hello.

I get the following error:
==>
Stack overflow in regexp matcher: /
^ # Start of line
<(p|div|h[1-6]|blockquote|pre|table|dl|ol|ul|script) # Start tag: \2
\b # word break
(.*\n)*? # Any number of lines, minimal match
<\/\1> # Matching end tag
[ ]* # trailing spaces
(?=\n+|\Z) # End of line or document
/ix

by adding this text to a page (please, see below ==>).

I'm running the lastest SVN version of instiki. Is it possible to
substitute (upgrade) the existing "bluecloth_tweaked.rb" file with the
latest bluecloth library (which could possibly fix this isssue?).

Thanks.

--L

==>
Let the Good Times Roll--by Guy Kawasaki: January 2006

The Zen of Business Plans
-------------------------

In my day job, I not only hear a lot of PowerPoint pitches, but I also
read a lot of business plans. The PowerPoint pitches explain my
Ménière's disease, but the business plans explain my recent need for
reading glasses. One of my goals for blogging is to reduce the
external factors that are causing the degradation of my body, so this
entry's topic is the zen of business plans.

* Write for all the right reasons. Most people write business plans to
attract investors, and while this is necessary to raise money, most
venture capitalists have made a "gut level" go/no go decision during
the PowerPoint pitch. Receiving (and possibly reading) the business
plan is a mechanical step in due diligence. The more relevant and
important reason to write is a business plan, whether you are raising
money or not, is to force the management team to solidify the
objectives (what), strategies (how), and tactics (when, where, who).
Even if you have all the capital in the world, you should still write
a business plan. Indeed, especially if you have all the capital in the
world because too much capital is worse than too little.

* Make it a solo effort. While creation of the business plan should be
a group effort involving all the principal players in the company, the
actual writing of the business plan--literally sitting down at a
computer and pounding out the document--should be a solo effort. And
ideally the CEO should do it because she will need to know the plan by
heart. Take it from an author, for writing to be cogent and
consistent, there needs to be only one author. It's very difficult to
cut-copy-and-paste several people's sections and come out with a good
plan.

* Pitch, then plan. Most people create a business plan, and it's a
piece of crap: sixty pages long, fifty-page appendix, full of
buzzwords, acronyms, and superficialities like, "All we need is one
percent of the market." Then they create a PowerPoint pitch from it.
Is it any wonder why that the plans are lousy when they are based on
crappy pitches? The correct sequence is to perfect a pitch (10/20/30),
and then write the plan from it. Write this down: A good business plan
is an elaboration of a good pitch; a good pitch is not the
distillation of good business plan. Why? Because it's much easier to
revise a pitch than to revise a plan. Give the pitch a few times, see
what works and what doesn't, change the pitch, and then write the
plan. Think of your pitch as your outline, and your plan as the full
text. How many people write the full text and then write the outline?

* Put in the right stuff. Here's what a business plan should address:
Executive Summary (1), Problem (1), Solution (1), Business Model (1),
Underlying Magic (1), Marketing and Sales (1), Competition (1), Team
(1), Projections (1), Status and Timeline (1), and Conclusion (1).
Essentially, this is the same list of topics as a PowerPoint pitch.
Those numbers in parenthesis are the ideal lengths for each section;
note that they add up to eleven. As you'll see in a few paragraphs,
the ideal length of a business plan is twenty pages, so I've given you
nine pages extra as a fudge factor.

* Focus on the executive summary. True or false: The most important
part of a business plan is the section about the management team. The
answer is False.* The executive summary, all one page of it, is the
most important part of a business plan. If it isn't fantastic,
eyeball-sucking, and pulse-altering, people won't read beyond it to
find out who's on your great team, what's your business model, and why
your product is curve jumping, paradigm shifting, and revolutionary.
You should spend eighty percent of your effort on writing a great
executive summary. Most people spend eighty percent of their effort on
crafty a one million cell Excel spreadsheet that no one believes.

* Keep it clean. The ideal length of a business plan is twenty pages
or less, and this includes the appendix. For every ten pages over
twenty pages, you decrease the likelihood that the plan will be read,
much less funded, by twenty-five percent. When it comes to business
plans, less is more. Many people believe that the purpose of a
business plan is to create such shock and awe that investors are
begging for wiring instructions; the reality is that the purpose of a
a business plan is to get to the next step: continued due diligence
with activities such as checking personal and customer references. The
tighter the thinking, the shorter the plan; the shorter the plan, the
faster it will get read.

* Provide a one-page financial projection plus key metrics. Many
business plans contain five year projections with a $100 million top
line and such minute levels of detail that the budget for pencils is a
line item. Everyone knows that you're pulling numbers out of the air
that you think are large enough to be interesting, but not so large as
to render urine drug-testing unnecessary. Do everyone a favor: Reduce
your Excel hallucinations to one page and provide a forecast of the
key metrics of your business--for example, the number of paying
customers. These key metrics provide insight into your assumptions.
For example, if you're assuming that you'll get twenty percent of the
Fortune 500 to buy your product in the first year, I would suggest
checking into a rehab program.

* Catalyze fantasy. Don't include citations of some consulting firm's
supposed validation of your market. For example, "Jupiter Research
says that the market for avocado-farming software like we make will be
$10 billion by 2010." No one ever believes this "validations" because
the entrepreneur who pitched at 9:00 am said this about USB thumb
drives; the one at 10:00 am said this about online dog food sales, and
the one at 11:00 said this about smart antennas for cell phones. What
you want to do is catalyze fantasy: that is, enable the reader to make
her own mental calculation that this market is big. "Every Nokia
Series 40 and Series 60 owner would buy this--Wow, this is a hot
market!"

* Write deliberate, act emergent. I borrowed this from my buddy
Clayton Christensen. It means that when you write your plan, you act
as if you know exactly what you're going to do. You are deliberate.
You're probably wrong, but you take your best shot. However, writing
deliberate doesn't mean that you adhere to the plan in the face of new
information and new opportunities. As you execute the plan, you act
emergent--that is, you are flexible and fast moving: changing as you
learn more and more about the market. The plan, after all, should not
take on a life of its own.


* Note: the question is what is the most important part of the
business plan, not what is the most important part of the business
itself. The management team is more important than the executive
summary to the business, but the discussion of the management team is
not the most important part of the business plan because if the
executive summary sucks, people won't get to the management team
section.


http://blog.guykawasaki.com/2006/01/index.html

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