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This chapter provides a comprehensive guide to generating and evaluating startup ideas, including innovative thinking techniques, different types of startup opportunities, market analysis, and strategic decision-making. You will learn how to distinguish sources of startup ideas, assess feasibility, and perform SWOT analysis for strategic planning.
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Getting Started PART 2 Starting from Scratch or Joining an Existing Business
Looking AheadAfter studying this chapter, you should be able to: Distinguish among the different types and sources of startup ideas and identify the most common sources of startup ideas. Use innovative thinking to generate ideas for high-potential startups. Describe external and internal analyses that might shape the selection of venture opportunities. Explain broad-based strategy options and focus strategies. Assess the feasibility of a startup idea before writing a business plan.
Identifying Startup Ideas • Opportunity Recognition • Identification of potential new products or services that may lead to promising businesses • Entrepreneurial Alertness • Readiness to act on existing, but unnoticed, business opportunities • Good Investment Qualities • Products that serve clear and important needs • Products that customers know about • Products that customers can afford • A good idea is not the same as a good opportunity.
Creating a New Business from Scratch To tap into unique resources that are available To develop a commercial market for new product or service. Motivations To Start a Business To avoid undesirable features of existing companies Wanting the challenge of succeeding (or failing) on your own
Kinds of Startup Ideas • Type A • Are centered around providing customers with an existing product not available in their market. • Type B • Involve new ideas, involve new technology, centered around providing customers with a new product. • Type C • Are centered around providing customers with an improved product.
Exhibit 3.2Common Sources of Startup Ideas Source:Data developed and provided by the National Federation of Independent Business and sponsored by the American Express Travel Related Services Company, Inc.
Exhibit 3.3Change-Based Sources of Entrepreneurial Opportunities
Applying Innovative Thinking to Business Ideas Borrow ideas from existing products and services or other industries. Combine two businesses into one to create a market opening. Begin with a problem in mind. Recognize a hot trend and ride the wave. Explore ways to improve a product or service’s function. Think of how to streamline a customer’s activities. Adapt a product or service to meet customer needs in different ways. Imagine how market for a product or service could be expanded. Use “green” technologies to make the product or service more environmentally friendly Keep an eye on new technologies.
Evaluating Entrepreneurial Opportunities • Outside-In Analysis • Studying context of venture to identify and determine business ideas that qualify as opportunities. • General Environment • Encompasses factors influencing business in a society. • Industry Environment • Combined forces impacting a firm and its competitors. • Competitive Environment • Focus on the strength, position, and likely moves and countermoves of competitors in an industry.
Competitor Analysis • Who are the new venture’s current competitors? • What unique resources do they control? • What are their strengths and weaknesses? • How will they respond to the new venture’s decision to enter the industry? • How can the new venture respond? • Who else might be able to observe and exploit the same opportunity? • Are there ways to co-opt potential or actual competitors by forming alliances?
Evaluating Opportunities… (cont’d) • Inside-Out Analysis • Assessing the firm’s internal competitive potential • Resources • Basic inputs that a firm uses to conduct its business • Tangible resources: visible and easy to measure. • Intangible resources: invisible, difficult to quantify • Capabilities • Integration of various organizational resources that are deployed together to the firm’s competitive advantage. • Core Competencies • Resources and capabilities that provide a firm with a competitive advantage over its rivals.
Integrating Internal and External Analyses • Strengths, Weaknesses, Opportunities, and Threats (SWOT) Analysis • Provides concise overview of firm’s strategic situation. • Helps identify opportunities that match the venture. • Seeking Competitive Insight • Will the opportunity lead to others in the future? • Will the opportunity build skills that open the door to new opportunities in the future? • Will pursuit of the opportunity be likely to lead to competitive response by potential rivals?
Important Strategic Terms • Strategy • Plan of action that coordinates resources and commitments of an organization to achieve superior performance. • Strategic Decision • Regards the direction a firm will take in relating to its customers and competitors. • Sustainable Competitive Advantage • A value-creating industry position likely to endure over time.
Selecting Strategies That Capture Opportunities Cost-Based Strategy Broad-Based Strategy Strategies That Capture Opportunities Focus Strategy Differentiation-Based Strategy
Focus Strategies • Focus Strategy Implementation • Restricting focus to a single subset of customers. • Emphasizing a single product or service. • Limiting the market to a single geographical region. • Concentrating on superiority of product or service.
Focus Strategies (cont’d) • Advantages • Niche market shields from direct competition. • Allow development of unique expertise • Disadvantages • Focus markets can quickly erode if: • Competitors successfully imitate the strategy. • Segment erodes or demand disappears. • Segment’s differences from other segments narrow. • New firms subsegment the industry.
How Feasible Is My Idea? Market Factors Fatal Flaws Competitive Advantage Judging a Business Opportunity IndustryAttractiveness Management Capability
Is Your Startup Idea Feasible? • Feasibility Analysis • A preliminary assessment of a business idea that gauges whether or not the venture envisioned is likely to succeed • Fatal Flaws • A circumstance or development that alone could render a new business unsuccessful • Market potential: acceptance, accessibility, growth, and size • Power of competitors • Strength of competitive advantage • Startup costs • Management capability
Feasibility… (cont’d) • New Venture Leadership • Industry Attractiveness • Leader’s grasp of critical enterprise success factors and ability to execute on these factors • Management Capability • Fit of the venture with leader’s mission, aspirations, and comfort level with risk involved • Leader’s connection to others who will be essential to making the venture work.
Key Terms opportunity recognition entrepreneurial alertness startups Type A ideas Type B ideas Type C ideas serendipity general environment industry environment competitive environment resources tangible resources • intangible resources • capabilities • competitive advantage • core competencies • SWOT analysis • strategy • cost-based strategy • differentiation-based strategy • focus strategy • strategic decision • feasibility analysis • fatal flaw