Install
openclaw skills install business-planWrite, structure, and update a business plan for a solopreneur. Use when creating a plan from scratch, updating an existing plan after a pivot or new phase, or preparing a plan to share with investors, partners, or even just to clarify your own strategy. Covers executive summary, market analysis, competitive positioning, revenue model, operations plan, financial projections, and risk assessment — all adapted for a one-person business. Trigger on "write a business plan", "business plan", "create my plan", "business plan template", "update my business plan", "plan for my business", "investor pitch plan".
openclaw skills install business-planA business plan is not a static document you write once and file away. For solopreneurs, it is a living strategy document — a forcing function that makes you think clearly about your business and a reference you update as reality proves or disproves your assumptions. This playbook builds it section by section, in the order that makes each section easier to write because the previous one is already done.
Even though it appears first, write this after everything else is done. It is a 1-page distillation of the entire plan.
Include exactly these five elements:
Rule: If someone reads only the executive summary, they should understand the entire business. If they want details, the rest of the plan delivers them.
Brief, factual, no fluff.
This is the heart of the plan. If this section is weak, everything after it is built on sand.
3.1 The Problem
3.2 The Solution
3.3 Why Now
Pull directly from your market-research skill output. Summarize into:
Keep this section data-driven. Every claim should have a source or a clear methodology behind it.
Pull from your competitive-analysis skill output. Include:
Pull from your business-model-canvas output. Translate into narrative form:
How does the business actually run day-to-day?
Build a simple but honest financial model:
Monthly for Year 1, quarterly for Years 2-3:
Key thresholds to calculate:
Honesty rule: Projections are guesses. Label them as such. Include a "conservative" and an "optimistic" scenario. The conservative scenario should still be a viable business.
Every business has risks. Identifying them doesn't make them go away — it lets you plan around them.
For each risk, write:
Common solopreneur risks to cover: