Module 02 of 10
Writing a business plan for a physical business
A business plan for a physical location is significantly more complex than a plan for an online business. You have a fixed address, a lease, build-out costs, foot traffic dependencies, and seasonal patterns to account for. This module walks through every section a physical business plan needs — including the ones most generic templates leave out.
Why physical business plans are different
Generic business plan templates are designed for any business. A physical business has specific variables that those templates don't address: What are your occupancy costs? What foot traffic does the location generate? How long until you break even given your build-out investment? What happens to revenue in your slow season? What's your contingency if you can't open on time?
These aren't minor additions — they're often the difference between a plan that gets funded and one that doesn't, and between a business that survives year one and one that doesn't.
THE NUMBER MOST OWNERS GET WRONG
Most first-time physical business owners dramatically underestimate startup costs. They budget for equipment and inventory but forget security deposits, build-out overruns, pre-opening payroll, utility hookups, signage, and the 3–6 months of operating losses while they build customer volume. Your plan needs to account for all of it.
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One-paragraph overview — written last
Summarizes your concept, location, target customer, and what you’re asking for. For a physical business, mention the location specifically — lenders are investors and want to know where you’re opening and why that location.
Example: “Maple Street Provisions is a specialty grocery and prepared foods shop opening in teh Riverside neighborhood of [City]. We are seeking a $120,000 SBA loan to fund build-out and opening invengtory for our 1,800 sq ft retail location, targeting the 14,000 residents within a 1-mile radius who currently lack a walkable specialty food option.”
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What yo usell, who buys it, and why they choos you
Describe your product or service, yhour target customer with specificity (age, income, lifestyle, proximity to your location), and your key differentiator from exissting options. Include your validtion evidence — what yo ulearned from community research, market tests, or pre-sales.
Example: “Our target customer is the 25-50 year old professional within a 10-minute walk who currently shops at a grocery chain 2 iles away. Community research with 60 residents confirmed that 78% would prefer a walkable specialty option if available within a neighborhood.“
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Why this specific location — foot traffic, demographics, competition
This section doesn’t exist in a generic template but is critical for a physical business. Include: the address or target area, pedestrian and vehicle traffic counts, neighborhood demographic data, proximity to anchors (other stores, transit, parking), and competitive landscape within your trade area. If you’ve signed a lease, include key terms. If still searching, describe the location criteria you’re using.
Example: “The target location at 412 Maple Street sees approximately 2,400 pedestrians per day (source: city traffic data). The surrounding half-mile includes 3 restaurants, a yoga studio, and a pharmacy — all of which attract our target demographic. The nearest comparable specialty grocery is 2.3 miles away.“
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Hours, staffing, layout, suppliers, and day-to-day procedures
Describe how the business runs: hours of operation, how many staff at what times, how you receive and manage inventory, your POS and payment system, key suppliers, and how customers move through your space. For service businesses, describe the service delivery process. For market vendors, describe your market schedule and setup process.
Example: “We will operate Tuesday - Sunday, 8am-7pm, with one FT manager and on PT staff member per shift. Inventory is received Monday mornings from 4 primary suppliers. POS is Square for Retail with integrated inventory tracking.“
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Costs, timeline, and contingency for getting the space ready
Detail the planned improvements to your space, estimated costs (get contractor quotes — don’t guess), timeline from lease signing to opening day, and any tenant improvment allowance from the landlord. Include a contingency buffer of at least 15-20% for build-out overruns, which are nearly universal. State your planned opening date and what needs to happen to hit it.
Example: “Build-out includes flooring replacement ($8,400), lighting ($4,200), shelving and fixtures ($12,000), signage ($3,500), and HVAC servicing ($2,800). Total: 30,900 with 20% contingency = $37,080. Landlord provides $15,000 TI allowance. Timeline: 10 weeks from lease signing to opening.”
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How yo umake money, at what price points, and in what volume
For retail: average transaction size, transactions per day, margin by product category. For service: service menu and pricing, average ticket, capacity (appointments per day). Include your seasonal revenue pattern — most physical businesses have meaningful peaks and troughs that affect cash flow planning.
Example: “Average transaction: $34. Target: 45 transactions/day at full operation. Gross margin: 52% blended. Peak months (Nov-Dec) projected at 160% of base. January-February at 65% of base. Seasonal pattern factored into 12-month cash flow projection.“
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Startup costs, monthly P&L, cash flow, and break-even
Physical businesses need four financial statemens: a startup cost summary (everything before you open), a 12-month monthly P&L projection, a 12-month cash flow projection (different from P&L — see Money & Finance section), and a break-even analysis. Your break-even must account for fixed costs including rent, not just variable costs.
Example: “Monthly fixed costs: rent $4,200, payroll $8,400, utilities $600, insurance $280, POS $89 = $16,569. Break-even at 52% gross margin = $26,095/month in revenue, or approximately 768 transactions at $34 average. We project reaching break-even in month 4.“
Startup costs for a physical business
These are the cost categories most physical business plans need to address. Most generic templates only cover the first two or three.
LEASE COSTS
$4K — $30K
Security deposit, first/last month, broker fee
OPENING INVENTORY
$8K — $60K
Depends entirely on category and size of assortment
BUILD-OUT
$15K — $150K
Varies enormously by condition of space and complexity
SIGNAGE
$2K — $12K
Exterior sign, window graphics, interior wayfinding
FIXTURE & EQUIPMENT
$5K — $50K
Shelving, display cases,
POS hardware, kitchen equipment
THE RESERVE FUND
Every physical business plan should include a working capital reserve of 3–6 months of operating expenses beyond your startup costs. This covers the ramp-up period before you reach break-even. It's not a nice-to-have — it's what separates businesses that survive year one from those that don't.
PRE-OPENING OPS COSTS
$10K — $40K
Payroll during build-out, utilities, marketing before open
In this Module
Why physical plans differ
What goes in the plan
Startup cost categories
Real-world examples
Related Modules
Choosing a location
Cash flow
Funding options
Real-world examples
Maria — gift and home goods boutique
SBA loan, full traditional plan
Maria needed $95,000 to open her boutique. Her bank required a full business plan with 3-year projections. The location analysis section was what made the difference — she had commissioned a foot traffic study, gathered demographic data, and documented the departure of a competing store two blocks away. Her loan officer said it was the best-researched location analysis she'd seen from a first-time borrower. Loan approved in 6 weeks.
Location analysis section was teh difference-maker with the lender
Derek — barbershop
Lean plan, self funded
Derek self-funded his barbershop with savings and a personal loan from his father. He wrote a one-page lean plan but added two things a generic lean plan doesn't cover: a build-out cost estimate (he got three contractor quotes) and a break-even calculation that factored in his $2,800/month rent. Knowing he needed 14 haircuts per day to break even helped him plan his marketing and hours before he opened rather than discovering it after.
Break-even calculation informed pre-opening decisions