Who wants to be an entrepreneur?

Post on 02-Dec-2014

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A workshop I conducted for a group of budding entrepreneurs with an objective to help decide if they have what it takes.

transcript

Prakash Bagri

OPPORTUNITY

ENTREPRENEUR

Technical/ Managerial

Competence Organziation

Human & Capital

Opportunity Recognition

Act as a force for creative destruction

Agents of change and, hopefully, progress

Bring products & services delivering something new

Make positive contributions to society

Self Diagnosis

Identifying & Evaluating Opportunities

Business Model & Business Strategy

Writing your Business Plan

Meeting the Financing Requirements

Challenges of Managing Growth

Maintaining the Spark in your Business

Comfortable stretching the rules

Prepared to make powerful enemies

Have the patience to start small

Willing to shift strategies quickly

Know how to close a deal

ADDITIONALLY…

Have requisite technical skills

Able to sell their vision: Customers, Employees, Financers

Knack for turning plans into action

Good negotiators

LASTLY….

Passion for what they are doing!

Where things are changing

Under the radar of big, powerful companies

Coaching Centers

Optimistic Revenue Projections

Marketing Expenses Required to breakout

Estimating People & Space required

1. Begin with a thorough examination of the market for the business’s product or service

2. Assess the current and anticipated level of competition and define the strategy that would give you an edge

3. Look at the economics of the opportunity

4. Consider the financial and human resources required for success

1. How will it benefit customers?

2. How many people stand to benefit? In other words, what is the size of the market?

3. Is the market stable or growing? If its growing, at what annual growth rate?

4. What percentage of the total market could the product (service) hope to capture in the next few years?

5. Is another product or service from competitors available to fill part of this demand?

6. Are potential customers aware of their need for this product (or service), or is the need latent – i.e., an undiscovered need?

7. Who exactly are the potential customers? Can you name them? Can you describe them?

8. How can you reach the potential customers and make a transaction – directly, through distributors, or through retail stores?

9. What is the utility of the product (or service) relative to substitutes?

1. How are customers currently satisfying the need you have identified?

2. What are the strengths and weakness of the main competitors?

3. How would a smart competitor respond to your entering the market?

4. Are the barriers to market entry high or low? If entry barriers are high, how will your surmount them?

5. Have current competitors shown themselves to be agile and responsive to customer needs and technical change?

6. What is the single worst thing that a competitor could do to your business?

7. How would the worst thing affect your prospects of success and how would you respond?

8. What strategy on pricing, positioning, service, distribution or product features would give you a sustainable competitive advantage?