+ All Categories
Home > Documents > Making an Idea into a Business pptcenit.latech.edu/downloads/making an idea into a business... ·...

Making an Idea into a Business pptcenit.latech.edu/downloads/making an idea into a business... ·...

Date post: 26-Jul-2020
Category:
Upload: others
View: 0 times
Download: 0 times
Share this document with a friend
34
Turning an Idea into a Business
Transcript
Page 1: Making an Idea into a Business pptcenit.latech.edu/downloads/making an idea into a business... · 2010-09-14 · experimentation, New Coke was renamed Coke 2 and remained on the market

Turning an Idea into a Business

Page 2: Making an Idea into a Business pptcenit.latech.edu/downloads/making an idea into a business... · 2010-09-14 · experimentation, New Coke was renamed Coke 2 and remained on the market

WELCOME Participants!

TOP DAWGBusiness Plan Competition

Sponsored by :ABESE

Outline of Presentation:Intro---CEnIT What is a Business Plan?Sources of informationBrainstorming for Value

Page 3: Making an Idea into a Business pptcenit.latech.edu/downloads/making an idea into a business... · 2010-09-14 · experimentation, New Coke was renamed Coke 2 and remained on the market

What does CEnIT do?

• we want what you want—more business!Mission:• Conduct research and develop new technologies that will

advance IT capabilities in the nation.• Conduct research on entrepreneurship development in • Conduct research on entrepreneurship development in

technologically under-developed communities.• Provide an infrastructure to stimulate an entrepreneurial

culture. Vision:• To create an entrepreneurial culture for expanding

education, research, intellectual property, and economic development opportunities in IT.

Page 4: Making an Idea into a Business pptcenit.latech.edu/downloads/making an idea into a business... · 2010-09-14 · experimentation, New Coke was renamed Coke 2 and remained on the market

What is a Business Plan?

• Its as much for you as it is for anyone else—maybe more… The SBA says:: A business plan precisely defines your business, identifies your goals and serves as your firm's resume. Its basic components include a current and pro forma balance sheet, an income statement and a cash flow analysis. It helps you allocate resources properly, handle balance sheet, an income statement and a cash flow analysis. It helps you allocate resources properly, handle unforeseen complications, and make the right decisions.

Because it provides specific and organized information about your company and how you will repay borrowed money, a good business plan is a crucial part of any loan package. Additionally, it can tell your sales personnel, suppliers and others about your operations and goals.

Page 5: Making an Idea into a Business pptcenit.latech.edu/downloads/making an idea into a business... · 2010-09-14 · experimentation, New Coke was renamed Coke 2 and remained on the market

B.P. is NOT Just Financial Numbers and NOT just for Loans

• Bootstraping—your own money (including loans), friends & family

• Angels—seed money and “hands on” advice-----Competition presentations toadvice-----Competition presentations to

• VC’s—La. SBIC being formed• Suppliers & customers— innovation in

financing• Mix of various above—you have to plan

which/when

Page 6: Making an Idea into a Business pptcenit.latech.edu/downloads/making an idea into a business... · 2010-09-14 · experimentation, New Coke was renamed Coke 2 and remained on the market

Business Plan Info

• Inc Magazine’s Business Plan Guidancehttp://www.inc.com/guides/write_biz_plan/20

660.html• American Express Outline• American Express Outlinehttp://home3.americanexpress.com/smallbu

siness/Tool/biz_plan/elements/index.aspSBAhttp://www.sba.gov/starting/indexstartup.htm

l

Page 7: Making an Idea into a Business pptcenit.latech.edu/downloads/making an idea into a business... · 2010-09-14 · experimentation, New Coke was renamed Coke 2 and remained on the market

B. P. Info. continued

• Two Books used around here lately:• The Art of Innovation-Tom Kelly-Innovative

Product Design Class-IDEO-http://www.ideo.com/http://www.ideo.com/

• High Tech Start-up-John Nesheim-Entrepreneurship for Scientists & Engrs

• http://www.startupweb.com/tools_business.html

Page 8: Making an Idea into a Business pptcenit.latech.edu/downloads/making an idea into a business... · 2010-09-14 · experimentation, New Coke was renamed Coke 2 and remained on the market

Which comes first:The idea or the plan?

• Question: The idea comes first. Right?• Answer:

YES… YES… and… and…

NONONONO• The first patent Thomas Edison was ever granted (of 1087), at the age of 22, was for a ballot

machine designed to instantly record votes made by members of Congress. It was a flop. • The machine worked very well, and Edison had found a financial backer willing to invest $100 in it.

Yet when he demonstrated his new device in Washington, he was told that it would only destroy the time-honored congressional device of filibustering, for example, stalling for time. "Young man, that is just what we do not want," a committee chairman told the future Wizard of Menlo Park. "Your invention would destroy the only hope that the minority would have of influencing legislation."

• Crushed - and nearly flat broke - the young Edison left the nation's capital determined from then on to invent only things that would be in "commercial demand.“

source: source: Machine Politics, Machine Politics, By Kevin Baker, By Kevin Baker, Issue Date: Nov 20 2000Issue Date: Nov 20 2000

Page 9: Making an Idea into a Business pptcenit.latech.edu/downloads/making an idea into a business... · 2010-09-14 · experimentation, New Coke was renamed Coke 2 and remained on the market

Who gives a hoot?

Ford’s Edsel

Coke’s formula fiasco

“Examples of costly failures are legion. In today's dollars, Federal Express lost $294 million on Zap Mail. NeXt lost $250 million on million on Zap Mail. NeXt lost $250 million on its computer workstation. GM lost $420 million on the Wankel Rotary Engine. DuPont lost over $1 billion on Corfam. Ford lost over $2 billion on the Edsel. Polaroid wrote off $197 million in inventory alone for Polarvision instant movies. Xerox invented the personal computer ahead of Apple but failed to commercialize it. Motorola invested over a decade and more than $360 million in its cellular telephone project before taking a single major order.”

G.S. Lynn and R.R. Reilly in “Growing the Top Line Through Innovation”, Chief Executive; New York; Fall 2002

Learn from “Uncle” Thomas (Edison):

Don’t Assume people will want it-

prove it -as you develop it !!!!!!!

Page 10: Making an Idea into a Business pptcenit.latech.edu/downloads/making an idea into a business... · 2010-09-14 · experimentation, New Coke was renamed Coke 2 and remained on the market

Quality problems and high costThe Edsel

• "To this day, it’s still pretty embarrassing to be broken down on the side of the road with one."

• Learn Vicariously:• Learn Vicariously:

Skip LeFauve, who was the president/CEO of the Saturn Corporation, bought a case of the books entitled ‘The Edsel Affair , gave a copy to all his executives and had them underline everything that Ford did wrong with the Edsel."

http://www.edsel.com/reviews/failure.htm

Page 11: Making an Idea into a Business pptcenit.latech.edu/downloads/making an idea into a business... · 2010-09-14 · experimentation, New Coke was renamed Coke 2 and remained on the market

Ford lost 2 billion on this beautiful car! $250 million in 1958 dollars

Page 12: Making an Idea into a Business pptcenit.latech.edu/downloads/making an idea into a business... · 2010-09-14 · experimentation, New Coke was renamed Coke 2 and remained on the market

New Ideas- but more hype than substance and introduced in a

recession• For all the criticism of the Edsel's appearance, the car did have

some interesting -- if not long-lasting -- technical innovations. • One was a speedometer that rotated on a vertical axis like a roulette

wheel and was called the rolling dome. There was also a "teletouch"transmission, a series of buttons set in the center of the steering wheel by which one changed gears.

• The ads said that such a light touch was required to push the • The ads said that such a light touch was required to push the buttons that you could shift gears with toothpick -- something that apparently did not impress the millions who don't keep toothpicks in their cars.

• Source CNN August 11, 1997 - Web posted at: 10:25 p.m. EDT (0225 GMT)

• Moral: Don’t KID the market or yourself• Is the product all you want to say it is – does design meet

requirements you set/committed

Page 13: Making an Idea into a Business pptcenit.latech.edu/downloads/making an idea into a business... · 2010-09-14 · experimentation, New Coke was renamed Coke 2 and remained on the market

The Coke fiasco---Don’t fix it if it ain’t broke

• In April of 1985, the most widely known and best selling soft drink on the market was going to be reinvented – “New Coke”

• Within weeks of the switch, loyal and dedicated fans of the original formula became so vocal that the rest of the nation followed along, calling the switch in formula Un-American, some stating that Coke had no right to take away something so intricately ingrained in Americana. Essentially, it was tanking.

• "Coca Cola Classic" was revived, and reintroduced to the marketplace. An apology was made, more or less, but in the spirit of experimentation, New Coke was renamed Coke 2 and remained on the market for some time in limited quantities. Time has swept the incident under the rug, and no mention of the product is made on the official Coca Cola website, even in the history section that cites new products released in the 1980's

Source—Danger-seekers.com

Page 14: Making an Idea into a Business pptcenit.latech.edu/downloads/making an idea into a business... · 2010-09-14 · experimentation, New Coke was renamed Coke 2 and remained on the market

An idea, A plan & a market

“These days, start ups must have more to offer than just a good idea to build a successful company. There’s plenty of risk for start ups which need the experience of angels who have already taken businesses to maturity or public. From her perspective, entrepreneurs need:”From her perspective, entrepreneurs need:”

• A Great Idea, but this is only the beginning, • A rock solid business plan,• A terrific management team, • An intense desire to succeed

Shirley Eis, co-partner of Rigo Telecommunications

Remember: BP’s are for someone else besides you-OPWM

Page 15: Making an Idea into a Business pptcenit.latech.edu/downloads/making an idea into a business... · 2010-09-14 · experimentation, New Coke was renamed Coke 2 and remained on the market

Why Prepare a Business Plan

• Sixty percent of Inc 500 CEOs did not have a formal business plan before launching their company

• Forty-one percent of the group started their companies with less than $10,000. Source: Inc. Magazine

• SO……Who needs one?-----Do you need more than $10,000?• Also, what isn’t said is how many Inc 500 wannabes there were.

Page 16: Making an Idea into a Business pptcenit.latech.edu/downloads/making an idea into a business... · 2010-09-14 · experimentation, New Coke was renamed Coke 2 and remained on the market

The purpose of a business Plan/Feasibility Study: Is there really a market for

HOOT n GIGGLES?

An idea is good if there is a An idea is good if there is a NEEDNEED for it.for it.At least a “perceived need”At least a “perceived need”

Another word for NEED:Another word for NEED:Another word for NEED:Another word for NEED:

MarketMarket

•• “Identifying, anticipating and satisfying customer needs “Identifying, anticipating and satisfying customer needs profitably” profitably” (the Institute of Marketing’s definition of (the Institute of Marketing’s definition of Marketing).Marketing).

•• The four P’s of marketing: The four P’s of marketing: Product, Price, Place, PromotionProduct, Price, Place, Promotion

Page 17: Making an Idea into a Business pptcenit.latech.edu/downloads/making an idea into a business... · 2010-09-14 · experimentation, New Coke was renamed Coke 2 and remained on the market

4 P’s of Marketing Thanks to Ashley Bienvenue

• Product– Brand —exclusive, elite– Packaging —easy to

remove– Aesthetics– Safety– Quality– Characteristics– Warranty– Support

� Promotion Strategy –Web based? Advertising

Personal Selling Sales Promotion PR Budget –is there enough margin

to afford?� Place

Distribution Channels• Price– Pricing Strategy —

great idea but will they pay that much for it?

– Bundling– Wholesale and volume

price– Medicare/Medicaid– Cash and Early

Payment Discounts– Seasonal Pricing– Long-term Price

Forecast–when will competition force reductions?

Distribution Channels Logistics Distribution Costs Order Processing Distribution Centers Manufacturing Centers Market Coverage ---just a niche? Inventory Management Transportation Warehousing Possibility for Long-term

Integration (Forward or Backward)

More on this next time ……..maybe

Page 18: Making an Idea into a Business pptcenit.latech.edu/downloads/making an idea into a business... · 2010-09-14 · experimentation, New Coke was renamed Coke 2 and remained on the market

So….There’s a place for:

• “Brainstorming”

But combine with…

• Market ResearchDisregard for the

limitations of market realities can be trouble !!!!!!!!! You do them

simultaneously-feedback

Page 19: Making an Idea into a Business pptcenit.latech.edu/downloads/making an idea into a business... · 2010-09-14 · experimentation, New Coke was renamed Coke 2 and remained on the market

Why a business plan?Another Reason--We need a

strategy for:• Connecting / Linking the idea with • the market

“Strategy leads to the continuous creation of “Strategy leads to the continuous creation of real value. Real value requires sustained competitive advantage. Leaping at opportunities without strategy consistently produces failure” –The Boston Consulting Group

Page 20: Making an Idea into a Business pptcenit.latech.edu/downloads/making an idea into a business... · 2010-09-14 · experimentation, New Coke was renamed Coke 2 and remained on the market

Brainstorming:Some things the Innovative Product Design Class did and

you should do:• Understanding the problem------including the market Are perceived

constraints really constraints? WNDITTWB• Observing—how problem/need is satisfied currently—weaknesses

of current solution. How much is the current solution worth to the market? ---size of the market—speed of adoption

• Visualizing—how your new product will overcome weaknesses including marketing/distribution weaknessesincluding marketing/distribution weaknesses

• Evaluating and refining--- dealing with “the limitations of reality” Doing what hasn’t been done.

• Implementing—a product is not a desirable (hence “finished”) product just because it has been physically created – it has to be “packaged” ---described/ presented to the buyer in such a way that the buyer AGREES it’s a product to be desired.

Page 21: Making an Idea into a Business pptcenit.latech.edu/downloads/making an idea into a business... · 2010-09-14 · experimentation, New Coke was renamed Coke 2 and remained on the market

Secrets to BrainstormingIDEO (a successful product design company)—

Innovative Product Design Class• Clearly defined focus—not too broad, not too narrow• Go for quantity of ideas to solve the problem –at first---

”Creating innovative products can be a challenge like going down a road with rocks and ruts the whole way. Out of approximately 3,000 raw ideas come 125 small projects, 9 that will go to early development, 4 that continue to major development, and fewer than 2 that actually make it to market. One recent study found that newly launched industrial products failed 33 percent of the time; new launched industrial products failed 33 percent of the time; new consumer packaged goods fail to live up to management s expectations 80 percent of the time.”---G.S. Lynn and R.R. Reilly in “Growing the Top Line Through Innovation”, Chief Executive; New York; Fall 2002 24:1

• Minimize critique until all ideas are out• Facilitator should enforce rules but not dominate• Free movement around the meeting area and free use of

paper/sketches/labels-physical triggers---get physically involved in idea.• Team members must Prepare For Meetings-do homework

Page 22: Making an Idea into a Business pptcenit.latech.edu/downloads/making an idea into a business... · 2010-09-14 · experimentation, New Coke was renamed Coke 2 and remained on the market
Page 23: Making an Idea into a Business pptcenit.latech.edu/downloads/making an idea into a business... · 2010-09-14 · experimentation, New Coke was renamed Coke 2 and remained on the market

If a product or service is “INNOVATIVE” :

• It has an “edge” in the market place that will not quickly disappear (John Nesheim author of High Tech Start UPcalls this “edge” part of your “Unfair Advantage”):

What limits COMPETITION? What limits COMPETITION? What makes you better?

Legal---Patents, copyrights / Trade secretsNatural Monopoly---single firm can supply the product at lower cost than two or more firms. Examples: Networks (cable systems, pipeline, wire) and Large data bases -Human Genome---see J. Nesheim’s example B.PHuge cost of Re-inventing the wheel--Microsoft

Page 24: Making an Idea into a Business pptcenit.latech.edu/downloads/making an idea into a business... · 2010-09-14 · experimentation, New Coke was renamed Coke 2 and remained on the market

Initial Advantages continued

John Nesheim author of High Tech Start UP calls this “Sustainable Competitive Advantage”

• Key Personnel-Choosing your initial team –building on its strengths---”core competencies”Experience-----VC’s contribute here more

than with their money. Abilities - complementaryCompatibility

• Getting there “Firstest with the mostest”—• Getting there “Firstest with the mostest”—• Gen. Nathan Bedford Forrest—

millionaire cotton speculatorCapital for “capturing “ the market quicklyServicename/brand recognition - “fortification”

your brand is the “generic” ----Advil -Ibuprofen

• How Long will initial advantages last?---What every VC/Angel wants to know…. and is not afraid to ask.

“In war you win by outwitting, outflanking, and overpowering the enemy—your competition”See Marketing Warfare, by Al Ries and Jack Trout

Page 25: Making an Idea into a Business pptcenit.latech.edu/downloads/making an idea into a business... · 2010-09-14 · experimentation, New Coke was renamed Coke 2 and remained on the market

Summary Challenge:

• Dream up “Brainstorm” a product or service (and method of delivery/distribution) that:1)satisfies market need(s)

2)With an “unfair” and “sustainable” competitive 2)With an “unfair” and “sustainable” competitive advantage …..and

3)which appeals to you ….and…

4)…to those who provide funding

Page 26: Making an Idea into a Business pptcenit.latech.edu/downloads/making an idea into a business... · 2010-09-14 · experimentation, New Coke was renamed Coke 2 and remained on the market

Things to Brainstorm for a Things to Brainstorm for a Description/Boundaries of your Description/Boundaries of your

ideaideaWhatis our product?

need(s) are satisfied

makes it unique?

Whois We? does what?

makes it unique?can go wrong?

Are the risks?

selling price?

does what?is our customer(s)?Botox---people with wrinkles

people with migraines

is our competition?

Page 27: Making an Idea into a Business pptcenit.latech.edu/downloads/making an idea into a business... · 2010-09-14 · experimentation, New Coke was renamed Coke 2 and remained on the market

Things to Brainstorm for a Things to Brainstorm for a Description of your idea, continuedDescription of your idea, continuedHow…can we minimize

risks?big is the market?

Where…Is the market?

advertise?big is the market?will we produce?Much will it cost?Will it be

sold/delivered?

advertise?

will you locate?When…Will it pay off?

Page 28: Making an Idea into a Business pptcenit.latech.edu/downloads/making an idea into a business... · 2010-09-14 · experimentation, New Coke was renamed Coke 2 and remained on the market

See J. Nesheim’s example B.P.

• http://www.startupweb.com/pdf/DataMedBPlan.pdf

Page 29: Making an Idea into a Business pptcenit.latech.edu/downloads/making an idea into a business... · 2010-09-14 · experimentation, New Coke was renamed Coke 2 and remained on the market

Do you really want to break a habit?

• Flip top Toothpaste containers• Selling insurance on-line “The insurance

market is huge”…..but…….How big is your market when for the How big is your market when for the

foreseeable future it contains only “innovators”?

When will the habituated try your product or service”?----Surveys-would you buy?…at what price?…how much do you use?

Page 30: Making an Idea into a Business pptcenit.latech.edu/downloads/making an idea into a business... · 2010-09-14 · experimentation, New Coke was renamed Coke 2 and remained on the market

Tom Kelly-IDEO

• “Make a checklist of the essentials before you begin a project, the minimal elements your product or service needs in order to be accepted in the marketplace. be accepted in the marketplace. Periodically check to make sure you haven’t forgotten one of these basics”

• P. 273, The Art of Innovation.

Page 31: Making an Idea into a Business pptcenit.latech.edu/downloads/making an idea into a business... · 2010-09-14 · experimentation, New Coke was renamed Coke 2 and remained on the market

Make a Check List

Brainstorm a product or service that meets or exceeds requirements --answers to:

Who, What, How, Where, WhenWho, What, How, Where, When(Or see the 4 P’s)If product evolves to violate

constraints, then: Change Product or …Change Constraint?

Page 32: Making an Idea into a Business pptcenit.latech.edu/downloads/making an idea into a business... · 2010-09-14 · experimentation, New Coke was renamed Coke 2 and remained on the market

Linking the market with the product idea—Cooper.com

• A good website on the subject of matching requirements to product innovation

http://www.cooper.com/newsletters/2002_08/turning_requirements_into_product_definition.htm

http://www.cooper.com/who_we_are.htm

Page 33: Making an Idea into a Business pptcenit.latech.edu/downloads/making an idea into a business... · 2010-09-14 · experimentation, New Coke was renamed Coke 2 and remained on the market

Thanks for your time!QUESTIONS

?

Page 34: Making an Idea into a Business pptcenit.latech.edu/downloads/making an idea into a business... · 2010-09-14 · experimentation, New Coke was renamed Coke 2 and remained on the market

Contact Information

Dr. Jon D. PrattCenter for Entrepreneurship and I.T.

208A Bogard Hall208A Bogard HallLouisiana Tech University

Ruston, LA 71272318 257 3191

[email protected]


Recommended