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Innovation and New Business Ventures I

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Title: Innovation and New Business Ventures I


1
Innovation and New Business Ventures I
  • Prof. Dr. Arthur Sybrandy
  • Cairo, Egypt
  • January 2007

2
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3
Entrepreneur
  • Someone who creates a new opportunity in the
    world of business and assembles the resources
    necessary to successfully exploit that
    opportunity.
  • Home based entrepreneur
  • Technology
  • Resources
  • (Tax) laws
  • Can be part-time
  • Virtual entrepreneur
  • No traditional bricks-and-mortar location
  • Serial entrepreneur
  • Doesnt want to be traditional manager
  • Traditional entrepreneur
  • Bricks-and-mortar

4
Entrepreneurial Ventures Differ From Small
Businesses in General
  • Entrepreneurial venture
  • Driven by opportunity
  • Focused on innovation
  • Determined to create new value by shaking up the
    marketplace
  • Determined to grow
  • Small business
  • Lifestyle business
  • Remains small
  • Geographically bound
  • Provides a job for the owner and income for the
    family
  • Entrepreneurs generate the most jobs, not small
    businesses!
  • The terms are often used informally and
    interchangeably

5
Most Enterprises Start Small
  • Small can be defined many ways
  • Total assets
  • Owners equity
  • Yearly sales revenues
  • Number of employees desirable because
  • Inflation-proof
  • Transparent
  • Comparable
  • Available
  • Different criteria can and often are used for
    different industries for example the U.S. Small
    Business Administration (SBA)
  • Manufactures and Wholesalers -gt number of
    employees (varies by SIC code)
  • Retailers and Services -gt Annual sales (varies by
    SIC code)

6
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7
Small Business by Industry (U.S.)
8
Small (entrepreneurial) Businesses
  • Tend to outperform big business in terms of ROE
  • Are more innovative
  • Form a basis on which big business depends
  • Create many jobs in the economy

9
Small (entrepreneurial) Businesses
  • Tend to have (very) high failure rates
  • However, big businesses also fail!
  • Fortune 500 changes over time
  • For example, Digital Equipment Corporation (DEC)
  • Dun Bradstreet identifies bad management as
    the number one reason for failure
  • This includes lack of expertise to handle
    increased demands as the business grows
  • Many small business owners are not professional
    managers, unlike their counterparts in big
    business

10
Small Business Survival Rate
11
Characteristics of Entrepreneurs
  • A unique breed that comes in many varieties
  • Very broadly (American) entrepreneurs are
  • Married
  • Men (but women are catching up rapidly)
  • Desiring to be independent
  • Comfortable with uncertainty and ambiguity
  • Moderate or calculated risk takers
  • They also
  • Have a lot of energy and are confident in their
    abilities
  • Tend to have a future orientation
  • Value achievement over money
  • Many researchers now feel that entrepreneurship
    is more about an opportunistic mindset and spirit
    than about a process for starting a new business

12
Entrepreneurial Traits
13
Entrepreneurial Characteristics
14
Entrepreneurs are a Diverse Bunch
  • Young
  • Women
  • Minorities
  • Immigrants
  • Part-time
  • Home-based
  • Family businesses
  • Copreneurs
  • Corporate castoffs
  • Corporate dropouts
  • Intrapreneurs

15
Global Entrepreneurial Activity
16
Entrepreneurship
  • Chance to make a difference (in society)
  • Opportunity to reach your full potential
  • Possible great financial gains
  • Independence, control your destiny
  • Make your hobby your work and vice versa
  • Risk losing your (and others) entire investment
  • Variable, uncertain income, especially early on
  • Lots of stress, with long hours, and having to
    make decisions in areas where youre not
    knowledgeable.
  • At least initially, a lower quality of life

17
Do you want to be an entrepreneur?
  • Why do you want to start a business?
  • Dont do it just for the money
  • Wont take out any money first year(s)!
  • Wealth comes from appreciation of value of the
    business, which takes time
  • How is starting a business going to affect your
    personal life?
  • Consider your age when evaluating risks
  • Look at the needs of your family
  • Are you in physical shape to start a business?
  • How does gt 14 hours per day, 7 days per week
    sound?
  • What aspects of business make you really
    uncomfortable?
  • Factor your attitudes into the type of business
    you start
  • How will your feelings about business affect the
    potential growth of your business?

18
Entrepreneurial Environment
  • The environment is constantly changing
  • We have to consider three components
  • Systems of Behavior
  • Systems of Meaning
  • Systems of Resources

19
System Definition
  • Organized
  • unitary whole composed of
  • two or more interdependent parts, components, or
    subsystems and
  • delineated by identifiable boundaries from
  • its environment.

20
Key System Terms (1)
  • Holism v. Reductionism
  • Open v. Closed systems
  • Input
  • Transformation
  • Output
  • System boundaries
  • Negative entropy

21
Key System Terms (2)
  • Feedback
  • Steady state, Dynamic equilibrium (Chaos?)
  • Hierarchy
  • Multiple goal seeking
  • Equifinality
  • Internal elaboration

22
Environmental Hierarchies
23
Examples
  • The (global) economy
  • Growth
  • Changing character
  • Integration
  • The entrepreneur
  • Passion, vision, personality
  • Political and legal systems
  • At home and abroad
  • Suppliers
  • Raw materials, parts ,labor, etc.
  • Competitors
  • Marketing strategy, sourcing, etc.
  • Customers
  • Technology
  • E-Commerce, Internet, etc.
  • Money
  • Educational system
  • Entrepreneurship courses ?

24
Some Internet Effects
  • Perception that all business now takes place at
    Internet Speed
  • Can be the base for your entire business
  • Easy, fast access to vital information, and
    turning information into (shared) knowledge
  • Reach sustainable size more quickly
  • Synergy due to opportunity to work with virtual
    partners
  • Scaling out -gt let someone else do what you cant
    do in-house
  • Keep your business as small as possible to be as
    fast as possible -gt outsourcing -gt concentrate on
    your expertise (core processes)
  • Shortening of value chains
  • Hierarchy is out, Network is in
  • Continually reinvent yourself, make yourself
    obsolete before someone else does.
  • Pricing has become more important

25
Growth of Entrepreneurship
  • Some environmental changes are particularly
    firing growth in entrepreneurship in the U.S.
  • American attitude of entrepreneur as hero,
    Individualism
  • Increased availability of entrepreneurial
    education
  • Demographic and Economic factors
  • Baby-boomers
  • Economic growth, more affluence (and leisure?)
  • Shift to a service economy
  • Technology advancements
  • E-Commerce
  • International opportunities
  • At least some of these changes are also
    applicable outside the U.S. and
  • Urbanization
  • Increasingly free enterprise

26
10 Deadly Mistakes
  • Management Mistakes
  • Lack of Experience
  • Poor Financial Control
  • Weak Marketing Efforts
  • Failure to Develop a Strategic Plan
  • Uncontrolled Growth
  • Poor Location
  • Improper Inventory Control
  • Incorrect Pricing
  • Inability to make the Entrepreneurial
    Transition
  • View failure as learning !

27
Avoiding Trouble
  • Know Your Business
  • Get an education before doing your own thing
  • Possible work in the industry in various
    positions
  • Read, Read, and Read some more
  • Understand the Industry (Starbuck Porter
    framework)
  • Develop a Good Business Plan
  • This includes a solid Feasibility Analysis
  • Marketing Planning (often Niche Strategy is good)
  • Carefully Manage Financial Resources
  • Practical Information System
  • Understand Financial Statements!
  • Learn to Manage People
  • Manage Your Time

28
10 Reasons Not to Start a Business
  • Because everyone is doing it
  • Because you want to be a millionaire
  • Because youre looking for a secure job
  • Because you dont want to work for someone else
  • Because you just came into some money
  • Because if the kid down the street did it, so can
    I
  • Because you want to give everyone in your family
    a job
  • Because youve got a great idea
  • Because its too risky
  • Start a business because its what you most want
    to do (a positive note at the end ?)

29
10 Ways to Spark Your Spirit
  • Start Reading about great new businesses
  • Join a community business organization
  • Hang around a university business school
    (excellent idea!)
  • Tell a friend
  • Do a feasibility study
  • Leave your job (or get laid off)
  • Discover an industry (immerse yourself)
  • Spend time with an entrepreneur
  • Find a mentor
  • Do something Anything (Just do it!)
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