Making the Business Case : How to create, write and implement a successful business plan

Making the Business Case : How to create, write and implement a successful business plan

by JamesCannon (Author)

Synopsis

Every day you have to make decisions about how to spend your time, your effort and your organisation's money. How you make those decisions determines whether your organisation succeeds or fails. At the heart of any sound decision is a business case that examines the options, marshals evidence and identifies the resources required and the benefits that might accrue. If you want people to listen to your ideas, if you want to make good decisions, if you want to make things better in your organisation, then you'll have to be able to present a clear and compelling business case. But a business case by itself does not translate an idea into action. You also need a business plan to draw together the elements into a coherent whole. It includes a number of ingredients such as an analysis of the situation, identification of future goals, possible strategies to achieve the goals, resources required to accomplish the plan, consideration of the sensitivity of the outcome to different factors that might intervene and what is required to deliver implementation with demonstrable benefits to the enterprise. This book shows you how to present your options in the form of a business case, develop a sound business plan for the function and contribute effectively to the business plan for the organisation and thereby enhance the effectiveness of decision making and demonstrate that HR is truly a business partner.

$3.34

Save:$29.94 (90%)

Quantity

1 in stock

More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 224
Publisher: Chartered Institute of Personnel and Development
Published: 01 Oct 2005

ISBN 10: 1843981351
ISBN 13: 9781843981350

Author Bio
Jim Cannon specialises in organisation development and has consulted with organisations in UK, North America, Europe and Asia. He runs an extensive range of training courses for the Chartered Institute of Personnel and Development (CIPD) as well as IATA and other organisations. In 1989 he started his own consultancy as well as co-founding Cavendish Partners, now merged with Right Coutts, a firm specialising in career counselling and coaching.