MBA 6203 Lecture Sheet
MBA 6203 Lecture Sheet
OF CREATIVE TECHNOLOGY
4thSEMESTER
Module Title: Entrepreneurship Development
Aim:
Objectives:
Text Books:
Mark Distribution
1. Attendance: 05 1. Attendance: 05
2.Quiz: 10 2. Submission: 05
3. Class Test: 05 3. Assignment: 10
4. Mid-Term Exam: 20 4. Final Exam: 40
10%
Quiz test
5%
Class Test
20% 40%
Written Written
Assignment Examination Examination
5% 10%
Presentation
&
Submission
All the above quiz, Class Tests must be carried out in NB: 5% is in Class Attendance in Mid-Term
class. Submission & Presentation will be present in Examination and 5% is in Final Examination.
Class.
Module Leader: Lablu Miah Module Teacher: Lablu Miah Date: 18.03.21
At a Glance: Lectures Delivery Plan
Module: Entrepreneurship Development Module Code: MBA 6203 Contact Hours / Week: 3
14 14 Market Survey
15 15 Launching Formalities
Getting financing of funding
16 16
Getting financing of funding
17 17
Review Class, Presentation,
18 18
Assignment submission
Final Examination
SHANTO –MARIAM UNIVERSITY OF CREATIVE
TECHNOLOGY
Program : MBA in Product & Fashion Merchandising
Course Title : Entrepreneurship Development
Course Code : MBA 6203
Year of Study : 2nd(Semester: 4th)
Lecture : 01
Week : 01
ENTREPRENEURSHIP
ENTREPRENEURSHIP DEVELOPMENT:
Entrepreneurs are endogenous to the economy in the general theory of the firm.
The entrepreneur is, before anything, a consumer. The consumer becomes an
entrepreneur by choosing to establish a firm. Consumers bring to the task of
entrepreneurship their judgment, knowledge, and technology. Consumers decide
to become entrepreneurs based on their personal characteristics and their
judgment of available market opportunities. Entrepreneurs act rationally and
purposefully based on maximizing their net benefits.
The most effective business objectives meet the following criteria: (SMART)
• S – Specific – objectives are aimed at what the business does, e.g. a hotel
might have an objective of filling 60% of its beds a night during October,
an objective specific to that business.
• M – Measurable – the business can put a value to the objective, e.g.
€10,000 in sales in the next half year of trading.
• A – Agreed by all those concerned in trying to achieve the objective.
• R – Realistic – the objective should be challenging, but it should also be
able to be achieved by the resources available.
• T- Time specific – they have a time limit of when the objective should be
achieved, e.g. by the end of the year.
TRAITS OF AN ENTREPRENEUR
Entrepreneurial success depends on the management of your own self. For this
you require certain traits, qualities or behavioral competencies.
Coordinator: An entrepreneur is a combiner and coordinator of productive
resources. He is at the crux of the market system. This implies that the
entrepreneur is the link of communication between the various classes of
producer and consumer. He directs the business of production and is the center of
many bearings and relationships.
Successful entrepreneurs have many qualities in common. They are confident and
optimistic, disciplined self-starters. They are open to any new ideas which cross
their path.
• Confidence: The entrepreneur does not ask questions about whether they
can succeed or worthy of success. They are confidence with the
knowledge that they will make their businesses succeed. They exude that
confidence in everything they do.
• Open Minded: Entrepreneurs realize that every event and situation is a
business opportunity. Ideas are constantly being generated about
workflows and efficiency, people skills and potential new enterprises.
Have the ability to look at everything around them and focus it toward
their goals. Update their knowledge continuously and seek information
from a variety of sources.
• Disciplined: Focused on making their businesses work, and eliminate any
hindrances or distractions to their goals. Successful entrepreneurs are
disciplined enough to take steps every day toward the achievement of
their objectives.
• Self-Starter: Entrepreneurs know that if something needs to be done, they
should start it themselves. They set the parameters and make sure that
projects follow that path. They are proactive, not waiting for someone to
give them permission.
• Competitive: Many companies are formed because of an entrepreneur
knows they can do a job better than another. They need to win at the
sports they play and need to win at the business that they create. An
entrepreneur will always be willing to highlight their own company’s
track record of success. The success of the entrepreneur will depend on
the quality of their product or service.
• Creativity: One facet of creativity is being able to make connections
between seemingly unrelated events or situations. Entrepreneur often
come up with solutions which are the synthesis of other items.
• Passion: Passion is the most important attribute of successful
entrepreneur. They genuinely love their work. They are willing to put in
extra hours to make the business grow because there is a joy their business
gives which goes beyond the money or profit. The successful entrepreneur
will always be reading and researching ways to make the business better.
• Determination: Entrepreneurs are not thwarted by their defeats. They
look at defeat as an opportunity for success. They are determined to make
all their endeavors succeed, so they will try and try again until it does.
Successful entrepreneurs do not believe that something cannot be done.
• Strong people skills: The entrepreneur has strong communication skills
to sell the product and motivate employees. Most successful entrepreneurs
know how to motivate their employees so the business grows overall.
They are very good at highlighting the benefits of any situation and
coaching others to their success.
• Be an active listener– Take the time to listen and show others that you’re
listening and understand their perspective-even if it is not in line with
yours.
• Body language– I don’t know many people who enjoy being around
unhappy individuals or those who appear to be unhappy in any given
moment. Make sure to smile, stand tall, make eye contact and do your
best to give off a good vibe. Body language introduces you to those
around you before you even open your mouth.
• Empathize– Try putting yourself in someone else’s shoes and understand
their perspective. This will allow you to better respond to their feelings
and it will show them that you care.
• Humor– It is not all about business. After all, we are all human. Be
spontaneous and say something at an appropriate time that you think will
make the other person smile. If they smile, you know they’re probably
working on their interpersonal skills.
• Optimism– Be optimistic, open minded and have an overall positive
attitude. Positive attitudes are contagious to those around you. Everyone
knows someone who has a negative attitude and you definitely do not
want to be one of them.
• Think on your feet– It is important to be sharp, pick up on, and react to
both verbal and nonverbal cues of others.
• Be patient– Not everyone processes and understand concepts in the same
way. Take the time to make sure that whoever you’re talking to
understands what you’re saying.
• Practice- The more interactions you have with others, the more progress
you will make.
TRAITS OF AN ENTREPRENEUR
Entrepreneurial success depends on the management of your own self. For this
you require certain traits, qualities or behavioral competencies.
Opportunity gap – identifying a missing piece, a NEED, and a new way tofillthat
gap.An opportunity is NOT driven by a desire to make andsell.
Some innovations are radical –an entirely new way to solve a problem oran
entirely
newproduct.Otherinnovationsareincremental,orsustaining,andareextensionsof
existing solutions that are somewhatbetter.
Window of Opportunity – timely, not too early or too late. Opportunities depend
upon acting at the right time. Too early and too late are sure ways to fail.Here are
three ways to look for opportunity gaps –if many people share the sameconcern.
Opportunities Recognition:
Rapid changes in technology, computers, the internet, globalization, and intense
economic competitiveness were forcing companies to adapt. To adapt, their
employees had to learn many newthings.
Employee training is expensive –especially for large geographically
distributedfirms.
Economic forces:
• Personalcomputing
• TheInternet
• Mobilephones.
• MedicalImaging
• Pharmacology
• Biologics
• RNAi – microRNA- genesilencing
• Genomics –personalmedicine
Creativity:
Inhibitor Facilitators
“Tried it-didn’t work” all ideas already Tolerate challenges to established ideas
known
Hire compatible people Hire diverse skills, experiences, and
viewpoints
Lecture : 04 & 05
Week : 04 & 05
Industry Analysis
4. Competitor analysis
Competitor analysis is the process where you identify your greatest competitors
and evaluate their strategies to find out what their strengths and weaknesses are
and how they relate to your product or service. This analysis removes you from
your comfort zone but also places you on the path to success if you do it well.
2. Competitor’s Assumptions
Competitor’s assumptions are based on regional factors, opinion on its
competitive position, rules of thumbs, industry trends and past experiences in
regards to a product. The assumptions determine the strategy that they apply in
the competitive market. The assumptions are founded on facts and some on fear
so they can be true or untrue.
The five forces work in different ways for each industry. In the film market, for
example, there are many substitutes and the suppliers have a higher power. This
is not the same for the airplane manufacturing companies where the threat of new
entry is low, and the buyers have a higher bargaining power.
3. Threat of Substitutes
Substitutes are products that can be used on behalf of others and still serve the
same purpose. A good example is Coke and Pepsi which are both soft drinks.
When setting prices, the two companies have to be aware of the substitute’s
prices. If one sets the prices so high, they will lose customers as they will have an
alternative product.
In the marketplace, when there are many competing products and services, it
becomes difficult to set the price of the service or good as you wish. You must,
therefore, set the price in accordance with the way the other players in the market
have set theirs. Trends and fads, relative prices, brand loyalty, and switching
costs affect threat to substitutes.
4. Bargaining Power of Buyers
The customer is always right and more so when they have the power to influence
the prices in the market. In an industry where the buyers purchase goods in bulk
or where there are similar products being produced, the buyers control the prices.
If a business insists on a particular price, the buyer might as well buy from
another company with the same kind of goods.
Before your business can go live, you need to have an understanding of the
activities required to make your business model work. Determine key business
activities by first identifying the core aspect of your business’s offering.
What does the company need to carry out daily processes, find new
customers and reach business goals? Document essential business resources to
ensure the business model is adequately prepared to sustain the needs of the
business. Common resource examples may include a website, capital,
warehouses, intellectual property and customer lists.
4. Develop a strong value proposition.
How will the company stand out among the competition? Does the company
provide an innovative service, revolutionary product or a new twist on an old
favorite? Establishing exactly what the business offers and why it’s better than
competitors is the beginning of a strong value proposition. Once you’ve got a few
value propositions defined, link each one to a service or product delivery system
to determine how you will remain valuable to customers over time.
No business can function properly (let alone reach established goals) without key
partners that contribute to the business’s ability to serve customers. When
creating a business model, select key partners, like suppliers, strategic alliances or
advertising partners. Using the previous example of Home Depot, key business
partners may be lumber suppliers, parts wholesalers and logistics companies.
Unless you’re taking a radical approach to launching your company, you’ll need a
strategy that builds interest in your business, generates leads and is designed to
close sales. How will customers find you? More importantly, what should they do
once they become aware of your brand? Developing a demand generation
strategy creates a blueprint of the customer’s journey while documenting the key
motivators for taking action.
When launching a company and developing a business model, your business plan
is based on many assumptions. After all, until you begin to welcome paying
customers, you don’t truly know if your business model will meet their ongoing
needs. For this reason, it’s important to leave room for future innovations. Don’t
make a critical mistake by thinking your initial plan is a static document. Instead,
review it often and implement changes as needed.
In an advertising business model, you have to satisfy two customer groups: your
readers or viewers, and your advertisers.
An advertising business model is sometimes combined with a crowdsourcing
model where you get your content for free from users instead of paying content
creators to develop content.
2. Affiliate
The affiliate business model is related to the advertising business model but has
some specific differences. Most frequently found online, the affiliate model uses
links embedded in content instead of visual advertisements that are easily
identifiable.
Examples: The Wire Cutter.com, Top Ten Reviews.com
3. Brokerage
Brokerage businesses connect buyers and sellers and help facilitate a transaction.
They charge a fee for each transaction to either the buyer or the seller and
sometimes both.
One of the most common brokerage businesses is a real estate agency, but there
are many other types of brokerages such as freight brokers and brokers who help
construction companies find buyers for dirt that they excavate from new
foundations.
Examples: ReMax, RoadRunner Transportation Systems
4. Concierge/customization
Some businesses take existing products or services and add a custom element to
the transaction that makes every sale unique for the given customer.
For example, think of custom travel agents who book trips and experiences for
wealthy clients.
Examples: NIKEiD, Journy
5. Crowdsourcing
Crowdsourcing business models are most frequently paired with advertising
models to generate revenue, but there are many other iterations of the model.
Threadless, for example, lets designers submit t-shirt designs and gives the
designers a percentage of sales.
Companies that are trying to solve difficult problems often publish their problems
openly for anyone to try and solve. Successful solutions get rewards and the
company can then grow their business. The key to a successful crowdsourcing
business is providing the right rewards to entice the “crowd” while also enabling
you to build a viable business.
Examples: Threadless, YouTube, P&G Connect and Develop, Cuusoo
6. Disintermediation
Disintermediation is when you sidestep everyone in the supply chain and sell
directly to consumers, allowing you to potentially lower costs to your customers
and have a direct relationship them as well.
Examples: Casper, Dell
7. Fractionalization
Instead of selling an entire product, you can sell just part of that product with a
fractionalization business model.
One of the best examples of this business model is timeshares, where a group of
people owns only a portion of a vacation home, enabling them to use it for a
certain number of weeks every year.
Examples: Disney Vacation Club, NetJets
8. Franchise
Franchising is common in the restaurant industry, but it can be found in all sorts
of service industries from cleaning businesses to staffing agencies.
Examples: Ace Hardware, McDonald’s, Allstate
9. Freemium
Freemium isn’t the same as a free trial where customers only get access to a
product or service for a limited period of time. Instead, freemium models allow
for unlimited use of basic features for free and only charge customers who want
access to more advanced functionality. For more on the freemium model (and
other pricing models popular with SaaS businesses)
Examples: MailChimp, Evernote, LinkedIn
10. Leasing
Leasing might seem similar to fractionalization, but they are actually very
different. In fractionalization, you are selling perpetual access to part of
something. Leasing, on the other hand, is like renting. At the end of a lease
agreement, a customer needs to return the product that they were renting from
you.
Leasing is most commonly used for high-priced products where customers may
not be able to afford a full purchase but could instead afford to rent the product
for a while.
Examples: Cars, Direct Capital
11. Low-touch
With a low-touch business model, companies lower their prices by providing
fewer services. Some of the best examples of this type of business model are
budget airlines and furniture sellers like IKEA. In both of these cases, the low-
touch business model means that customers need to either purchase additional
services or do some things themselves in order to keep costs down.
Examples: IKEA, Ryan Air
12. Marketplace
Marketplaces allow sellers to list items for sale and provide customers with easy
tools for connecting to sellers.
The marketplace business model can generate revenue from a variety of sources
including fees to the buyer or the seller for a successful transaction, additional
services for helping advertise seller’s products, and insurance so buyers have
peace of mind. The marketplace model has been used for both products and
services.
Examples: eBay, Airbnb
13. Pay-as-you-go
Instead of pre-purchasing a certain amount of something, such as electricity or
cell phone minutes, customers get charged for actual usage at the end of a billing
period. The pay-as-you-go model is most common in home utilities, but it has
been applied to things like printer ink.
Examples: Water companies, HP Instant Ink
Great business models depend on developing three "green lights," or qualities that
help the business succeed: finding high-value customers, offering significant
value to customers, and delivering significant margins. Great business models
also avoid three "red lights" that can derail a business: difficulties in satisfying
customers, trouble maintaining market position, and problems generating funding
for growth. The list below outlines key factors in determining whether the model
meets each green light and avoids the red lights.
Green Lights:
1. Acquire high-value customers.
High-value customers doesn't mean rich customers, but customers who meet the
following requirements:
The rise of the internet, outsourcing and, most of all, the increased willingness of
companies to partner in creative ways to serve customers has resulted in every
industry creating innovation in business strategy.
A business plan in any company is a document with every crucial detail. It covers
the following information: what you are going to sell or produce, the structure of
your business, your vision on how to sell the product, how much funding you
need, information on financial projections, among other details.
It’s important to remember that this is not a document for internal use only. On
the contrary, it’s a promotional document that will undergo constant updates and
changes. Keep in mind whom you write it for (investors, customers, etc.) and do
it in an easy-to-read language without challenging to understand words and terms.
The summary is where you (succinctly) introduce the business vision. Try to
make sure your exec summary answers these questions:
This part is important to you and your team. However, this isn’t quite
as important to your audience as you think it is.
The mission statement should include your goal and the objectives that will lead
you toward it; your industry, how you see it evolving in the short and long term,
and who your customers are. Your mission statement also says who you are, and
talks about the strengths of you and your team. This is where you, in part (and in
brief), sell the features and benefits of your company.
Step 3. Products and/or services
This part includes information on what you do and what you plan to sell it for.
This is also where you sell the benefits of your business.
This being a business plan and all, it’s important to list the cost of the
products/services you are providing:
• How much does it cost to produce? Versus how much will you sell each
piece for?
• Is there packaging?
• How will the client purchase the product?
• What system will you use to bill them?
• Are there extra costs in getting it to the customer? How will it be
transported?
• The products/services section should also differentiate your new business.
• What makes your business different?
• What gives your company’s product or service an edge in the
marketplace?
• What distinguishes it from competitors?
This is where you prove you know what you’re talking about and that your
company is ready to provide a service to a proven audience.
• Your customers: Are you B2B or B2C? Who are your customers? How do
you plan to reach them? Where will you sell your product/service? How
will you garner feedback from them? How will they know you care?
• Your competition: Who are your direct/indirect competitors? What’s your
advantage? Don’t be shy — tell them you are better and why.
• Your niche: Or market or sector. Again, what separates your business
from your competitors — how will you make yourself known in the
niche?
• Your distribution: Of course, this is a marketing plan, so they’ll want to
know your tricks for promoting within the said niche. How are you selling
it — directly to clients, to a vendor, online, at a store, an office, freelance,
etc.
• Your advertising: Are you advertising already? Where? When you have
more funding, where do you advertise? How will you use advertising to
retain customers? Get new ones? Make sure you outline your marketing
budget either here or within the financial plan. How much will be spent on
print, TV/radio, Internet, direct mail, external ads, etc?
• Your sales strategy: Depending on the industry, this could be one of the
most important parts — how are you going to sell your product/service?
Online? A sales team? Telesales? How will you incentivize sales? Will
you offer a free sample or trial? Host a free workshop?
• Your face: You’ve described how you will market, what, to whom, on
where. Now it’s time to explain the image you’re going to project. This
can include your slogan, images, logos, website, social media channels,
etc.
This part takes a reader through the day-to-day of your company, explaining the:
This part includes a hierarchical chart of your company and how the operations
we talked about above flow through it. List the positions and briefly describe the
functions of each integral member of your business, including but not limited to:
board of directors, advisors, technical specialists, accomplished salespeople,
accountants, and lawyers.
The fiscal piece of your business plan puzzle is the piece investors and loan
managers are going to spend the most time looking at. Without proper
capitalization and financial planning, even the most excellent business idea that
fulfills an urgent need is at high risk for failing.
• Cash-flow analysis
This reflects what you are going to sell versus your business expenses. This
analysis projects your profit margin.
• Break-even analysis
This breaks down how much you have to, well, break even.
Step 8. Addendum
The addendum shows your research. Also, this is where you add any technical
diagrams of your business plan. The addendum is also a great place to put
references and press about your company, as well as resumes/CVs, adding proof
of your awesomeness.
Lecture : 10 & 11
Week : 10 & 11
Most entrepreneurial firms want to grow. Especially in the short term, growth in
the sales revenue is an important indicator of an entrepreneurial venture's
potential to survive today and be successful tomorrow. Growth is exciting and,
for most businesses, is an indication of success.
While there is some trial and error involved in starting and growing any business,
the degree to which a firm prepares for its future growth has a direct bearing on
its level of success.
Here are the three most important this a business can do to prepare for growth:
Not all businesses have the potential to be aggressive growth firms → The
businesses that have the potential to grow the fastest over a sustained period if
time are ones that solve a significant problem or have a major impact on their
customers' productivity or lives.
A business can grow too fast → Many businesses start fast and never let up,
which stresses a business financially and can leave its owners emotionally
drained.
Business success doesn't always scale → Unfortunately, the very thing that
makes a business experts often mean when they say growth is a "two-edged
sword."
There is also a category of businesses that sell high-end or specialty products that
earn high margins. These businesses typically sell their products through venues
where customers prioritize quality over price. These business can grow, but only
at a measured pace. If they grow too quickly, they can lose the "exclusivity" they
are trying to project, or can damage their special appeal.
An important part of a firm's business model is its core strategy, which defines
how it competes relative to its rivals. A firm's core strategy is largely determined
by its core competencies, or what it does particularly well. If a business becomes
distracted or starts pursuing every opportunity for growth that presents itself, the
business can easily stray into areas where it finds itself at a competitive
disadvantage.
The third thing that a firm can do to prepare for growth is to establish growth-
related plans. The task involves a firm thinking ahead and anticipating the type
and amount of growth it wants to achieve. A business plan normally includes a
detailed forecast of a firm's first three to five years of sales, along with an
operations plan that described the resources the business will need to meet its
projections. It’s also important for a business to determine, as early as possible,
the strategies it will choose to employ as a means of pursuing growth.
Economies of scale are generated when increasing production lowers the average
cost of each unit produced. Economies of scale can be created in service firm as
well as traditional manufacturing companies. This phenomenon occurs for two
reasons. First, if a company can get a discount by buying component parts in
bulk, it can lower its variable costs per unit as it grows larger. Variable costs are
the costs a company incurs as it generates sales. Second, by increasing
production, a company can spread its fixed costs over a greater number of
units. Fixed costs are costs that a company incurs whether it sells something or
not. A related reason firms can grow is to make use of unused resources such as
labor capacity and a host of others.
With economies of scope, the advantage a firm accrues comes through the scope
(or range) of a firm's operations rather than from its scale of production.
Market Leadership
Market leadership occurs when a firm holds the number one or the number two
position in an industry or niche market in terms of sales value. Being the market
leader also permits firm to use slogans in its promotions, helping it wins
customers and attract talented employees as well as business partners.
Larger businesses usually have more influence and power than smaller firms in
regard to setting standards for an industry, getting a "foot in the door" with major
customers and suppliers, and garnering prestige. As a firm grows and adds
employees, it's normally not as vulnerable to lose a single person or a small group
of people's participation or passion for the business.
Ability to Attract and Retain Talented Employees
It is natural for talented employees to want to work for a firm that can offer
opportunities for promotions, higher salaries, and increased levels of
responsibility. Growth is a firm's primary mechanism to generate promotional
opportunities for employees, while falling to retain key employees can be very
damaging to a firm's growth efforts.
Managing Growth
Many businesses are caught off guard by the challenges involved with growing
their companies. One would think that if a business got off to a good start,
steadily increased its sales, and started making money, it would get progressively
easier to manage the growth of a firm. The reality is that a company must actively
and carefully manage its growth for it to expand in a healthy and profitable
manner.
Introduction stage → The start-up phase where a business determines what its
strengths and core capabilities are and starts selling its initial production or
service.
Continuous growth stage → Start developing a new product and services and will
expand to new markets.
Decline stage → A firm can enter the decline stage if it loses its sense of purpose
or spreads itself so thin that it no longer has a comparative advantage in any of its
markets. A firm's management teams should be aware of these potential pitfalls
and guard against allowing them to happen.
Challenges of Growth
There is a consistent set of challenges that affect all stages of a firm's growth. The
challenges illustrate that no firm grows in rival firms; there will be a certain
amount of retaliation that takes place. This is an aspect of competition that a
business owner needs to be aware of and plan for. Competitive retaliation
normally increases as a business grows and becomes a larger threat to its rivals.
Managerial Capacity
As a firm goes about its routine activities, the management team becomes better
acquainted with the firm's resources and its markets. This knowledge leads to the
expansion of a firm's productive opportunity set, which is the set of opportunities
the firm feels it's capable of pursuing.
Cash flow management → A firm must carefully manage its cash on hand to
make sure it maintains sufficient liquidity to meet its payroll and cover its other
short-term obligations.
Quality control → As the firm grows, it handles more service requests and
paperwork and contends with an increasing number of prospects, customers,
vendors, and other stakeholders.
Capital constraints → Some business needs capital from time to time to invest
in growth-enabling projects. Their ability to raise capital, whether it's through
internally generated funds, through a bank, or from investors, will determine in
part whether their growth plans proceed.
Lecture : 12
Week : 12
A small company may also use a market expansion strategy if it finds new uses
for its product. For example, a small soap distributor that sells to retail stores may
discover that factory workers also use its product.
A small company may also expand its product line or add new features to
increase its sales and profits. When small companies employ a product expansion
strategy, also known as product development, they continue selling within the
existing market. A product expansion growth strategy often works well when
technology starts to change. A small company may also be forced to add new
products as older ones become outmoded.
Alternative Channels
Maybe you sell everything through wholesalers. Or you only have one retail
store. In either case, you could add the other one you don’t currently offer or
perhaps even add an online shopping option. Or maybe you start selling direct in
addition to your wholesale channel.
The key here is communication with existing channels so there aren’t hurt
feelings or lost business. Or if you plan to lose business in one area, make sure
that it will be more than made up for in another area, either in total sales volume
or profit or both.
Reducing or Increasing Prices
True, it might cause you to lose a customer or two, but part of that is how well the
price is communicated. Many times, customers will understand an increase if
their prices haven’t gone up in many years, and you remind them of this fact
along with solid reasons their costs are going up. Plus, taking a personal approach
of communicating this face-to-face with all of, or at least, your top customers will
go a long way towards assuring them that their business is important. Here are
some tips for raising your prices without losing customers.
Or on the flip side, perhaps a strategic price reduction for specific items is in
order. This could help drive market share for a product that gets the customer in
the door in order to sell them something else more profitable later.
Now, I’m not advocating doing anything illegal or unethical, but if you can gain
knowledge of what they’re doing on the up-and-up, then why not do so. Keep in
mind that you may need to modify their strategies to your own company, but by
the same token, be careful not to water it down too much, thus losing the power
of what’s working for them.
Are there other companies or influential people in your industry that you can
align yourself with to grow your revenues. Typically, these aren’t your industry
leaders since they don’t need your help in return. But if you can find a company
or person that has a certain level of success and needs others to create a win-
win scenario for both organizations, then by all means do it. Check out these tips
for successful partnerships and alliances.
Brand Differentiation
Are your brand and products you sell truly differentiated in the market?
Perhaps, you have the best quality, or maybe you have the fastest turnaround. Or
you have the most advanced product on the market. Just make sure you have
something that is genuinely unique, that sets you apart and actually matters to
your customer, meaning they are willing to pay for it at a price you can make a
profit. And make sure to communicate that to potential customers as your main
point of differentiation from the competition.
Workforce Supply
Discussing this with your team leaders and HR folks can be a real eye-opener.
This issue is not one that will go away anytime soon as many companies are
challenged with finding quality employees who are the right skills and culture fit.
Perhaps, you need to replace or supplement some of those before you get in a
pickle and have to turn away or significantly delay some of this new business that
you’ve just spent a ton of time and money getting in the door.
Consider doing highly targeted campaigns to grow your business, whether digital
or traditional marketing. Most of your customers are bombarded with generic
ads every day. Find out where your customers hang out, whether physically or
digitally, and speak directly to them there.
Financial Resources
While it might be tempting to think that we can just figure that out later…once
growth happens, that can lead to a bad situation where you can’t deliver on the
promises you just made to these new customers. You can borrow money from a
bank, add equity through shareholders, or use an alternative financing model
like supplier financing.
Lecture : 13
Week : 13
Soul Roots, a nonprofit organization that wants to use the vacant spaces of
Toronto to install urban agriculture projects.
Public Accessory, which uses public and private vacant spaces in Toronto in order
to install the eco-urban infrastructure, such as bike racks.
Social integration
Many of the innovators present in Toronto run enterprises that stress the
importance of equity and inclusion.
Health
Environmental innovation
The environment and the optimization of existing processes were also among the
topics covered by the entrepreneurs in the Toronto cohort.
Zooshare uses waste from the Toronto Zoo and its surrounding stores
(excrement and food) to convert them into biofuel.
Growing North works with families in Nunavut, 79 percent of which face food
insecurity. The organization set a goal of reducing the cost of food to help these
families to save money; it also empowers families to take an active role in the
development of their community.
Meal Exchange helps students create a sustainable food system in their
schools. The main idea is to use local suppliers and create the shortest possible
circuit for supplying these schools in an environmentally responsible manner.
Lecture : 14
Week : 14
Market Survey
Market survey is the survey research and analysis of the market for a particular
product/service which includes the investigation into customer inclinations.
Market surveys are tools to directly collect feedback from the target audience to
understand their characteristics, expectations, and requirements.Marketers
develop new and exciting strategies for upcoming products/services but there can
be no assurance about the success of these strategies. For these to be successful,
marketers should determine the category and features of products/services that the
target audiences will readily accept. By doing so, the success of a new avenue can
be assured. Most marketing managers depend on market surveys to collect
information that would catalyze the market research process. Also, the feedback
received from these surveys can be contributory in product marketing and feature
enhancement.
Market surveys collect data about a target market such as pricing trends, customer
requirements, competitor analysis, and other such details.
Direct-mail interviews: If you want to survey a wider audience, direct mail can
be just the ticket. Your survey can be as simple as a postcard or as elaborate as a
cover letter, questionnaire and reply envelope. Keep questionnaires to a
maximum of one page, and ask no more than 20 questions. Ideally, direct-mail
surveys should be simple, structured with "yes/no" or "agree/disagree" check-off
boxes so respondents can answer quickly and easily. If possible, only ask for one
or two write-in answers at most.
1. Conduct Testing
confidence business owners take time to test their new items and perform
necessary adjustments. Before listing a product for sale on your website, or
stocking it in your retail store, send out complimentary versions for trusted clients
to test and evaluate. The goal is to collect feedback from surveys and focus
groups so you can make any needed improvements before releasing the product
wide.
One of the reasons that testing is so crucial is that it ensures a product’s first
impression with buyers will be a positive one. After all, if you release a flawed or
buggy item, customers will remember that fact and be loath to try future versions.
The internet means shoppers have virtually endless options, and they are unlikely
to give a second chance to a disappointing company or product.
2. Contact Influencers
Blogs and social media sites are great for marketing new businesses and products
online. However, if you only post about your brilliant invention on your own
website, you’re unlikely to generate the sales results you desire. Instead, startups
should target key influencers, or trusted brand advocates, in their chosen
industries.
Start by creating a list of popular bloggers, social media mavens, and even high-
profile customers who have shopped with you before. You can then email or
message these individuals and ask them to review a free sample of your product.
If they like the item, the chances are good that they will blog about it or share
details with their social followers. The goal is to generate buzz and excitement
about a product before you launch and identify any outstanding issues that could
affect your item’s ability to generate a profit.
3. Get Your Team Excited
It doesn’t matter how strong your product is if your marketing and customers
service teams aren’t behind you. Before launching your new item, it’s important
to educate your employees and get them excited about the item. (Ideally, you will
also involve product managers and sales staff throughout the item’s development,
so they can weigh in on aspects.)
To prepare your team members for launch, sit down with them to discuss the
product ahead of time and ensure they have the resources needed to support
customers and answer their questions. If your staff is going to be selling products
over the phone, consider creating new talk tracks to aid in the process. For best
results, create a number of small but attainable goals so employee morale stays
high throughout the launch.
4. Create a Schedule—and Stick to It
It’s easy to lose sight of your goals while trying to launch a new product. Smart
business owners create detailed production schedules to ensure tasks are
completed on time and team members are held accountable for their roles.
Additionally, you should review your timetable to ensure it covers all the
necessary tasks, from performing market research on your target audience to
contacting your favorite blogger or YouTube star, and set clear objectives. If you
want to sell 1,000 products in the first month, put that goal in writing and commit
to achieving it.
While it’s important to ensure your schedule is realistic, entrepreneurs also need
to consider the best times of year to release their new products. For example,
depending on the item you’re selling, you might want to consider seasonal factors
or the timing of trade shows or pop culture events. And of course, you will want
to ensure you are properly staffed for the launch. The last thing you want is to
find yourself struggling to release a new product because several of your
employees are out for summer vacation.
5. Identify Your Marketing Channels
Disappeared are the days when businesses could market their wares on one or two
sales channels only. Today, savvy startups maximize potential sales by targeting
as many potential channels as possible. Along with traditional outlets like TV,
radio, and mailers, modern businesses promote their goods on websites, social
media pages, and online retail sites. They create email marketing campaigns,
utilize PPC advertising, and even contact customers via text. The more channels
you target with your marketing materials, the more opportunities you will have to
find new and profitable audiences.
Lecture : 16 & 17
Week : 16 & 17
Financing or Funding
There are three reasons that most entrepreneurial ventures need to raise money
during their early life:
Capital Investments
The cost of buying real estate, building facilities, and purchasing equipment
typically exceeds a firm's ability to provide funds for these needs on its own.
Some products are under development for years before they generate earnings.
The up-front costs often exceed a firm's ability to fund these activities on its own.
Typically,the seed money that gets a company off the ground comes from the
fonder's own pockets. There are three categories of sources of money in this area
Personal Funds
Involves both financial equity. Sweat equity represents the value of the time and
effort that founder puts into a firm.
Often comes in the form of loans or investments, but can also involve outright
gifts, foregone or delayed compensation, or reduced or free rent.
Bootstrapping
Finding ways to avoid the need for external financing through creativity,
ingenuity, thriftiness, cost-cutting, obtaining grants or any other means.
The primary disadvantage of equity funding is that the firm's owners relinquish
part of their ownership interest and may lose some control. Unlike a loan, the
money received from an equity investor doesn't have to be paid back. The
investor receives a return on the investment through dividend payments and by
selling the stock. Here are the three most common forms of equity funding
Business Angels
Business angels are individuals who invest their personal capital directly in start-
ups. The term angel was first used in conjunction with finance to describe
wealthy New Yorkers who invested in Broadway plays. Business angels are
valuable because of their willingness to make relatively small investments.
Venture Capital
Venture Capital is money that is invested by venture capital firms in start-ups and
small businesses with exceptional growth potential. The majority of venture
capital money goes to follow-on funding for businesses that were originally
funded by angel investors, government programs, or by some other means. The
investors who invest in venture capital funds are called limited partners. The
venture capitalists, who manage the fund, are called general partners.
An IPO is the first sale of stock by a firm to the public. Any later public issuance
of shares is referred to as a secondary market offering. Most entrepreneurial firms
that go public trade on NASDAQ , which is weighted heavily toward technology,
biotech, and small-company stocks. An IPO is an important milestone for a firm.
Typically, a firm is not able to go public until it has demonstrated that it is viable
and has a bright future.
Debt financing involves getting a loan or selling corporate bonds. There are two
common types of loans.
There are two major advantages to obtaining a loan as opposed to equity funding.
The first is that none of the ownership of the firm is surrendered. The second is
that interest payments on a loan are tax deductible, in contrast to dividend
payments made to investors, which are not.
There are two major disadvantages of getting a loan. The first is that it must be
repaid, which may be difficult in a start-up venture in which the entrepreneur is
focused on getting the company off the ground. The second is that lenders often
impose strict conditions on loans and insist on ample collateral to fully protect
their investment.
Here are the three most common sources of debt financing available to
entrepreneurs:
Commercial Banks
There are a variety of other avenues business owners can pursue to borrow money
or obtain cash. Vendor credit (aka trade credit) is when a vendor extends credit to
a business in order to allow the business though buy its products or services up
front but defer payment until later. Factoring is a financial transaction whereby a
business sells its account receivable to a third party, called a factor, at a discount
in exchange for cash.
Because financing and funding are difficult to obtain, particularly for start-ups,
entrepreneurs often use creative ways to obtain financial resources. Here are the
common creative sources of financing and funding for entrepreneurial firms:
Crowd funding
Leasing
There are many different players in the leasing business. Some vendors lease
directly to businesses. As with banks, the vendors look for lease clients with good
credit backgrounds and the ability to make the lease payments. There are
also venture-leasing firms that act as brokers, bringing the parties involved in a
lease together. One of the responsibilities of these firms is conducting due
diligence to make sure that the new ventures involved will be able to keep up
with their lease payments.
The Small Business Innovation Research (SBIR) and the Small Business
Technology Transfer (STTR) programs are two important sources of early-stage
funding technology firms. The main difference between the SBIR and the STTR
programs is that the STTR program requires the participation of researches
working at universities or other research institutions.
The SBIR Program is a competitive grant program that provides over $2.5 billion
per year to small businesses for early-stage and development projects. The SBIR
is a three-phase program, meaning that forms that qualify have the potential to
receive more than one grant to fund a particular proposal. These are the three
phases:
Phase III is the period during which Phase II innovations move from the research
and development lab to the marketplace.
The STTR Program is a variation of the SBIR for collaborative research and
projects that involve small business and research organizations, such as
universities or federal laboratories.
Strategic Partners
Strategic partners are another source of capital for new ventures. Indeed, strategic
partners often play a critical role in helping young firms fund their operations and
round out their business models. Many strategic partnerships are also formed to
gain access to a particular resource or to facilitate speed to market. In exchange
for access to plant and equipment and established distribution channels, new
ventures bring an entrepreneurial spirit and new ideas to these partnerships. These
types of arrangements can help new ventures lessen the need for financing or
funding.
Lecture : 18
Week : 18