Beer Business & Industry
Brewery Business Planning
Why a Business Plan Matters
A business plan is not bureaucratic busywork — it is the most important document you will create. It forces you to think critically about every aspect of your brewery before spending money. It convinces lenders and investors that you understand the market. Most importantly, it becomes your operating guide for the first three years.
Executive Summary
One to two pages that capture the entire plan: concept, market opportunity, financial highlights, funding request, and team credentials. Write this last but place it first. Many investors read only the executive summary before deciding whether to continue.
Market Analysis
Industry overview — US craft beer market size ($28+ billion), growth trends, and headwinds. Local market — population demographics, income levels, competing breweries, and underserved niches. Target customer — detailed persona: age, income, beer preferences, dining habits, social media usage. Competitive advantage — what specifically differentiates your brewery. Location alone is not sufficient; you need a compelling reason for customers to choose you.
Operations Plan
Production — brewing schedule, batch size, annual capacity, and growth projections. A 7-barrel system brewing twice weekly produces approximately 700 barrels per year. Supply chain — malt, hops, yeast, packaging materials. Identify primary suppliers and backups. Quality control — dissolved oxygen measurement, microbiological testing, sensory evaluation protocols. Staffing — organizational chart, hiring timeline, compensation benchmarks.
Financial Projections
Startup Costs
| Category | Range |
|---|---|
| Equipment | $150K-500K |
| Buildout/renovation | $100K-400K |
| Licensing and legal | $10K-30K |
| Initial inventory | $20K-50K |
| Working capital (6 months) | $50K-150K |
| Marketing launch | $10K-30K |
| Total | $500K-1.5M |
Revenue Model
Taproom sales generate 80-90% gross margin. Distribution generates 40-50%. The most profitable breweries maximize taproom revenue. Project conservatively: assume 60% capacity in year one, 75% in year two, 90% in year three.
Key Metrics
Cost per barrel — all-in production cost including ingredients, labor, utilities, and overhead. Target: $100-200 per barrel. Revenue per barrel — varies dramatically by channel. Taproom pints: $800-1,200 per barrel equivalent. Distribution: $200-350 per barrel. Breakeven — most breweries reach operating breakeven at 18-30 months. Debt service extends total breakeven to 36-48 months.
Financial Projections (3-5 Year)
Build month-by-month projections for year one, quarterly for years two and three, annual for years four and five. Include income statement, cash flow statement, and balance sheet. Model three scenarios: conservative, moderate, and optimistic.
Risk Analysis
Identify and address key risks: construction delays, permitting complications, ingredient cost inflation, slower-than-expected taproom traffic, key employee departure, equipment failure, recession impact on discretionary spending. For each risk, describe your mitigation strategy.
The Pitch Deck
Distill the full plan into a 10-12 slide presentation for investor meetings. Lead with the opportunity, demonstrate market understanding, present the team, and close with financials and the ask.