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WELCOME ENTREPRENEURS!. 2014 Be Your Own Boss Bowl. Business planning competition for aspiring and early-stage entrepreneurs from Temple University 16 th annual competition Managed by the Innovation and Entrepreneurship Institute – a top 15 nationally ranked program. BYOBB Objectives.
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2014 Be Your Own Boss Bowl • Business planning competition for aspiring and early-stage entrepreneurs from Temple University • 16th annual competition • Managed by the Innovation and Entrepreneurship Institute – a top 15 nationally ranked program
BYOBB Objectives • The creation, launch and sustainability of new ventures – including small business, truly scalable enterprises and social innovation ventures – from the Temple community • To develop, improve and refine business planning skills • To drive economic development and social change in the region and beyond
Social Impact The Social Impact track is for new ventures whose primary focus is to create social value. Unlike a traditional business venture with their focus on profits, social ventures pursue the double bottom line of social impact and, in the best cases, financial sustainability. For purposes of the BYOBB, a company whose primary motive is financial, but which donates a relatively small amount of money or time to social causes does not qualify as a social impact firm.
Social Impact Entries in the Social Venture Track of the BYOBB may be nonprofit, for-profit, or hybrid in design, but must: • Incorporate a measurable social and/or environmental bottom line into its mission and practices, and • Plan to attain financial self-sufficiency primarily through earned revenues (by making money)
2014 BYOBB At a Glance • Three Competitive Tracks: • Lower (Undergraduates) • Upper (Grad Students, Alum, Faculty, Staff) • Social Impact • Three Category Prizes • Best written plan by a woman • Best written plan by a minority • Best written clean tech plan • Total value >$200,000 • $145,000 cash, $40,000 + in professional products & services plus gift certificates, incubation space, more…
2014 Prizes & Recognition • Grand Prize: $70K cash; $40K in professional products & services, and $5K in incubation services and intensive coaching/mentoring from IEI; first right of refusal for the Temple Acceleration Company • First Place (each track): $10K cash • Second Place (each track): $5K cash • Consideration for the Temple Accelerator Program • PR from Temple University, Fox School of Business • Philadelphia Inquirer, Metro, USA Today, Entrepreneur magazine and others
2013 BYOBB At a Glance • 96 business plans submitted • About 180 people competing (total) • 55% Upper track, 45% undergraduates • 15 schools and colleges within Temple • 90+ senior executive mentors, majority from GPSEG • 285 preliminary judges • Grand prize: Neighborhood Foods(Dylan Baird BA‘12) – Urban Farm initiative reducing blight, providing local healthy produce
Past BYOBB Winners • 2007 – Advanced Medical Solutions (Undergraduates, College of Engineering) • 2008 – Legal Organics (Undergraduate, College of Liberal Arts) • 2009 – Pit Bull Development (Alum, School of Tourism and Hospitality Management) • 2010 – Next Engineering (Undergraduates, College of Engineering) • 2011 – pureNANO (Graduate Student, Fox School of Business) • 2012 – PHmHealth (Alum, Fox School of Business)
BYOBB Important Dates • September 25 – Info Session 12 – 1 PM • October 22 – Info Session 5 – 6 PM • November 18 – Info Session 5-6 PM • February 10 – On Demand Mentoring Session 5 – 7 PM • March 24 – Plans Due • April 9 – Finalists Announced • April 17 – Scrub Day - Finalist Presentations • April 24 – Finalist Presentations and Awards Ceremony
‘13 Fall Business Planning Workshops 4:30 to 6:00 p.m. 503D Alter Hall September 12 – Idea Creation & Design Inquiry September 16– Legal 101 for Entrepreneurs September 19 – Market Segments & Value Propositions September 26 – Assessing Ideas: The Good, The Bad, The Ugly October 3 – Overview of Entrepreneurial Process & Business Planning October 10 – Creating Winning Business Models October 17 – Competitive Analysis October 24 – Cash Flows, Profits and Financial Projections October 31 – Entrepreneurial Marketing November 7 – Management & Team Building November 14 – Entrepreneurial Sales ProcessNovember 20 – Development Investment Presentations
Additional Temple Resources • Executives/Entrepreneurs in Residence: • Glen Gaddy – Strategist in Residence • Mike Jones – Legal Executive in Residence • Ted LeBow – Profitability Coach, Financial Executive • Lisa Peskin – Sales Executive in Residence • Chris Rabb – Social Entrepreneur in Residence • Ellen Weber – Angel Investor in Residence • Rick Genzer – Business Executive/IT Executive in Residence • 2013-2014 Entrepreneur in Residence: Bernie Spain, Co-Founder, Dollar Express • Temple business librarians @ Paley Library • Legal clinic at the Temple SBDC • IEI Staff (by appt) and IEI Resource Center • IEI mentor/subject matter expertise network • Online articles @ www.fox.temple.edu/iei
Rules & Regs & Info • Participants are encouraged to work in teams • 4 person max per team • Teams may be comprised of non-Temple affiliates • The business founder/CEO/main shareholder must have a Temple University affiliation • Students, alumni, staff & faculty from all of Temple’s 17 schools and colleges are eligible, plus TU Health System and other Temple organizations (Paley Library, Office of Technology Transfer, etc.) • The business plan may focus on either the creation of a new business or an already existing business (less than two years)
More Rules & Regs & Info… • Plans for expansions of existing businesses are ineligible • You may revise and resubmit your plan one time, providing you were not a prior finalist & plan has been updated/upgraded • Compete in three tracks • Undergraduate • Upper Track: Graduate Students/Staff/Faculty/Alumni • Social Impact • Any team not comprised of solely undergrad students must compete in Graduate Student/Staff/Faculty/Alum track • Non-profit and social entrepreneurship businesses are encouraged to participate • Participants who declare their intent will receive a business plan guidebook and a Senior executive mentor upon request, and completion of a one-page “vision paper.”
Senior Executive Mentor Program • One-on-one mentoring program with mentors from the Greater Philadelphia Senior Executive Group & other orgs • Two-way project-based mentoring program • Mentors may not do any primary work or write plans • Mentors provide feedback, advice and counsel • Protégé or mentee: • Drives the plan forward & is the responsible party • Communicates regularly with their mentor • Is respectful of mentor’s time and other commitments • Sticks to agreed upon schedule and due dates • To receive a mentor, you agree to complete and enter the business plan. “Commit to finish.”
Sections of a Business Plan • MARKETING PLAN & SALES STRATEGY • OPERATIONS • MANAGEMENT & ORGANIZATION • DEVELOPMENT, MILESTONES & EXIT PLAN • FINANCIAL DATA & PROJECTIONS • EXECUTIVE SUMMARY • COMPANY OVERVIEW • INDUSTRY ANALYSIS • THE TARGET MARKET • THE COMPETITION • STRENGTHS & RISKS(Business and Operational)
Start Early! • Plans are due in about six months – start now! • Break it down into “chunks” and stick to a schedule • Allow time for re-writes, more research, exams, glitches at work, etc. • Take advantage of winter break
Suggested Timeline Company Overview – one to two weeks Industry Analysis – one week Target Market – two weeks The Competition – two weeks Strengths and Risks – one week or less Marketing Plan & Sales Strategy – two weeks Operations – one week or less Management & Organization – one week or less Development, Milestones & Exit Plan – one week Financial Data & Projections – two weeks Executive Summary, Title Page, Table of Contents & Proofreading – one week
Business Plan – Do’s and Don’ts • DO comply with the 15-page limit, excluding title page, table of contents and executive summary • DO use the template available on the IEI website, www.fox.temple.edu/iei • DO your homework – research! • DO use spell check and a professional writing style • DO submit a plan that’s clear, concise, compelling and complete • DO proofread your document prior to submitting • DON’T skip sections • DON’T turn your plan in after 3/25 @ 5 pm
What Makes a Winning Plan? • Evidence of thorough research regarding market, industry and competition • Market segmented properly • Industry trends recognized • Competitive strengths and weaknesses addressed • Direct and Indirect • A well organized, well written, sophisticated plan that makes a compelling business case • “I would invest in this business” • Sound strategy and revenue model; plan is executable • Financials that are grounded in sound assumptions and which are attainable
Need Help? • IEI staff • Jaine Lucas, Executive Director jaine.lucas@temple.edu – Alums & Graduate Students • Quanda Garrison, Associate Director quanda@temple.edu – Undergrads • Entrepreneurship Facilitators: Melinda & Kelly • IEI Innovation Lab & Resource Center • Mentor meeting rooms & IEI Innovation Lab • “You can do it. We can help.”