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Masters in Engineering and Management of Technology Masters in engineering Design. Entrepreneurship and New Venture Creation Rui Baptista. Analyzing New Ventures: Opportunity Screening. Anchors of Superior Business. They create or add significant value to a customer or end user
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Masters in Engineering and Management of TechnologyMasters in engineering Design Entrepreneurship and New Venture Creation Rui Baptista
Anchors of Superior Business • They create or add significant value to a customer or end user • They solve a significant problem, or meet a significant want or need, for which someone is willing to pay a premium • They are a good fit with the founder and management team at the time, as well as with the marketplace and the risk-reward balance • They have robust market, margin, and moneymaking characteristics Entrepreneurship - Rui Baptista
Timmons’ Opportunity Criteria • Industry and Market Issues • Economics and harvest issues • Competitive advantage issues • Management team fit • Fatal flaws/Overall assessment • Strategic Differentiation Entrepreneurship - Rui Baptista
Venture Criteria: Questions to be Answered (I) • Product/service • creates or adds significant value to customer or end-user • solves a significant problem / need for which the customer is willing to pay a premium • Customers are reachable and receptive • Product life is durable • Robust market in terms of potential revenues and margins Entrepreneurship - Rui Baptista
Venture Criteria: Questions to be Answered (II) • Competitive advantages exist: • “First mover” advantages • Control over prices or costs • Patents or trade secrets • Special know-how • Special relationships with customers or suppliers • Contractual advantages • Attractive value creation and realization: • Offers attractive returns for investors (ROI) • Has low to moderate capitalization needs that are fundable • Has a viable exit strategy • Risk/reward balance Entrepreneurship - Rui Baptista
Screening Criteria: Customer/Market • Need/Problem • Customer Description/Identifiable and Reachable • User Benefit • Demand Durability • Market Structure • Market Size • Market Growth • Market Trends • Market Capacity • Market Share Attainable Entrepreneurship - Rui Baptista
Screening Criteria: Competitors/Competitive Advantage • Competitor Assessment • Barriers to Entry • Competitive Lead Time • Competitive Advantage • Cost/Price • Channels • Proprietary Technology • Lead Time • Service • Contracts/Contacts • Key People Entrepreneurship - Rui Baptista
Screening Criteria: Economics and Financial Issues • Gross/Profit Margins • EBIT • Sustainability • Time to Positive Cash Flow • ROI • Capital Requirements/Resource Needs • Gradual Resource Usage • Scalability of Investment Entrepreneurship - Rui Baptista
Screening Criteria: Harvest/Exit • Strategic Value • Valuation of Assets and Capital Costs • Exit Possibilities • Capital Market Timing Entrepreneurship - Rui Baptista
Screening Criteria: Management • Entrepreneurial Skills • Industry and Technical • Integrity and Intellectual Honesty • Ability to Work Together • Balanced in Team Roles and Styles • Goal Alignment • Team Skills • Management Holes/Gaps Entrepreneurship - Rui Baptista
Screening Criteria: Personal Fit • Risk/Reward • Goals • Timing/Opportunity Costs • Stress and Life Style Issues Entrepreneurship - Rui Baptista
Screening Criteria: Overall Assessment • Fit between Opportunity-Team-Resources • Upside-Downside Risk • Fatal Flaws • Go/No Go Entrepreneurship - Rui Baptista
First-Mover Advantage in the Assessment of New Venture Opportunities • Lead Times: new ventures introducing new products/technologies benefit from high barriers to entry being more likely to survive because high barriers provide long lead times for ventures to get established • Entry Timing: pioneers have a disadvantage because they face greater uncertainty (lower financing) and greater customer reluctance to buy, and therefore experience greater costs to enter Entrepreneurship - Rui Baptista
First Mover Advantage: Myth or Reality First mover advantages are based on the ability to: • Lock in customers • Build relationships with customers, suppliers and partnerships to build brand and increase market share • Learn to operate and achieve advantages over competitors • Influence business practices • Garner industry attention Entrepreneurship - Rui Baptista
Sustainability of First Mover Advantage (I) Such advantages may not hold if: • Customers don’t perceive switching costs • Pioneers face significant resistance from customers or there are high training or market education costs • Pioneer products are poor and produce customer dissatisfaction • Newer technologies replace pioneering technologies Entrepreneurship - Rui Baptista
Sustainability of First Mover Advantage (II) Such advantages may not hold if: • Single strong competitor reduces margins for pioneering companies • Existing larger competitors can easily develop competing capabilities – no protected intellectual property • Competitors can withstand financial losses better than pioneer Entrepreneurship - Rui Baptista
Sustainability of First Mover Advantage (III) Such advantages may not hold if: • Pioneer products don’t have significant cost or differentiation advantages • Pioneers are not able to develop organizational and corporate capabilities to exploit technologies Unsustainable first mover advantage benefits “fast seconds” Entrepreneurship - Rui Baptista
Fast Second: Technological Knowledge as a Public Good • Non-rivalry: the cost of replicating new technology is usually trivial when compared with the cost of creating it in the first place • Incomplete Excludability: property rights can be assigned by law to the creators of new ideas; however, technology determines how easy it is to prevent unauthorized use • This means that a “fast second” firm may reach the market with a new product reaping some of the benefits of innovation without facing its costs Entrepreneurship - Rui Baptista
The Timing of Innovation and the Fast Second Advantage • The larger the expected profit from introduction, the greater the probability of innovating first • The smaller the profit from the present product/technology, the greater the probability of innovating first • The larger the difference between present and expected profits (after introduction), the greater the loss from being beaten to the market Entrepreneurship - Rui Baptista
A Simple Model of the Timing of Innovation Entrepreneurship - Rui Baptista
Case – Securities OnLine: Customer/Market • Product: rapid, easily accessible informaton on emerging East European capital markets (higher risk/return–greater demand for information) • Customers: financial/business/legal/data services – sophisticated, diverse, geographically dispersed financial operators + advertisers • Opportunity: customers’ frustration with current lack of resources/information • Large market with high potential for growth • Customers are multiple users and have low switching costs • Demand subject to international fluctuations in economic growth and financial markets Entrepreneurship - Rui Baptista
Case – Securities OnLine: Industry (I) • Competition: inexistent/weak in the market presently; increasing in the near future (reduced lead time) • Low barriers to entry • Sources of competitive advantage: • First mover advantage • Technology: low entry costs, low operation costs (but possibly growing as scope of services widens) • Product differentiation: quality content and presentation, fast distribution, segmentation per type of customer and type of information • Entrepreneurial team dominates both product content and distribution technology Entrepreneurship - Rui Baptista
Case – Securities OnLine: Industry (II) • Risks: • Low barriers to entry – increased competition eroding first-mover advantage • Low switching costs – limits to product differentiation • Large information providers (Reuters, Bloomberg) may enter the market soon with the advantage of established customer base • Technology risk: quality and quantitiy of content vs. quick internet access; security and integrity of data • Political instability and economic fluctuations Entrepreneurship - Rui Baptista
Case – Securities OnLine: Economics and Financial Issues • Low investment requirements: $0.514M in the conservative scenario (C); $1,022M in the agressive scenario (A) • Gradual resource usage; high scale economies • Quick to positive cash-flow: 14 months (C); 13 months (A) • EBIT: $0.7M (C); $1.3M (A) by year 3 • Expected ROI by year 3: 36% (C); -31,5% (A) • Expected Sales Margin by year 3: 24% (C); 26% (A) • Sustainability: strongly conditioned by risk – low barriers to entry; low switching costs; increasing competition; political and economic instability • Discounted Expected Cash-Flow (DCF): $2.5M (C); $5.5M Entrepreneurship - Rui Baptista
Case – Securities OnLine: Harvest/Exit Issues • Exit possibilities: Merger vs. IPO vs. Venture Capital • Potential investors: • Large financial information providers • Large multimedia companies (financial cable chanells) • Associated customers: financial services (First Boston, ING); information providers (FT) • Local (East European) investors Entrepreneurship - Rui Baptista
Case – Securities OnLine: Management Team/Personal Fit • Strong technical skills • Low entrepreneurial experience, partially compensated by the advisory board • Ability to commit, giving up highly paid corporate jobs • Question: ability to extend human resources and management team with the same level of skills Entrepreneurship - Rui Baptista
Case – Securities OnLine: Overall Assessment • Good fit between opportunity, team and resources as regards market and technology • Strong/average upside – first mover advantage, good established connections, but average/low initial revenues as customer base grows • Strong downside: exit through acquisition of strategic assets: customer base and human resources • Possible flaws: • co-ordination of geographically dispersed team and customer base • Risk of internet capital market bubble bursting Entrepreneurship - Rui Baptista