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Venture Planning Chapter Three

Venture Planning Chapter Three. Dowling BA 560 Fall 2005. Fundamental Realities. Most new ventures are works in process and works of art Most business plans are obsolete at the printer

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Venture Planning Chapter Three

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  1. Venture PlanningChapter Three Dowling BA 560 Fall 2005

  2. Fundamental Realities • Most new ventures are works in process and works of art • Most business plans are obsolete at the printer • Speed, adroitness of reflex, and adaptability are crucial • The key to succeeding is failing quickly and recouping quickly BA560 Venture Planning Prof. Dowling

  3. Fundamental Realities • Success is highly situational, depending on time, space, context, and stakeholders • The best entrepreneurs specialize in making “new mistakes” only • Starting a company is much harder than it looks, or you think it will be; but you can last a lot longer and do more than you think if you do not try to do it solo. BA560 Venture Planning Prof. Dowling

  4. The Opportunity The highly organic and situational character of the entrepreneurial process underscores the criticality of determining fit and balancing risk and reward. -Timmons

  5. The Opportunity Ideas: Over-rated? ‘Flashes of brilliance’ are rare: Instead, it’s more common to see a series of trial-and-error iterations before a promising idea fits with what the market wants.

  6. The Opportunity The ‘Great Mousetrap Fallacy’ ‘If a man can make a better mousetrap … the world will make a beaten path to his door.’ Emerson ‘The truth of the matter is that ideas are inert and, for all practical purposes, worthless.’ Timmons

  7. The Opportunity First-Mover Advantage Though not a guarantor of success, there is tremendous potential value in being first with an idea, so long as you have the capacity to capitalize on being first and establishing market share or erecting other barriers to entry.

  8. The Opportunity Experience: Herbert Simon • The entrepreneur’s pattern-recognition skills • The ‘50,000 Chunks’ of experience • Seeing what others don’t see

  9. The Opportunity When is an idea an opportunity? An opportunity has the qualities of being attractive, durable, and timely and is anchored in a product or service which creates or adds value for its buyer or end user.

  10. The Opportunity Opportunities… • Are created, or built, using ideas and entrepreneurial creativity. • Are spawned, in a free market society, when there are changing circumstances, chaos, confusion, inconsistencies, lags or leads, knowledge and information gaps. • Are situational. Conditions can be idiosyncratic or generalizable.

  11. The Opportunity Opportunity Spawners & Drivers • Regulatory Changes • 10-fold change in 10 years or less • Reconstruction of value chain and channels of distribution • Proprietary or contractual advantage • Existing management/investors burned out or under managed • Entrepreneurial leadership • Market leaders are customer-obsessed or customer-blind

  12. The Opportunity $1 billion Market $500 million Market Size $250 million Window of Opportunity $100 million 5 Years 10 Years 20 Years

  13. The Opportunity Criteria for Evaluating Venture Opportunities Exhibit 3.8 - Timmons • Industry & Market • Market • Market structure • Market size • Market capacity • Growth rate • Market share attainable in year 5 • Cost Structure

  14. The Opportunity Criteria for Evaluating Venture Opportunities Exhibit 3.8 - Timmons • Economics • Time to breakeven/positive cash flow • ROI potential • Capital requirements • Internal rate of return potential • Free cash flow characteristics

  15. The Opportunity Criteria for Evaluating Venture Opportunities Exhibit 3.8 - Timmons • Harvest Issues • Value-added potential • Valuation multiples and comparables

  16. The Opportunity Criteria for Evaluating Venture Opportunities Exhibit 3.8 - Timmons • Competitive Advantage Issues • Fixed and variable costs • Control over costs, prices, and distribution • Barriers to entry Proprietary protection Response/lead time Legal, contractual advantage Contracts and networks Key people

  17. The Opportunity Criteria for Evaluating Venture Opportunities Exhibit 3.8 - Timmons • Management Team • Entrepreneurial team • Industry and technical experience • Integrity • Intellectual honesty

  18. The Opportunity Criteria for Evaluating Venture Opportunities Exhibit 3.8 - Timmons • Fatal-Flaw Issue Personal Criteria • Goals and fit • Upside/downside issues • Desirability • Risk/reward tolerance • Stress tolerance

  19. The Opportunity Criteria for Evaluating Venture Opportunities Exhibit 3.8 - Timmons • Strategic Differentiation • Degree of fit • Team • Service management • Timing • Technology • Flexibility • Opportunity orientation • Pricing • Distribution channels

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