care of my dogs while I'm away won't be too much of a hassle for you.
The English pod audio review.