Title: Entrepreneurship
1Entrepreneurship Intrapreneurship
2Entrepreneurship
- The process of uncovering and developing an
opportunity to create value through innovation
and seizing that opportunity without regard to
either resources (human and capital) or the
location of the entrepreneurin a new or existing
company (Churchill, 1992 586).
3Entrepreneurship Characteristics
- Commercial leanings
- Lack of structure/self-control
- Visionary tendencies
- Risk-taking/appetite for uncertainty
- Persistence
- Doer/high initiative
- Charisma and extroversion
4Entrepreneurship Characteristics
- High-energy level
- Strong self-image
- Team building skills/uses contacts
and connections - Views failure as learning
- Commitment and fun
5Entrepreneurs vs Managers
Entrepreneurs Managers
Rewards Doing what they like. Independent Corporate rewards. Promotion, staff, office, money
Activity Direct involvement Delegation
Risk Moderate risk taker Avoids risk
Status Not concerned about status symbols Represents power and position
Relationships Deal-making and reciprocity Relies upon the hierarchy
Time orientation Time orientation - 5 - 10 years. Short term
Decisions Follows dreams with decisions Follows directives
6Intrapreneurship Characteristics
- Understands the environment
- Visionary and flexible
- Creates management options
- Encourages teamwork
- Encourages open discussion
- Builds a coalition of supporters
- Persists
7Intrapreneurship Environment
- New ideas encouraged
- Trial and error encouraged. Failure ok!
- Resources available and accessible
- Long time horizon
- Appropriate reward system
- Sponsors and champions available
- Support of top management
8- It is the customer who, in the end,
- determines how many people are employed and what
sort of wages companies can afford.
Lord Robens
9Strategy in High Technology Industries
10High Technology Industries
- Rapidly changing scientific knowledge underlying
attribute for competition - RD/Sales
- Battle over technical standard, format, and
dominant design - Set by decree, cooperation, public domain, but
mostly through consumer choices
11Benefits for Standards
- Compatibility
- Reduce consumer uncertainty
- Reduce production costs
- Increase in complementary products Network
effects which greatly enhances sustainability - Lock outs and switching costs
12Winning Format Wars
- Ensure complementary products
- Killer applications
- Razor and blade strategy
- Cell phones, printers, satellite TV/radio, video
games - Cooperative competition
- Licensing
13TV Industry Paradigm Shifts
Black White TV
14Color TV
Black White TV
15Color TV
Black White TV
16Big Screen TV
Color TV
Black White TV
17Big Screen TV
Color TV
Black White TV
18HDTV
Big Screen TV
Color TV
Black White TV
19HDTV
Incremental evolution included remote
controls,cable ready tuners, stereo sound
systems, screen-in-a-screen, etc
Big Screen TV
Color TV
Black White TV
20Competitive Dynamics
- Competitive action within an industry.
- Strategic and tactical action does not occur
within a vacuum - What industries have high competitive dynamics?
- What sort of actions/tactics are taken?
21Drivers of Competitive Dynamics
- numerous/equally balanced competitors
- slow growth
- high fixed/storage costs
- lack of differentiation/switching costs
- high exit barriers
- Etc
Competitive Dynamics
Rivalry
22Competition in the Pharmaceutical Industry
- Reps tripled to 90K last 10 years
- 12B on sales force, 2.76B on ads
- Managed care bet Pfizer from 14th to 1st
- 529 visits yearly, average length 2.5 min
- 8 remember
- Glaxo can reach 80 of the Drs in a week
- Is this necessary. No, but if my competitors do
it and I cant, then Im at a disadvantage. This
has been an arms race in the worst possible
manner.
23Types of Competitive Responses
- First Movers - initial competitive action
- advantages and disadvantages
- Fast Followers or Capable Competitors- respond
quickly to first movers - Late Entrants - day late and a dollar short
24Winners vs. Losers
- Xerox vs. Apple vs. IBM vs. Wintel
- Sony vs. Matsushita
- Polaroid vs. Kodak vs. Digital
- Atari vs. Nintendo/Sega/Sony /Microsoft.
25Relationship between Innovation and Performance
- Dependent on industry conditions
- 1) Appropriability
- 2) Sustainability
- are both a function of
- a) legal protection
- b) complementary resources
- c) complexity of innovation
26Appropriability
- Patents judged important in 65 of
pharmaceuticals, 30 in chemicals, but only 10
in electrical, instrumentation, motor vehicles,
office equipment, rubber textiles - Lead time advantages, learning curves, sales and
service networks more effective than patents.
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30The Logitech Saga
- Fortunes one of 25 cool places to work
- CEO complained in a 4AM phone call to their
advertising agency that Logitechs ads failed to
breakthrough the clutter of tech and spec in
the computer publication he was reading.
31The Logitech Saga
- Woolward Partners responded to the wake-up call
by developing a campaign featuring a series of
improbably human images that included fat men in
beanies, a urinating baby boy, and fully-clothed
nuns splashing in the surf
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34The Logitech Saga
- After a twelve-year roller-coaster ride of
profit and loss, leadership and anarchy,
attention and ignorance, Logitech is now plagued
with recreating itself. The company has been
plagued with inefficient manufacturing, mixed
marketing messages, and ill-conceived product
ventures. In 1995, despite a 40 market share,
the company lost 17 million. The company with
advertisements featuring a peeing baby or a nose
picking (Henry) Kissinger is dead
35The Logitech Saga
- We didnt want to be in mice. They seemed
beneath our intelligence. We wanted to be a
software company, like Microsoft. - I dont know where I am going, but Im on my
way. - We are the most critical users of our products.
Customer need recognition is limited by their
understanding of technology - they dont know
what is possible.
36Sound Familiar?
- This is what customers pay us for - to sweat all
these details so its easy and pleasant for them
to use our computers. Were supposed to be real
good at this. That doesnt mean we dont listen
to customers, but it is hard for them to tell you
what they want when they have never seen anything
remotely like this.
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