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SECRETS OF SUCCESSFUL STARTUPS

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Title: SECRETS OF SUCCESSFUL STARTUPS


1
SECRETS OF SUCCESSFUL STARTUPS
  • Presentation of a paper prepared for the
    international summer school in innovation and
    entrepreneurship, the university of California,
    San Diego (July 10.-28. 2000)
  • Antti Aarnio Soile Oikkonen

2
Contents
  • Driving principles of the new economy
  • Business models for the internet
  • Funding
  • Things to consider with possible venture
    opportunities
  • Business plans
  • Best practises and pitfalls

3
10 Principles of the new economy
  • Matter
  • Space
  • Time
  • People
  • Growth
  • Value
  • Efficiency
  • Markets
  • Transitions
  • Impulse
  • Recognize new business opportunities!

4
To remember when starting a business (1/2)
  • Pain is a continuum from minor inconvenience to
    life threatening.
  • One persons pain can be another persons
    pleasure.
  • There is a difference between buying a cool
    product and the one that gets rid of some pain.
  • Pain depends on the circumstances.

5
To remember when starting a business (2/2)
  • Great idea eliminates pain.
  • A new product lessens pain.
  • People need to relieve more pain than they cause.
  • Products need to be developed according to the
    demand of pain.
  • (What a Pain in the Ass! by Chris OLeary)

6
Understand your customer
  • What will the business be about?
  • What will its competitive advantage be?
  • What will it be especially good at?
  • How will this match its capabilities?
  • What will make the business successful?

7
Economics of running the business
  • Will people pay enough so the business will make
    a profit?
  • What will it offer that competitors dont?
  • What will it offer that customers cant get
    elsewhere?
  • Who do you want your customers to be?
  • What are their buying habits?
  • What do they want and need?

8
Eight business models for the Internet
  • Merchandise Sales
  • Per Use
  • Timed Usage
  • Subscription
  • Advertising
  • Sponsorship
  • Public Support
  • Information Site

9
Product design guidelines
  • Design from outside in.
  • Create an intuitive product.
  • Get physical fast.
  • Design for manufacturability.
  • Surprise the user.
  • Avoid product delays.

10
The key issues for investors
  • How will revenue be generated?
  • Is the business idea sustainable long enaugh to
    generate a significant return on investment?
  • Is the management team up to challenge?

11
Finding funding (1/2)
  • FFF money Family, Friends, Fools
  • Stages of funding
  • Concept stage
  • business plan and a model
  • from personal savings, FFF, Angels
  • Early stage
  • Beta (product, customers) market defined
  • Angels, some VCs

12
Finding funding (2/2)
  • First pro round
  • product and referenceable customers
  • VCs and some Angels
  • Later stage rounds
  • first pro round market validation
  • VCs
  • NEVER RUN OUT OF MONEY!
  • Always ask for more than you think you are going
    to need

13
Differences between Angels and VCs
14
Angel investor Charlie Gaylord
  • Things he looks for
  • A defined market of at least 50M
  • A real business, not just a product
  • A potentially rewarding exit X10 return in 3-5
    yrs
  • A team that can execute well
  • Questions he asks about
  • The business model and the market
  • The operating plan
  • Management
  • Funding and its source

15
Finding VCs
  • The market
  • Its a team game.
  • Focus
  • Have a great story
  • Will the dogs eat the dog food?
  • Referrals
  • Time is money
  • Realistic financial projections
  • Valuation
  • Exit strategy
  • Sales tool or operating plan

16
Things to consider with possible venture
opportunities
  • venture concept
  • Market opportunity
  • Technology
  • Protection
  • Manufacturing
  • Marketing
  • Management
  • Resource
  • Expected pay-off

17
Preparing a business plan -by Ken Olsson
  • Plan outline
  • Prepare a summary
  • Edit the summary
  • Add an appendix
  • Define the market opportunity
  • Describe the team
  • How far along is the product?
  • Marketing strategy
  • Development and operation plans
  • Spending and results
  • Capitalization plan

18
Common problems with business plans
  • Too long
  • Should be under 30 pages, the shorter the better
  • Unclear concept
  • Customer input missing
  • Weak competition section
  • Too brief team description

19
Great venture team
  • Really smart people
  • People who can make a concept live and breathe
  • People who are likely to wear well over time
  • Know the compelling interests of the members
  • Not too much emphasis on credentials
  • Anticipate a leave from a member

20
Getting organized
  • Venture teams should come with a label that says
    some assembly required
  • Never assume things are obvious
  • Clear goals known by everybody
  • Each team member should have a formal
    accountability/performance agreement
  • Terry Morses rules for success
  • Make the decision that makes the most money
  • Dont give your customer any excuse to say no
  • If youre very smart and work hard, you can do
    one thing well (focus on your core competence)

21
Niel Senturias ten commandments
  • The golden rule is that the guy with the gold
    rules.
  • Be aggressive but dont take unnecessary chances.
  • Answer all threats. Improve your position and
    pose a counter threat.
  • Play for initiative. If you have it, maintain it.
  • Cut your losses but lose as little as possible.
  • Rely on your own powers. If you cant see the
    power of your opponents move, there probably
    isnt any.
  • Outhustle the other guy.
  • Try to develop with threats, but dont threaten
    pointlessly.
  • When you cant decide, accept.
  • Choose a plan and stay with it.
  • To gain time, usually you have to sacrifice.
  • Remember Einstein time slows down as speed
    increases.

22
Branding the product
  • A promise to the customer
  • Brand equity
  • Brand loyalty
  • Have a marketing strategy
  • Tie the product to a single concept
  • Establish brand relevance
  • Have a brand esteem
  • Have a brand knowledge
  • Appropriate name for business helps
  • Logo that has a clear meaning

23
9 ways to kill a startup through bad PR -by Tom
Gable
  • Pandoras Positioning
  • Babel Branding
  • Budget 22
  • Egomaniac Expectations
  • Creative Quagmires
  • Missing Metrics
  • Hysteria Marketing
  • Dullness
  • Old Economy Thinking

24
Marketing the product
  • Have a market that is wide enough but not too big
  • Right time to enter
  • Getting customer attention
  • Collecting customer information
  • Planning the future
  • Packaging products

25
10 ways to attract new business (1/2)
  • Be an example
  • Be a solution provider
  • Have a good product knowledge and presentation
    techniques
  • Collect your best stories
  • Improve your communication skills

26
10 ways to attract new business (2/2)
  • Add value to your customers
  • Get feedback from your customers
  • Get letters of recommendation from your best
    customers
  • Act confidentially
  • Master the six-step selling process
  • 1) Establish rapport, 2) ask questions to
    understand customers real need, 3) determine
    where real value is, 4) link customers need to
    the value to your product/service, 5) assume the
    sale and conditionally close if green light,
    close 6) if there are any objections, handle them
    by cycling back to previous steps

27
When starting up a new business watch out for
  • Product development delays
  • People problems
  • Sales below projections
  • New competitors
  • Investor agendas

28
An entrepreneurial leader
  • Strong physically, mentally, emotionally,
    spiritually
  • Get personal needs met
  • Tolerate nothing
  • Oriented exclusively around their values
  • Deliver twice what they promise
  • Affect others profoundly
  • Build a super-reserve in every area

29
Growing the business fast (1/2) -by Leo
Speigel
  • Hire great people fast and executive management
    early.
  • Be well funded.
  • Purposefully create a company culture that values
    empowerment, delegation and self-direction.
  • Make each employee a star.
  • Have great advisors.

30
Growing the business fast (2/2)
  • Buzz is king.
  • Know your target market and watch all your
    competitors
  • Find the boulders.
  • Work hard, have a can do attitude and be
    passionate.
  • Focus on keeping a balance between personal and
    private life.

31
Finding partners
  • Networking
  • Partnerships
  • Alliance with richer, smarter, larger and the one
    that also benefits from it.
  • Marketing arrangements
  • Key objectives
  • Good financial transactions
  • A value-adding partner
  • Win-win relationship

32
Learning from failure
  • Patterns of failure -by Geoffrey Moore in Red
    Herring
  • The slow fail
  • Failure on transition into the mainstream market.
  • Managers and investors dive right in without
    niche market
  • End up in the dead zone
  • Examples of services available for companies in
    different countries
  • Help with issues over Atlantic
  • France, Finland, Ireland, Sweden, UK, Germany
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