Business Plan Writing Service
A professional business plan is not only a document. It is a structured business tool that explains what your business does, how it will operate, how it will make money and why it has a realistic opportunity to grow. At Wix Solutions, we write detailed business plans for business owners, start-ups, service providers and companies that need a clear, professional and well-organised document for planning, funding, investment, expansion or internal strategy.
Every business plan is written according to the purpose of the document. A business plan prepared for a small service business will not need the same level of depth as a business plan created for a platform, a large project or a company seeking a high-value investment. This is why our Business Plan service is delivered through flexible blocks of hours.
For many local and service-based businesses, a 50-hour block is usually suitable. For more complex businesses, platforms or investment-focused projects, a 100-hour block may be required.
Business Plans Written Around Your Real Purpose
Before writing a business plan, it is important to understand why the business plan is needed. This affects the structure, detail, research, financial sections, language and overall depth of the document.
A business plan may be needed for:
starting a new business
planning business growth
applying for funding
preparing for investment
presenting a business idea professionally
organising a new service or company structure
explaining the market opportunity
preparing a roadmap for operations
supporting internal decision-making
showing financial direction
presenting a project to partners or stakeholders
A strong business plan should not be generic. It should explain the business clearly, show the logic behind the idea and make the reader understand how the business can operate in real conditions.
50-Hour Business Plan Block
The 50-hour block is suitable for many standard business plans, especially where the business model is clear and the structure is not overly complex.
This option may be suitable for businesses such as:
building services
construction businesses
cleaning services
trades and contractor businesses
local service providers
beauty, wellness or therapy services
small business start-ups
consultancy services
simple retail or service models
local business expansion plans
For example, a business plan for a building company, construction service or cleaning business may usually fit within a 50-hour block, depending on the level of detail required and the information provided by the client.
This type of business plan can include the main business concept, service description, target market, competitor overview, operations, marketing strategy and basic financial structure.
View the 50-hour block here:
50 Hours Mix Services
100-Hour Business Plan Block
The 100-hour block is suitable for more complex business plans that require deeper explanation, stronger structure, more detailed research and more developed financial or investment sections.
This option may be suitable for:
online platforms
marketplace businesses
app or technology-based businesses
businesses seeking more than £1 million in investment
complex start-ups
multi-service companies
businesses with several revenue streams
businesses entering a competitive market
larger expansion projects
investor-facing business plans
strategic business plans for high-value opportunities
A business plan for a platform, technology project or investment proposal normally needs more detail because the reader must understand the business model, scalability, market opportunity, operational structure, customer acquisition strategy and financial logic.
This level of business plan usually requires more planning, deeper writing and a stronger explanation of how the business can grow.
View the 100-hour block here:
100 Hours Mix Services
What a Business Plan Can Include?
Each business plan is tailored to the business and purpose of the document. Depending on the selected hour block and project complexity, your business plan may include:
Executive Summary
A clear overview of the business, its purpose, offer, market position, goals and commercial direction. This section helps the reader quickly understand the business.
Business Description
A detailed explanation of the business, what it does, who it serves and how it operates. This may include company background, services, values, structure and business model.
Products or Services
A clear description of the products, services or packages offered by the business. This section explains what customers will buy and why the offer has value.
Target Market
An explanation of the target audience, customer needs, buying behaviour and market segment. This section helps show who the business is designed to serve.
Market Research
A structured overview of the market, including demand, trends, customer expectations and business opportunities. For more complex projects, this section may require deeper research and more detailed analysis.
Competitor Review
A review of competitors, market positioning and differentiation. This helps explain how the business can stand out and what makes it different from similar businesses.
Marketing Strategy
A practical plan for attracting customers. This may include website strategy, SEO, social media, content marketing, paid advertising, local marketing, partnerships, email marketing or other relevant channels.
Operations Plan
A clear explanation of how the business will operate day to day. This may include staffing, suppliers, systems, delivery process, customer service, tools, locations, workflow and operational responsibilities.
Management and Team Structure
An overview of the owner, management structure, key roles and responsibilities. For larger businesses, this may include planned team growth or future recruitment needs.
Revenue Model
A clear explanation of how the business will generate income. This may include service fees, product sales, subscriptions, platform commissions, retainers, packages or multiple income streams.
Financial Overview
A structured financial section that may include start-up costs, expected income, running costs, pricing logic, profit direction and financial assumptions. The depth of this section depends on the purpose of the business plan and the information available.
Growth Strategy
A plan for how the business may grow over time. This can include new services, new locations, online expansion, team growth, marketing development or investment-backed scaling.
Risk Review
A practical review of business risks and possible solutions. This may include market risk, financial risk, operational risk, competition, staffing or customer acquisition challenges.
Action Plan
A clear roadmap showing the next steps for the business. This helps turn the business plan into a practical working document rather than only a written report.
Types of Business Plans We Can Write
Wix Solutions can write different types of business plans depending on your needs.
Start-Up Business Plan
For new businesses that need a clear structure before launch. This plan explains the idea, target market, services, pricing, operations and first steps.
Small Business Plan
For local or service-based businesses that need a professional document to organise their offer, marketing and growth direction.
Funding Business Plan
For businesses preparing to apply for funding, grants or financial support. This plan focuses on clarity, business viability, purpose and practical financial structure.
Investor Business Plan
For businesses seeking private investment or larger funding opportunities. This type of plan requires more detail, stronger market explanation, growth logic and financial direction.
Strategic Business Plan
For existing businesses that need a clear direction for growth, restructuring, service development or expansion.
Platform or Technology Business Plan
For online platforms, apps, marketplaces or digital business models. These plans usually require more detailed explanation because the business model, user acquisition and scalability must be clearly presented.
Service Business Plan
For businesses such as cleaning, construction, building services, consultancy, wellness, beauty, repair, trades or professional services.
Why the Purpose of the Business Plan Matters?
A business plan written for personal organisation is different from a business plan written for a lender, investor or business partner. The purpose affects the tone, structure and level of detail.
For example, a simple internal plan may focus on services, pricing, marketing and operations. A funding plan may need stronger financial explanation. An investor plan may need market opportunity, scalability, risk analysis, growth forecasts and a clear explanation of return potential.
This is why Wix Solutions does not treat every business plan the same. The work begins by understanding what the business plan needs to achieve.
Professional Writing, Clear Structure and Business Logic
The Business Plan service is written in clear British English and structured so the document is easy to understand. The aim is to make your business look organised, serious and professionally presented.
A good business plan should help the reader understand:
what the business does
who the business serves
why the business is needed
how the business will operate
how the business will attract customers
how the business will make money
what the business needs to move forward
what makes the business realistic and commercially prepared
Wix Solutions focuses on clarity, structure and practical business thinking. The final document is designed to support real business activity, whether you are launching, expanding, applying for funding or preparing for investment.
Important Note About Financial Sections
Wix Solutions can help structure and write financial sections based on the information, figures and assumptions provided. We can present the information professionally and organise it clearly within the business plan.
However, financial projections should be reviewed carefully by the business owner and, where necessary, by a qualified accountant or financial adviser. This is especially important for investment, lending, tax or regulated financial decisions.
Book a Business Plan Writing Block
Business Plan writing is available through 50-hour or 100-hour service blocks.
For many standard service businesses, the 50-hour block may be enough.
For platforms, complex businesses or investment-focused plans, the 100-hour block is usually more suitable.
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FAQ
How many hours do I need for a business plan?
It depends on the complexity of the business and the purpose of the plan. A standard service business may need around 50 hours. A platform, complex company or investment-focused business plan may need 100 hours.
What businesses can Wix Solutions write business plans for?
Wix Solutions can write business plans for service businesses, construction companies, cleaning services, local businesses, start-ups, online platforms, technology projects and businesses preparing for growth or investment.
Can you write a business plan for investment?
Yes. Wix Solutions can write investor-focused business plans. These usually require more detail, especially when the business is seeking large investment or needs to explain scalability, market opportunity and financial direction.

