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By John W. Cones
Technically speaking, the business plan is not
a financing vehicle or entity but can be used in conjunction with
several other investor-financing techniques to raise money for independent
feature film projects. For example, a business plan can be used
with an investor- financing agreement to raise money from one or
two active investors. It can be used with a joint venture agreement
to raise money from another entity also acting as an active investor/joint
venture partner. In limited circumstances, it may also be used
as a means of identifying possible founding shareholders for the
initial incorporation, a strategy discussed elsewhere in the book
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Ways to Finance Your Feature Film (Southern Illinois
University Press).
Another important use of the business plan is
helpful in establishing a preexisting relationship with prospective
investors for a subsequent securities offering. Thus, the business
plan becomes a method for conducting a general solicitation while
looking for active investors, and if the active investor campaign
does not prove successful, then the use of the business plan can
be halted, a three or four week interim waiting period can be observed
and then the information in the business plan can be converted into
a private placement securities offering memorandum for the purpose
of seeking investments from a larger group of passive investors.
If the private placement approach is used for the subsequent
securities offering, those persons contacted during the active investor
general solicitation (using the business plan) may be approached
as prospective investors for the private placement since the initial
contact with those prospective investors is likely to be sufficient
to establish the preexisting relationship which, although not technically
required by the federal securities laws, still is an important element
in proving that no general solicitation occurred.
The film production company business plan can
be very similar to the producer's package except that it is usually
bound and may be presented in a more organized fashion. The business
plan is often the first step in procuring investor financing, whereas
the producer's package is more commonly used for similar purposes
in obtaining funding from a distributor or other industry sources.
The producer's package might include, for example, a screenplay,
a list of credits for key persons attached to the project and a
proposed budget, whereas a business plan might include a synopsis
of the screenplay, narrative biographies of the key persons attached
to the project and a use of proceeds section, which corresponds
closely to the budget top sheet. A business plan can be as simple
or as sophisticated as the producer and his or her advisors choose
to make it.
Like other forms of film finance, using the
business plan has inherent advantages and disadvantages. The advantages
of the business plan approach include: (1) No securities laws involved--So
long as the business plan is associated with an active investor
form of financing (i.e., investor-financing agreement, joint venture
or initial incorporation), producers using a business plan may approach
any prospective investor without fear of violating the securities
law prohibitions relating to private placements, which in turn (as
a practical matter) limit offers and sales to persons with whom
the producer or other upper-level management of the issuing entity
have a preexisting relationship. (2) No formal rules--There are
no formal rules promulgated by any governmental authority regulating
the contents of a business plan; thus, producers have considerable
freedom in drafting such a document. There still may be some liability,
however, for inaccurate or misleading statements. (3) Relatively
easy to assemble--
In the context of the film business, a business plan is merely a specific
adaptation of the producer's package, which in turn contains many
of the documents a producer would ordinarily generate in the preplanning
stages of putting together a film project. (4) General solicitation
permitted--The business plan, properly handled, allows the producer
to go out into the marketplace and conduct a general solicitation
for a single active investor or other possible combinations, and
if not successful in raising the necessary monies using the business
plan, the producer may convert his or her offering into a securities
offering and then go back and call on those same investors within
the context of a securities private placement.
Disadvantages of the business plan approach
include the following: (1) May be unneeded step--If the producer
already knows that he or she is going to use the limited partnership
or limited liability company as the financing vehicle, for example,
and already has a sufficient pool of prospective investors available,
the business plan is just another step in the financing process
that might be eliminated. (2) Inadvertent securities sales--Producers
who are not aware of the important distinction between active and
passive investor offerings may confuse the two in using a business
plan and thus inadvertently be guilty of selling an unregistered
security, a law violation raising the possibility of both civil
and criminal penalties. Thus, producers beware: ignorance of the
law is no excuse.
The following is a sample outline of a business
plan to be used in promoting a feature film production company:
1. Business Plan
i. Executive Summary
ii.Introduction (Setting of the Stage)
iii.Status of the Independent Producer
iv.General Company Description
v.Management and Organization (narrative biographies)
vi.The Proposed Film
1. Film Synopsis/Treatment
2. Screenplay Rights
3. Comparable Box Office Performances (or distributor rentals)
4. Production of the Picture
5. Budget/Use of Proceeds
6. Distribution Approach
7. Funding of the Picture and Cofinancing
2. Industry Overview
3. Exhibits
i.Résumés of Principals
ii.Literary Property Option/Acquisition Agreements
iii.Financial Statements
iv.Letters of Interest/Intent
v.Industry Articles
vi.Press Coverage
vii.Financial Projections
The following are other possible exhibits (depending
on the stage at which financing is sought) that may be included
as part of the business plan: title report, copyright search report,
chain of title documents including a certificate of authorship for
the screenplay, copy of the copyright registration, copyright assignment,
distribution agreement(s), completion bond commitment letter, corporate
resolution authorizing the producer to negotiate and sign a financing
agreement, final screenplay and shooting script, cast and production
credits, synopsis of the script, biographies of key people, feature
stories on lead actors and the director, production stills, casual
cast photos, agreements relating to the film's music, the MPAA ratings
certificate (if available) and the E&O certificate of insurance
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