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Startup Guide

Why You Shouldn't Ask GPT to Write Your Business Plan for You — Writing Well and Passing Review Are Different Things

2026.06.18·6 min·OPENSEED

Ask GPT, Claude, or Gemini to "write me a business plan" and they'll do it shockingly well. Smooth sentences, a structure that sounds convincing. But trusting that output and submitting it as-is is risky. Writing well and passing review are two entirely different problems.

Intro.

#The Structural Limits of an AI That Just Writes for You

A plan a drafting-AI hands you is a starting point, not a finished product. Before explaining why you shouldn't trust it as-is, let's walk through the structural limitations.

  • It invents numbers — figures like 'a ₩3 trillion domestic market' or '20% annual growth' get generated to sound plausible, with no source check. It never actually looked at real statistics.
  • It doesn't verify its own claims — a smooth sentence isn't the same as a correct one. The model isn't cross-checking facts; it's generating what sounds plausible.
  • It has no real, current data — it writes without knowing the market past its training cutoff, the actual format of Korean government grant programs, or your real competitors and market conditions.
  • It inflates things to sound good — it tends to write optimistically in the direction the user wants, which hides weaknesses.
주의
Reviewers are looking for exactly that — plausible-sounding claims with nothing backing them up. It's not the best-written plan that gets through. It's the one with evidence attached.
02

#OpenSeed Isn't for 'Writing' — It's for 'Verifying'

OpenSeed isn't a tool that writes your plan and calls it done. It takes the plan you have before submission and checks the claims inside it against real data.

Say you wrote 'a ₩3 trillion domestic market.' We check it against real public and market data, and if the evidence isn't there, we point to exactly that spot. We're not generating new text — we're checking whether what you already wrote is actually true. This is a tool for 'confirm this is actually correct,' not 'just write it and I'll trust it.'

03

#So, 70/30

Here's the summary: the substance of the business — problem definition, real traction, strategy, evidence — 70% of it has to be written by you. That's not something AI can do in your place. Leave the other 30% — structuring it, and above all, verifying whether it's actually true — to AI. That 30% verification is exactly what OpenSeed does.

TIP
It's fine if you used AI to write the first draft. But run it through verification once before submitting, and you'll be the first to see which numbers lack evidence and where it's been inflated — before the reviewer does.
Summary.

#Conclusion — Don't Hand It All Over. Get It Verified.

Drafting AI is fast and convenient, but submitting its output as-is is risky. Writing well and passing review are different things. Write the business plan yourself (70%), and get help from a tool for fact verification (30%).

For context, the tendency of language models to answer plausibly without fact-checking is a limitation consistently raised in AI research. It's nothing new — it's a structural problem anyone runs into when using drafting AI.

CTA
Don't hand it all over — go 70/30. Get the 70% you wrote verified before you submit. OpenSeed checks it against real data and flags exactly where the evidence is missing.
광고

AI Wrote Your Plan — Get It Verified Before You Submit

OpenSeed checks the claims in your plan against real data and flags where the evidence is missing. Before you submit and trust it blindly, go 70/30 — get the 70% you wrote verified.

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