A nonprofit business plan answers a different question than a startup's: not 'how do we profit' but 'how do we fund the mission sustainably and prove impact.' Funders and board members want a credible program model, a diversified revenue base, and measurable outcomes. Here is how to write one that wins grants and keeps the board aligned.
Write the one-page summary first so you can see the whole shape, then size the market from the bottom up, map who your buyers use today, and build the financials to a clear break-even before you polish a single paragraph. Pick the first three channels you will actually run, set four near-term milestones, and write the executive summary last. A template that holds this order — and fills each section with example copy you edit instead of a blank box — is the difference between a draft you finish this week and one you abandon.
Do not borrow a top-down 'the market is billions' number; count reachable buyers instead. Do not list ten marketing tactics; commit to three. Do not hide the risks — naming them builds more trust than pretending the path is clean. And do not let the financial model drift from the story; every claim in the narrative should map to a number in the projection.
A one-page summary, the customer and their pain, your offer and pricing, a bottom-up market size, competition and your wedge, go-to-market with cost-to-acquire, operations, a financial projection with break-even, and milestones plus risks.
As short as it can be while answering a funder's questions — one to three pages for an internal plan, rarely more than ten for a lender or investor.
A focused template saves hours because it holds the right section order and gives you example copy to edit, so the document actually gets finished.
Page built 2026-06-14 from public, dated buying-intent signals. Updated as new signals land.