Every serious business in India needs a business plan — whether you’re pitching to investors, applying for a bank loan, registering under Startup India, or simply giving yourself a clear roadmap. But most entrepreneurs don’t know where to start.
This guide gives you a complete, step-by-step business plan template for India, with examples, what banks and investors actually look for, and a free downloadable format.
What is a Business Plan and Why Do You Need One?
A business plan is a written document that describes your business, your goals, your strategy for achieving them, and the financial projections to back it up. Think of it as a GPS for your business — it tells you where you’re going and how to get there.
When You Need a Business Plan in India
- Applying for a bank loan (MUDRA, SBI, HDFC) — banks require a detailed project report
- Applying for PMEGP, Startup India, or other government schemes — subsidy applications need a business plan
- Pitching to angel investors or VCs — investors want to see your logic and numbers
- Starting a partnership — a plan protects both parties by aligning expectations
- Strategic clarity — even if you never show it to anyone, writing a plan forces you to think clearly
Business Plan vs. Project Report: What’s the Difference?
| Feature | Business Plan | Project Report (DPR) |
|---|---|---|
| Primary audience | Investors, partners, internal use | Banks, government scheme authorities |
| Focus | Strategy, market, team, vision | Technical details, cost estimates, financial ratios |
| Length | 10–30 pages | 20–50 pages |
| Financial depth | 3-year projections, broad | 5-year projections, detailed ratios (BEP, IRR, DSCR) |
| When needed | Investor pitches, strategic planning | Bank loans, PMEGP, MUDRA subsidy applications |
For bank loans and government schemes in India, you’ll need a Detailed Project Report (DPR). For investors, a business plan or pitch deck. This guide covers both.
Complete Business Plan Template for India (Section by Section)
Section 1: Executive Summary (1–2 Pages)
Write this last — it’s a summary of the entire plan. It should cover:
- Business name and location
- What the business does (one clear sentence)
- The problem you solve and for whom
- Your unique advantage over competitors
- Funding required (if any) and how it will be used
- Key financial highlights (expected revenue Year 1, Year 3; breakeven timeline)
Example: “BakeMasters is a home-based artisan bakery in Pune targeting working professionals who want healthy, preservative-free baked goods delivered to their doorstep. We seek ₹3 lakh in MUDRA funding to scale production from 50 to 200 orders per day. Projected Year 1 revenue: ₹18 lakh. Expected breakeven: Month 8.”
Section 2: Company Description (1–2 Pages)
- Business name and legal structure (Sole Proprietorship / LLP / Pvt Ltd)
- Date of establishment (or proposed date)
- Business address
- Products or services offered
- Mission statement (1–2 sentences on WHY your business exists)
- Vision statement (where the business will be in 5 years)
- Founders’ background and relevant experience
Section 3: Market Analysis (3–5 Pages)
This is the most important section for investors and lenders. It proves you understand your market.
3a. Industry Overview
- Size of the industry in India (₹ value)
- Growth rate (e.g., “India’s home-baked goods market is growing at 15% annually”)
- Key trends driving growth (e.g., health consciousness, online ordering adoption)
- Source your data: IBEF, Statista, NASSCOM, industry reports
3b. Target Customer Profile
Define your ideal customer in detail:
- Age, gender, income level, location
- Their problem (what pain point does your product solve?)
- Where they currently buy what you sell
- What would make them switch to you
- How many such customers exist in your target area
3c. Competitive Analysis
List your top 3–5 competitors and honestly compare:
| Competitor | Strength | Weakness | Your Advantage |
|---|---|---|---|
| Competitor A | Established brand | Expensive, no delivery | 30% cheaper, home delivery |
| Competitor B | Wide range | Generic quality | Artisan, customizable |
| Competitor C | Low price | Poor hygiene reputation | FSSAI certified, transparent |
3d. Market Size (TAM / SAM / SOM)
- TAM (Total Addressable Market): The entire India-wide market for your product/service
- SAM (Serviceable Addressable Market): The portion you can realistically reach (your city, your niche)
- SOM (Serviceable Obtainable Market): What you’ll actually capture in Year 1–3
Section 4: Products and Services (2–3 Pages)
- Detailed description of each product/service
- Pricing (with justification — how did you arrive at this price?)
- Product/service development stage (idea / prototype / launched / scaling)
- Intellectual property (do you have any patents, trademarks, proprietary processes?)
- Suppliers (who supplies your raw materials? What are backup options?)
- Unit economics: cost to make/deliver one unit vs. price charged
Section 5: Marketing and Sales Strategy (2–3 Pages)
5a. Marketing Channels
How will customers find you? Be specific:
- Google Business Profile (free local search visibility)
- Instagram and WhatsApp marketing
- Word of mouth / referral program
- Google Ads (budget: ₹X/month starting Month Y)
- Partnerships (with complementary businesses)
5b. Sales Process
- How does a prospect become a customer? (step-by-step conversion funnel)
- What’s your average sales cycle length?
- What’s your closing rate? (1 in 5 inquiries converts = 20%)
5c. Pricing Strategy
Choose one:
- Cost-plus pricing: Cost of production + desired margin = price
- Competitive pricing: Price matching or slightly below/above competitors
- Value-based pricing: Price based on perceived value to customer (best for premium products)
5d. Customer Acquisition Cost (CAC) and Lifetime Value (LTV)
- CAC: How much does it cost to acquire one customer? (marketing spend ÷ new customers)
- LTV: How much does one customer spend over their lifetime with you?
- A healthy business has LTV ≥ 3x CAC
Section 6: Operations Plan (2–3 Pages)
- Business location and facilities (rented / owned, size, why this location)
- Equipment and technology required (list everything with costs)
- Production process (step-by-step, from raw material to delivery)
- Staffing plan (how many people, what roles, when will you hire)
- Key suppliers and vendor relationships
- Quality control measures
- Legal licences and registrations required (FSSAI, GST, Shop Act, etc.)
Section 7: Management and Organization (1–2 Pages)
- Founder profiles (qualifications + relevant experience)
- Organizational structure (who reports to whom)
- Key hires planned for Year 1 and Year 2
- Advisory board or mentors (if any)
- Professional services (CA, lawyer, consultant)
Section 8: Financial Plan (4–6 Pages) — Most Important for Banks
This is what banks and investors scrutinize most. It must be realistic and internally consistent.
8a. Startup Cost / Project Cost
List every single expense to launch the business:
| Item | Cost (₹) |
|---|---|
| Equipment / machinery | X |
| Interior / renovation | X |
| Initial inventory / raw materials | X |
| Legal registrations | X |
| Website and marketing setup | X |
| Working capital (3 months operating expenses) | X |
| Total Project Cost | X |
Use our free Business Cost Calculator to build this estimate quickly.
8b. Funding Plan
How will you finance the project cost?
- Own investment (promoter’s contribution): ₹X (typically 10–25% for bank loans)
- Bank loan / MUDRA loan: ₹X
- Government subsidy (PMEGP, etc.): ₹X
- Family / friends: ₹X
8c. Revenue Projections (3–5 Years)
Build from units sold × price per unit:
| Year | Units Sold / Month | Revenue/Month | Annual Revenue |
|---|---|---|---|
| Year 1 | 100 | ₹80,000 | ₹9.6 lakh |
| Year 2 | 200 | ₹1.6 lakh | ₹19.2 lakh |
| Year 3 | 350 | ₹2.8 lakh | ₹33.6 lakh |
8d. Profit and Loss Projection
For each year: Revenue − Cost of Goods Sold = Gross Profit. Gross Profit − Operating Expenses = Net Profit.
8e. Cash Flow Statement
Month-by-month cash in vs. cash out for Year 1. Banks want to see you won’t run out of cash.
8f. Break-Even Analysis
The month/year when total revenue equals total costs. Formula: Fixed Costs ÷ (Price per unit − Variable cost per unit) = Break-even units.
8g. Key Financial Ratios (For Bank Loans)
- Debt Service Coverage Ratio (DSCR): Net Annual Cash Accrual ÷ Annual Debt Repayment. Should be above 1.5
- Current Ratio: Current Assets ÷ Current Liabilities. Should be above 1.33
- Gross Profit Margin: Gross Profit ÷ Revenue × 100. Varies by industry
Section 9: Risk Analysis (1–2 Pages)
Show you’ve thought about what could go wrong — and how you’ll handle it. This builds credibility.
| Risk | Likelihood | Impact | Mitigation Plan |
|---|---|---|---|
| Key supplier fails | Medium | High | Maintain 2 backup suppliers |
| Demand lower than projected | Medium | High | Start small, validate demand before scaling |
| New competitor enters market | High | Medium | Build brand loyalty through quality and service |
| Regulatory change | Low | Medium | Stay updated with FSSAI/GST guidelines |
Business Plan for Bank Loan vs. Investor — Key Differences
| Aspect | For Bank Loan | For Investor |
|---|---|---|
| Focus | Repayment ability, collateral, financial ratios | Growth potential, team quality, market size |
| Format | Formal DPR with all financial statements | Concise pitch deck (10–15 slides) + business plan |
| Financial horizon | 5-year projections, monthly Year 1 | 3–5 year projections |
| Key metric | DSCR > 1.5, Current Ratio > 1.33 | Revenue growth, LTV/CAC ratio, TAM size |
| Tone | Conservative, risk-aware | Ambitious, growth-focused |
Common Business Plan Mistakes to Avoid
- Unrealistic financial projections: “We’ll capture 10% of India’s market in Year 1” destroys credibility. Be conservative — banks and investors prefer understated projections you can actually beat.
- Ignoring competition: “We have no competitors” is a red flag. Every product has competition — direct or indirect. Acknowledge competitors and explain your edge.
- Vague marketing plan: “We’ll use social media” is not a plan. Specify platforms, budget, posting frequency, and expected customer acquisition cost.
- No exit strategy (for investors): How will the investor eventually get their money back? IPO, acquisition, buyback? Specify this.
- Inconsistent numbers: Revenue projections must align with production capacity. If you say you’ll make ₹50 lakh in Year 1 but your kitchen can only produce ₹10 lakh worth of product, it’s immediately dismissed.
Free Resources to Write Your Business Plan
- Startup India business plan template: startupindia.gov.in → Tools → Business Plan Template
- MSME project report format: msme.gov.in → Forms and Applications
- Jan Samarth Portal: jansamarth.in → Apply for MUDRA/PMEGP loans with guided business plan format
- BusiVest Startup Cost Calculator: busivest.com/tools/calculator.html — build your financial projections
- BusiVest Government Scheme Finder: busivest.com/tools/schemes.html — find which subsidies to include in your funding plan
Frequently Asked Questions
How long should a business plan be in India?
For bank loans and government schemes: 20–40 pages. For investor pitches: 10–20 pages + a 10-slide deck. For internal planning: as long as it needs to be — quality matters more than length.
Can I write a business plan myself or do I need to hire a CA?
You can write it yourself using this guide and templates. However, for bank loan applications above ₹10 lakh, having a CA review your financial projections adds credibility. CA fee for DPR preparation: ₹5,000–₹20,000.
Is a business plan required for MUDRA loan?
For Shishu loans (up to ₹50,000), a simple application form is sufficient. For Kishor (₹50,000–₹5 lakh) and Tarun (₹5 lakh–₹20 lakh) loans, banks typically require a basic project report with cost estimates and financial projections.
How do I write a business plan for a new startup with no revenue?
Focus more on market research, problem-solution fit, team credentials, and go-to-market strategy. For financials, use industry benchmarks and bottoms-up projections (number of customers × average order value). Be transparent about assumptions.
What’s the difference between a business plan and a pitch deck?
A business plan is a comprehensive document (15–40 pages). A pitch deck is a visual presentation (10–15 slides) that summarizes the key points for investors. Most investor meetings start with the deck; the business plan is shared as due diligence material afterward.
Business Plan Checklist
- ☑ Executive Summary (write last)
- ☑ Company description with mission and vision
- ☑ Market analysis with competitor comparison table
- ☑ Products/services with pricing and unit economics
- ☑ Marketing strategy with specific channels and budget
- ☑ Operations plan with equipment and staffing
- ☑ Management team bios
- ☑ Financial projections: startup cost, P&L, cash flow, break-even
- ☑ Funding plan showing how much you need and from where
- ☑ Risk analysis with mitigation strategies
- ☑ All numbers checked for internal consistency
Start building your financial projections now with the free Business Cost Calculator. Find the best government funding for your project using the Scheme Finder, and explore investor options at the Funding Database.
