How to Write a Business Plan for a Canadian PNP Entrepreneur Application (With What Provinces Actually Look For)
The business plan is the single most scored element of most Canadian PNP entrepreneur applications. In British Columbia, it accounts for up to 80 of 200 possible points. In New Brunswick, it is worth up to 25 of 100 points and forms the basis of your interview. A weak plan does not just lower your score. It can end your application entirely.
This guide covers what each province actually looks for, what sections every plan needs, what kills most plans, and how to write a plan that survives a provincial officer’s scrutiny.
Why Most PNP Business Plans Fail
Here is what provincial assessors see constantly: a business plan that could describe a restaurant in any city in any country. No specific location. No local competitor research. Financial projections that show steady 10% annual growth with no explanation for why. An executive summary that uses words like “unique concept” and “unmet market need” without any data to support either claim.
That plan does not get an invitation. Or it gets one and then fails the interview because the applicant cannot defend what someone else wrote for them.
The second most common failure: plans that are accurate about the business but do not connect the applicant’s experience to that specific market. BC PNP scores “Transferability of Experience” as a separate category worth up to 15 points. You cannot score those points with a generic resume attached to a generic plan.
What Every PNP Business Plan Must Include
Executive Summary
This is the first thing a program officer reads. Keep it to one page. It must state the business type, the specific location in the province, the investment amount, the number of jobs the business will create, and why you are the right person to run it. Do not start with your life story. Start with the business.
Business Description and Legal Structure
Describe exactly what the business does. If it is a manufacturing company, state what it manufactures and for whom. If it is a restaurant, state the cuisine type, target market, and how many seats. Include the proposed legal structure (sole proprietorship, corporation, or partnership) and the planned ownership breakdown. Your ownership percentage must meet the program minimum (33.3% for most programs, 51% for BC Regional Stream and NB).
Market Research: The Section That Separates Good Plans from Bad Ones
This is where most plans lose points. Market research must be specific to the province and the community where you plan to operate. General statistics about the Canadian food service industry do not help an assessor evaluate a restaurant in Fredericton. You need local data.
For New Brunswick applications, the program guide explicitly states that “relevant and detailed market research” earns 5 of the 25 business plan points. The word “relevant” means specific to New Brunswick. You need to research the local market, interview potential customers if possible, and reference local economic reports or Statistics Canada data for your specific region.
For BC PNP applications, Commercial Viability is assessed out of 30 points. BC program officers look at whether your market analysis shows a real, provable demand for your product or service in BC. Your research needs to cite credible sources, not just state opinions about the market.
Competitive Analysis
Name your actual local competitors. Find out where they operate, what they charge, and what gaps they leave in the market. A competitive analysis that says “there are some similar businesses but none that offer our level of service” is not a competitive analysis. It is a red flag that the applicant has not done the work.
If you are entering a market with established competitors, explain specifically how your pricing, location, product range, or service model creates a sustainable advantage. If the market has few competitors, explain why: is there a genuine gap, or is there no viable demand?
Operational Plan
Describe how the business will actually run. Include your supplier relationships (named, not hypothetical), your planned premises (address or neighbourhood, square footage, lease or purchase cost), your equipment needs, your hiring timeline, and your daily operational flow. Provinces need to see that the business can actually operate, not just that the concept makes theoretical sense.
Management Team and Experience
This section is where you connect your background to the specific business. Do not just list your resume. Explain exactly how your previous experience translates to running this type of business in this province. BC PNP scores “Transferability of Experience” separately. A Chinese food manufacturer applying to open a food distribution business in BC should explain which specific aspects of manufacturing, supplier management, or logistics carry over directly.
If you have partners, include their experience and their role. For programs that require a minimum ownership percentage, confirm that each partner’s stake is clearly stated and that the total reaches or exceeds the program minimum.
Financial Projections
Most provinces expect three to five years of financial projections. Your projections need to be defensible, meaning you need to show your assumptions in writing. If you project $450,000 in revenue in year one, explain where that number comes from. Base it on industry benchmarks, your planned capacity, your pricing model, and your estimated customer volume. Assessors have seen thousands of financial projections. They know what a realistic startup looks like.
Include a startup cost breakdown, a cash flow statement for at least the first two years, a profit and loss statement, and a balance sheet. Your investment amount must appear explicitly in your financial plan and must match your BPA commitment.
Job Creation Plan
Every active PNP entrepreneur program requires you to create at least one full-time permanent position for a Canadian citizen or permanent resident. Your business plan must describe this position: the job title, salary, hours, and when you expect to hire. BC PNP Base Stream requires the position to be filled within 420 days of your work permit. New Brunswick requires a permanent full-time position as a condition of nomination.
Do not treat this as a formality. Provincial assessors check whether your financial projections actually support a payroll at the stated salary. If your projected revenue cannot sustain the cost of one employee in year one, that inconsistency will be flagged.
What Each Province Actually Scores
| Province | Business Plan Weight | Key Scoring Factors | Template Required? |
|---|---|---|---|
| BC PNP (Base Stream) | Up to 80 of 200 points | Commercial Viability (30pts), Transferability of Experience (15pts), Economic Benefits to BC (35pts) | No official template |
| BC PNP (Regional Stream) | Up to 80 of 200 points | Same as Base Stream, plus community-specific fit | No official template |
| New Brunswick BIS | Up to 25 of 100 points | Exploratory visit (5pts), same-industry experience (4pts), outside major cities (5pts), investment level (2-3pts), regulations included (3pts), detailed market research (5pts) | Yes: NBBIS-BP template required |
| Alberta AAIP | Required for all streams | Business viability, market, financials, job creation; no published point breakdown | No, but pitch deck required for Foreign Graduate Stream |
| Nova Scotia | Required for all applicants | Assessed as part of overall EOI review; no separate point breakdown published | No official template |
| Northwest Territories | Required as part of application | Economic benefit to NWT, job creation, viability of concept | No official template |
Province-Specific Requirements You Cannot Miss
British Columbia: The 40-Point Business Concept Minimum
BC PNP’s scoring system has a hard floor: your business concept must independently score at least 40 out of 80 points. Even if your personal factors score is excellent, falling below 40 on the business concept disqualifies you. This means your plan needs to be genuinely strong, not just acceptable.
BC program officers assess commercial viability by looking at your market research, competitive landscape, and financial projections. They assess transferability by examining how directly your previous industry and management experience applies to the proposed business in BC. They assess economic benefits by asking whether the business creates real value for BC beyond just your own income. Job creation, supply chain relationships, and contribution to an underserved market all support the economic benefits score.
Vague or generic concepts lose significant points in this category. A well-constructed business concept narrative can be the difference between an invitation and a rejection. Do not treat the business concept as a formality attached to your financial documents.
New Brunswick: The Non-Amendment Rule
New Brunswick has one rule that trips up applicants more than any other: you cannot amend your business plan after submitting your Expression of Interest. You must use the official NBBIS-BP template. Third-party help to write the plan is allowed, but once it is submitted, it is final.
This matters because ImmigrationNB may call you for an interview before processing your application. At that interview, you must be able to explain and defend every section of the plan. If you did not write it yourself or did not review it carefully enough to know it inside out, that interview will go badly. Applications have been refused on the basis of interview performance alone.
The NB plan also earns points for including relevant statutes, regulations, and bylaws for your industry. This means doing the regulatory homework: do you need a provincial licence? A municipal permit? Food safe certification? List and reference these specifically in your plan.
Alberta: Start-Up vs. Existing Business
For the AAIP Rural Entrepreneur Stream, you must contact a participating Alberta rural community before applying and submit a Business Proposal Summary as part of your initial contact. The community’s economic development officer will evaluate whether your concept fits local needs. Their feedback directly affects whether you are supported through the process.
For the Foreign Graduate Entrepreneur Stream, you submit a full business plan and pitch deck to an AAIP-approved designated agency. The agency reviews your concept before issuing a recommendation letter. Without that letter, you cannot apply. The agency’s assessment is effectively the first screening of your business plan’s quality.
How to Improve Your Business Plan Score Before Applying
- Visit the province before writing the plan. BC Regional Stream makes this mandatory. But for any program, a visit gives you real market data, named competitors, specific premises costs, and local economic development contacts. An exploratory visit earns 5 points on the NB scoring grid on its own.
- Research actual comparable businesses. Google the business type in the specific city. Note what they charge, where they are located, and what reviews say about them. This is the kind of specificity that scores well under commercial viability.
- Build financial projections from the bottom up. Start with estimated monthly customers or units sold. Apply your pricing. Subtract costs. Show your math. A projection built on real assumptions is always more credible than a round-number estimate.
- Include a jobs section with salary benchmarks. Research the actual going rate for the position you plan to fill. Include it as a line item in your operating costs. This shows financial literacy and satisfies the job creation requirement simultaneously.
- Have someone who did not write the plan test you on it. Ask a colleague, family member, or consultant to ask you hard questions about your numbers, your competitors, and your customer acquisition strategy. If you cannot answer fluently, you are not ready for a provincial interview.
Want a Business Plan Review Before You Apply?
We review business plans against the specific scoring criteria for BC, Alberta, New Brunswick, and other active PNP programs. We tell you where you will lose points and how to fix it before you submit.
Book Your Strategy AssessmentFrequently Asked Questions About PNP Business Plans
Related pages:
Canada PNP Entrepreneur Immigration: All Programs Compared (2026)
BC PNP Entrepreneur Immigration
Alberta Entrepreneur Immigration (AAIP)
New Brunswick Business Immigration Stream

