A business plan

 

 

Part A

 

What are the reasons for writing a business plan?
What two parts of a business plan do you think you would have the most challenges in creating and how would you overcome those challenges?
Part B

(Describe a time in your life when NOT being your authentic self may have had an effect on your success.)

Tell us about this time when you were inauthentic and how it impacted your success.
If you had the chance to do it all over again, what would you do differently, now that you know the importance of being your authentic self?

 

Sample Solution

A business plan

Just as a builder uses a blueprint to ensure that a building will be structurally sound, the process of creating and writing a blueprint for your business, called a business plan, will help you determine whether your business will be strong from the start. Without a business plan, you leave far too many things to chance. A business plan contains a description of your business, including details about how it will operate, a section on market research and marketing strategies, an evaluation of your main competitors, and several financial forecasts. Reasons to create a business plan include; to determine whether your business has a chance of making a good profit; provide an estimate of your start-up costs, and how much you will need to invest or finance; convince investors and lenders to fund your business and more.

ve to be clinically diagnosed based off the patient’s symptoms. If an individual only has persistent delusions it becomes apparent to the doctor that they aren’t schizophrenic. Schizophrenic requires multiple symptoms not just delusions. A person with delusional disorder are typically fully functioning individual except for their delusional episodes. According to Belmont Behavioral Hospital, emphasizes that “This condition could have an impact on the person’s daily living, although, fortunately, it does not necessarily prevent that individual from functioning within society on an ongoing basis”. In contrast to Schizophrenia, this psychotic disorder causes patience to be more dependent on friends and family due to lack of the ability to make decisions on their own. Another, similar disorder whose symptoms have to be clinically distinguished from Schizophrenia is substance or medication induced psychotic disorder. Substance induced psychotic disorder is when a patient has been abusing a controlled substance that is mind altering. Examples of drugs that cause, hallucinations and or delusions would be LSD, Psilocybin Mushrooms, recreational marijuana, and opioids. The Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration report the staggering statistic that in 2014, “approximately 1.2 million Americans are currently hallucinogenic drug users”. This goes to show the epidemic that psychiatrist have to take into account prior to clinically diagnosis an individual with Schizophrenia. The diagnosis for substance or medication induced psychotic disorder is to conduct a urine test to determine if the person is experiencing a “bad trip,” due to a controlled substance. The American Addiction Center, provides a description of a bad trip as “when brain levels of the drugs become “too” high, the effects become bizarre, and you start experiencing out-of-the-earth things”. An individuals with history of drug use that have been diagnosed with substance psychotic disorder often have recurrent bad trips even after the sobriety. It’s undeniable that mind altering drugs can lead to damaging the brain and permanently causing symptoms similar to Schizophrenia. However, Schizophrenia is typically a lifelong disorder while acute Substance Induced Psychotic Disorder symptoms with proper treatment and sobriety can go away. Schizophrenia can be linked by genetics while Substance Induced Psychotic Disorder, is due to abusing a controlled substance. Neither, are curable however, with treatment symptoms can subside or disappear. Prevalence Rates of Schizophrenia Physiatrist have observed that there is a difference in prevalence in women and men with Schizophrenia. According to Rena Li and Xi Ma, two Psychiatrist at the University of Tennessee, “Schizophrenia is more frequent in men. Female onset is typically 3–5 years later than males. It is now accepted that men has a single peak age for onset which is between 21 and 25 years old and women have two peaks age of onset, one between 25 and 30 years

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