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Title: Entrepreneurship for MBA Students


1
Entrepreneurship for MBA Students
  • Proving the Business Concept
  • Lecture 4

2
Introduction
  • The world of possibilities is unlimited but the
    world of ideas is even larger
  • Some ideas are ready to be turned into a growing
    profitable business immediately. Some have to
    wait till critical technological problems are
    overcome
  • Some ideas are practical while most of ideas are
    not.
  • This lecture discusses the process of opportunity
    screening
  • It discusses systematic ways of discarding
    unfeasible ideas, and identifying unfeasible
    aspects of otherwise practical ideas

3
Introduction
  • This lecture will assist the entrepreneur of
    avoiding unfeasibility before committing
    him/herself to investing time needed to produce a
    complete business plan and long before the
    entrepreneur or anyone associated with him
    commits money or other significant resources into
    an attempt on the impossible

4
Introduction
  • As part of this screening process, you will need
    to make projections of revenue and marketing
    expenses of your venture

5
SMECP
  • The stylized map of the enterprise creation
    process

Idea
Project
Concept development
Plan evaluation
Plan Development
Problem
Commercial feasibility screen
Concept
Enterprise
The Innovation Track
6
Ideas
  • Every innovation starts with an idea, but only a
    few ideas become innovations
  • Some inventors are profoundly reluctant to allow
    their concept or prototypes to be examined in
    detail by experts as a broad generalization, an
    entrepreneur or investor who backs a product so
    secret that a reputable consulting engineer
    cannot be trusted to examine it and prepare a
    confidential report is putting their money at
    high risk

7
Screening for Practicability
  • The starting point for every new enterprise is
    the problem and the idea for solving it
  • Every idea is the product of humans imagination
    and some ideas are bound to stay there
  • Ideas must be tested for fatal flaws before they
    can be set out as a concept
  • A concept is a combination of an idea for
    resolving a problem and a practical proposal in
    an outline form at least, for delivering that
    solution
  • A concept may address a real problem and be
    technical feasible and commercially unfeasible

8
Screening for Practicability
  • Developing a complete business plan takes time
    and effort and it is disappointing to get to the
    end of the process and discover that the concept
    cannot be turned into a commercial proposition
  • The less invested in a flawed idea, the less
    psychological pain involved in abandoning it

9
Points to be Pondered
  • What is a Feasibility Study?
  • What is a Business Plan?
  • How do they differ?
  • What Resources are available to help develop each?

10
What is a Feasibility Study?
  • A feasibility study is an analysis of the
    viability of an idea through a disciplined and
    documented process of thinking through the idea
    from its logical beginning to its logical end.
  • A feasibility study provides an Investigating
    function that helps answer Should we proceed
    with the proposed project idea? Is it a viable
    business venture?
  • A feasibility study should be conducted to
    determine the viability of an idea BEFORE
    proceeding with the development of a business.

11
Levels of Feasibility Assessment
  • A feasibility study of an idea is conducted at
    three levels
  • Operational Feasibility
  • Will it work?
  • Technical Feasibility
  • Can it be built?
  • Economic Feasibility
  • Will it make economic sense if it works and is
    built?
  • Will it generate PROFITS?

12
Feasibility Study
  • Fatal flaws are facts about an opportunity that
    make it impossible for a new enterprise based
    upon it to succeed

13
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14
Strengths
Threats
Opportunities
SWOT Analysis
Weaknesses
15
Comparison Entrepreneurs and Traditional Managers
16
Project Management Process
Identify activities and resources
Define objectives
Establish sequences
Determine project completion date
Compare with objectives
Estimate time for activities
Determine additional resource requirements
17
Further Feasibility Studies
  • If this list was routinely consulted before
    people put their time and money into a new
    venture, a lot of pain may be avoided
  • Marketing feasibility does anyone want it? Has
    the product any features that would persuade
    someone to choose it ahead of currently available
    products?
  • Fundamental legality is it legal?

18
Why doing a Feasibility Study?
  • Provide a thorough examination of all issues and
    assessment of probability of business success
  • Give focus to the project and outline
    alternatives
  • Narrow business alternatives
  • Surface new opportunities through the
    investigative process
  • Identify reasons NOT to proceed
  • Enhance the probability of success by addressing
    and mitigating factors early on that could affect
    the project
  • Provide quality information for decision making
  • Help to increase investment in the company
  • Provide documentation that the business venture
    was thoroughly investigated
  • Help in securing funding from lending
    institutions and other monetary sources

19
Data Sources for a Feasibility Assessment
  • Data required for a feasibility study can come
    from primary or secondary sources
  • Primary data can include formal interviews and
    surveys
  • Collection of primary data can be expensive and
    time consuming
  • Secondary data can include industry and trade
    publications, statistics of industry
    associations, and government agency reports

20
Is it legal?
  • Visitors to Thailand may be surprised that there
    are no T-Shirts bearing caricatures of the King
  • No one in Singapore publishes a popular newspaper
    of magazine disrespectful of the Prime Minister
  • Americans dont like to make any misuse of the
    Stars and Stripes
  • Some Americans are surprised at the bureaucratic
    hurdles in the way anyone wishing to sell or buy
    handguns in other countries
  • There are many products that are freely available
    in some countries and strictly banned in others
  • Many types of business may only be conducted in
    premises that have been approved by one of more
    levels of the government
  • Very strict standards backed up by severe
    penalties apply in many countries to facilities
    where food is prepared or stored
  • Appliances that are connected to the water, gas
    or electricity supplies, or to the
    telecommunications network, must meet strictly
    enforced standards
  • If laws and regulations block an opportunity, the
    entrepreneur can plan to secure an exemption or
    lobby to have the regulations amended. In the
    absence of an exemption or deregulation, such a
    proposal is fatally flawed

21
Does anyone want it?
  • Specialists and experts often fall into the trap
    of doing something because they can and assuming
    that other people will want the result while
    prospective users cant see the point at all.
  • Marketing legends tell the tale of a pet food
    company in England, whose technicians discovered
    a new way to, process dog food. The product
    seemed to be a certain winner and the company
    invested in substantial advertising and
    negotiated extensive distribution. The first few
    days sales were fantastic the product walked
    off the shelves the company stepped up
    production and waited for the repeat orders, but
    none ever came. Dogs loathed the stuff!

22
Planning Spreadsheets
  • Entrepreneurial businesses must be managed, often
    more carefully than established ones, since there
    is little room for error. There are, however, no
    historical records from which objectives can be
    derived. A planning spreadsheet may be used to
    generate, among other things, prof forma sales
    and cost projections which can serve two major
    purposes

23
Planning Spreadsheets
  • They can provide a pseudo-historic base upon
    which objectives can be set and the performance
    of the organization in its early months monitored
  • They can provide a tool which can be used to test
    the financial feasibility of a proposal and
    refine the marketing and organization plans of a
    feasible one, without going to the trouble of
    developing a full set of operating financial
    projections

24
Steps for an Economic Feasibility Study
  • Identify and Estimate all Capital Expenditures
  • Identify and Estimate all Variable Costs related
    to the Proposed Business Venture
  • Identify People and Skills required to operate
  • Determine Wages, Salaries, and Benefits
  • Identify and Estimate Project Related Costs
  • Infrastructure development or improvements
  • Advertising and Promotion
  • Legal Fees
  • Municipal State Development taxes
  • Identify and Estimate all Fixed Costs

25
Estimating Total Capital Requirements
  • Estimate capital requirements for facilities,
    equipment and inventories
  • Estimate working capital needs
  • Estimate start-up capital needs until revenues
    are realized at full capacity
  • Estimate other capital needs (constructions
    delays, technology malfunction, market access
    delays, etc.)
  • Estimate other capital needs than those listed
    above

26
Equity and Credit
  • Estimate Equity and Credit Needs
  • Identify alternative equity sources and capital
    availability
  • Producers, Local Investors, Venture Capitalists
  • Identify and assess alternative credit sources
  • Banks, Government, Grants, Local and State
    Economic Development Incentives
  • Assess expected financing needs and alternative
    sources
  • Interest Rates, Terms, Conditions, Etc.

27
Cost-Benefit Analysis
  • Utilize data collected to determine economic
    feasibility
  • Estimate Expected Costs and Revenue
  • Estimate the Profit Margin / Expected Net Profit
  • Estimate the sales or usage needed to break-even
  • Estimate the returns under various production,
    price and sales levels
  • Benchmark against industry averages and/or
    competitors
  • Identify limitations or constraints of the
    economic analysis
  • Project expected cash flow during the start-up
    period
  • Project income statement, balance sheet when
    reaching full operation

28
What Defines Feasibility?
  • A feasible business venture is one where
  • the business will generate adequate cash flow and
    profits,
  • the business will withstand the risks it will
    encounter,
  • the business will remain viable in the long-term,
    and
  • the business will meet the goals of the founders.

29
What Next?
  • After the feasibility study has been completed
    and presented to the leaders of the project, they
    should carefully study and analyze the
    conclusions and underlying assumptions
  • Next they will decide which course of action to
    pursue
  • Potential Courses of action include
  • Developing a business plan and proceeding with
    creating and operating a business
  • Identifying additional scenarios for further study

30
Developing a Business Plan
31
What is a Business Plan?
  • A Business Plan summarizes the plan of action
    after a course of action has been determined
    through the Feasibility Study
  • A Business Plan provides a Planning function
  • A Business Plan outlines the actions needed to
    take the proposal from idea to reality
  • A Business Plan tells How your business will be
    created and Why it will be successful
  • A Business Plan provides a road map for
    strategic planning

32
Why Write a Business Plan?
  • Put the Pieces TogetherDo the pieces fit
    together in a logical manner?
  • Create a Blueprint for Action
  • Focus Founders and/or Management Team
  • Obtain Financing
  • Attract Equity Investment
  • Attract Key Managers and Employees
  • Obtain Contracts
  • Create Joint Ventures, Mergers, Acquisitions

33
What is included in a Business Plan?
  • A Business Plan should be brief, concise
    straight to the point
  • Main Requirements May Include
  • Industry Description
  • Market Size
  • Customer Base
  • Competitive Advantage
  • Business Location
  • Three years of Financial Projections
  • Monthly Tracking of First Year Financials
  • Management Experience and Profile
  • Personal Statement of Affairs
  • Other Sources of Cash, if any

34
How Effective Is the Business Plan?
  • How effective a Business Plan is depends on how
    well the following questions are answered
  • Who are we?
  • What do we do?
  • What do we have to offer?
  • Why will someone pay for our products/service?
  • What resources do we have?
  • Where are we going?
  • What do we need to get there?
  • Why will we be successful?
  • Why should someone participate or invest?
  • How will we measure performance?

35
The Story a Business Plan Tells
  • Business Plan should be tailored to the
    stakeholders
  • Be aware of each potential stakeholders
    priorities
  • Make sure all priorities are addressed in a
    balanced manner in the business plan
  • If more than one version of a business plan is
    written, make sure each tells the SAME story only
    with difference emphasis

36
Feasibility Study vs. Business Plan
  • Feasibility study answers the bottom line
    questionIs this venture going to make money?
  • Feasibility study outlines and analyzes several
    alternatives or methods of achieving business
    success
  • Feasibility study is conducted before a business
    plan
  • Business plan is prepared only after the venture
    has been deemed to be feasible
  • Business plan deals with only one alternative or
    scenario that is determined to be the best
    alternative
  • Business plan considers the management sidegoals
    and objectives of the planned business venture

37
What resources are available to help develop each?
  • Hired Business Consultants
  • Make sure an accurate assessment is given
  • Make sure someone is not paid to give the answer
    the group wants to hear
  • Can be costly
  • Third Party Unbiased
  • Universities and Research Centres
  • Centers for Economic Development
  • Small Business Development Center

38
Consumer Benefits
  • People do not buy products or services, they buy
    benefits
  • Hence we make purchases not for the products
    themselves, but for the benefits of the problems
    they solve or the opportunities they offer

39
Consumer Benefits
  • Consumers seek bundles of types of benefits
  • Tangible benefits e.g., a watch keeps good time
    has leather band
  • Intangible benefits e.g., the reliability
    reputation of the watch manufacturer the image
    of the watch wearer

40
Customer Behavior
  • There are three general classes of purchasing
    event in the life of the relationship between a
    supplier and a customer
  • The customer makes the first purchase to initiate
    the relationship this may be indistinguishable
    from subsequent purchases, as when a new member
    joins a golf or other club and pays a joining
    premium
  • There may be ongoing transactions, such as
    regular servicing of a motorcar or simply routine
    repurchasing of a consumer good or service
  • There may be subsequent transactions such as the
    replacement of a motorcar after a period of use
    of the payment of annual renewal fees at a club
    or on an insurance policy
  • Often a venture that would be marginal if it
    could only rely on one source of income from a
    customer relationship and becomes profitable if
    more than one can be brought into play. One of
    the most famous examples is King Gillettess
    launch of the safety razor, where Gillette
    offered the handles at an actual cash loss,
    relying on the extremely profitable sales of
    blades for the prosperity of his business

41
Parameters that you must estimate
  • Marketing a new product (whether a good or
    service) involves asking people to pay for it.
    This introduces at least two constraints
  • The perceived value to the buyer must exceed the
    price, which in turn must exceed the cost
  • The targeted buyers must be able to afford the
    product

42
Parameters that you must estimate
  • You are going to get very far with your planning
    if you have not developed a reasonable idea of
    your proposed price and associated direct costs
    the price then has two roles to play, in that
    your revenue is that the price of the product and
    the number of the sales, while your market is
    limited to those people who can afford your
    product.
  • You will also need to estimate likely trends in
    prices and costs prices unless supported by
    other features and improved performance levels,
    generally tend downwards, while hourly labor
    costs tend up
  • You need to estimate these effects in your
    planning and you will need to track the trends
    after your venture is launched to verify or
    adjust estimates

43
Defining the Market
  • Failure is always distressing, but failure in the
    pursuit of an impossible objective can be worse
    you dont just feel disappointed, you feel stupid
    as well
  • The most fundamental error anyone can make is to
    launch a product into a market that is simply too
    small to generate enough revenue to cover the
    ventures operating basic costs

44
Defining the market
  • Modeling starts by quantifying the market the new
    venture intends to satisfy and the estimate of
    the size of the target market will become a key
    model parameter
  • The market for this purpose consists of the
    people and the firms who could gain a net benefit
    from using the new product, have the means and
    will be offered the opportunity to buy it
  • The market is not static but in constant change

45
Market Response Parameters
  • It is difficult to accurately estimate how many
    potential customers the world holds for a new
    product
  • It is even more difficult to estimate how many of
    these people or firms will become actual,
    revenue-generating customers
  • And once they have become customers, how long
    will they maintain that state

46
Promotional Quality
  • The most direct way of securing a trial is a
    sampling program or the equivalent
  • When introducing a new packaged consumer good the
    supplier may engage a an advertising firm to
    distribute free samples of the product to
    shoppers in the target segments

47
Encouraging internal influence
  • Internal influence is pure gold to entrepreneurs
    with satisfied users persuading potential ones to
    try the product without drawing a penny from the
    marketing budget
  • Wal-Mart, the leading American retailer, brands
    its discount warehouses Sams Clubs to give its
    users a sense of being a part of the community
    rather than mere consumers

48
Consumer Decision-Making Process
Problem Recognition
Information Search
Evaluation of Alternatives
Purchase Decision
Postpurchase Evaluation
49
Stages in the New Product Adoption Process
  • Adoption process
  • the mental process through which an individual
    passes from first hearing about an innovation to
    final adoption
  • Consists of 5 Stages (These are exactly as they
    indicate)
  • Awareness
  • Interest
  • Evaluation
  • Trial
  • Adoption

50
New Product Adoption Rates
Figure 6-5
34 Early majority
34 Late majority
13.5
Early adopters
2.5 Innovators
16 Laggards
Time of adoption of innovations
Source reprinted with permission of the Free
Press, a Division of Simon Schuster, from
Diffusion of Innovations, Fourth Edition, by E.M.
Rugers, 1983.
51
Influences on the Rate of Adoption
  • Relative advantage
  • How much better than existing alternatives?
  • Compatibility
  • Fit current values and experiences?
  • Complexity
  • Ease of understanding?
  • Communicability
  • Can the innovation be observed and communicated?

52
The Total Product Concept
  • Total product refers to the sum of benefits
    offered by a product, service, outlet, etc.
  • Basic core bundle of utilitarian benefits (e.g.,
    design, features, etc.)
  • Accessory ring added-value benefits with no
    apparent extra cost (e.g., store reputation,
    manufacturer prestige, convenient location, etc.)
  • Psychological ring benefits resulting from the
    consumers feelings associated with owning/using
    the product (e.g., belonging, youthful, powerful,
    sexy, etc.)
  • Time products/service this can be good or
    bad (e.g., fast food versus conventional
    restaurant)

53
Market Segmentation
  • Market segmentation is the study of the
    marketplace in order to discover already existing
    viable groups of consumers who are similar or
    homogeneous in their approaches to choosing
    and/or consuming goods and services.

54
Segment Bounding
  • Segment bounding is a means by which marketers
    differentiate among consumers and among market
    segments
  • Determine the descriptors of the
    consumers/units in the segment (e.g.,
    demographics, psychographics, benefits sought,
    product usage rate, type of retail outlet, etc.)
  • Determine specific geographic location of
    segment
  • Bound segments in time to ensure that all data
    is relevant and up to date for the time of use.

55
Segment Viability
  • Four factors are used to assess segment
    viability. Viable segments are
  • Of sufficient size
  • Measurable
  • Differentiated
  • Reachable

56
Segmentation Strategies
  • Mass marketing (undifferentiated marketing)
    offering the same product to the entire consumer
    population
  • Concentrated marketing (focused or niche
    marketing) selecting one market segment, even
    though the product may also appeal to others
  • Differentiated marketing selecting two or more
    different segments

57
Segmentation in the Global Marketplace
  • There are two approaches to market segmentation
  • Localization treating each country as a separate
    market and seeking consumer segments accordingly
  • Intermarket segmentation (also called
    standardization) selecting groups of consumers
    who exhibit similar consumption behavior across
    different countries
  • Marketers emphasize similarities rather than
    differences across country markets

58
Consumer Benefits and Product Positioning
  • Product positioning is the placement of a
    product, service, outlet, etc. in the mind of the
    consumer
  • There are five ways used to position products,
    services, outlets, etc.
  • On perceived benefits
  • On image
  • On attributes
  • Against competitors
  • Combination of two or more of the above
  • Repositioning shifting position in the
    consumers mind through changes in important
    product, price, distribution, and promotional
    and/or personal selling benefits.

59
The Consumer Decision-Making Process
  • A consumer decision model is a means of
    describing the processes that consumers go
    through before, during, and after making a
    purchase (choice).
  • A model shows the causes or antecedents of a
    particular behavior and each of its results or
    consequences.

60
Engel, Kollat, and Blackwell (EKB) Model
  • The five distinct parts of consumer decision
    making presented are
  • Input, information processing, a decision
    process, decision process variables, and external
    influences

61
Input
  • Input includes all kinds of stimuli from our
    contact with the world around us
  • Our experiences, contact with others
  • Marketer-controlled stimuli (e.g., advertising,
    store display, demonstrations)
  • Other stimuli (e.g., personal recollections,
    conversations with friends)
  • External search

62
Decision Process
  • It is triggered at any time during information
    processing
  • It consists of five steps
  • Problem recognition
  • Search
  • Alternative evaluation
  • Choice
  • Outcomes (post-purchase evaluation and behavior)

63
Decision Process Variables
  • Those individual qualities that make
    people/consumers unique.
  • Decision process variables include
  • Motives
  • Beliefs
  • Attitudes
  • Lifestyles
  • Intentions
  • Evaluative criteria
  • Normative compliance and informational influence
  • Other aspects of self

64
External Influences
  • Such influences are called Circles of Social
    Influence. They are culture, sub-culture
    (co-culture), social class, reference groups, and
    family or household influences
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