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Selecting and executing your Entrance Strategy

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PETCO. Chapter 9. Executing Your Entrance Strategy. 31-Oct-06. Cherry Split (fractionation) ... PETCO Case on pp. 213-214. Theory & Practice ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Selecting and executing your Entrance Strategy


1
Selecting and executing your Entrance Strategy
  • Entrance Strategies (Chapter 9)
  • Decide on an entry strategy
  • Planning to learn when uncertainty is high
  • Assessing your project as it unfolds
  • Tug of War (Practicum) 

2
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3
Innovation Invention Commercialization
4
What do you do now?
  • Youve
  • Identified and screen new innovations
  • Figured out your target market
  • Filled your opportunity portfolio
  • Determined your core competences
  • Decided where you will invest for the future
  • Now its time to get
  • Down in the real world. You know. Where the
    rubber meets the road and the real folks are that
    make it go.
  • H. Ross Perot, on Larry King Live

5
Where does entry strategy fit in?
6
What is Entrance Strategy?
  • Several practical areas in entrepreneurship and
    innovation reflect the role of the entrance
    strategy
  • The first step in an entrance strategy is your
    vision what will the company look like in 10,
    15, 20 years
  • Financing (VCs, Banks, Stock issues)
  • Many aspects of Venture Capital work (business
    model, hiring decisions, capitalization, etc.)
  • Incubators
  • Speculators and Universities love these
  • Why?

7
Adaptive Execution
  • Decide on an entry strategy
  • Anticipating competitive behavior and response
  • Planning to learn when uncertainty is high
  • Rather than meeting objectives set in advance
  • Discovery Driven Planning
  • Assessing your project as it unfolds

8
Anticipating Competitor Response
  • Objective Avoid debilitating competitive
    interaction
  • By using speed, skill and surprise
  • Use your imagination, innovation, creativity to
    outmaneuver your competitors
  • Rather than your scarce resources

9
Where are your Customers?
  • Lead-steer customers
  • Opinion leaders in their industries
  • Highly regarded by peers
  • Customers with blogs, review or other sites
  • Use these customers enthusiasm to
  • Test your assumptions about attribute maps and
    consumption chains
  • Use their success with your offering to sell
    others

10
Assessing Your first 5 sales
  • This is where you evaluate, learn, modify

11
No Sales until First 5 Salesprioritizing the
first few sales
12
Risk-return trade-off
  • Most customers will buy on a risk-return decision
  • Small value low risk
  • Higher risk demand for higher return (savings)

13
Customer RisksThe risk of the New
  • Learning (experience) curve
  • Opportunity costs
  • Failure or uncertain operation
  • Employee resistance
  • Legal and Environmental
  • Quality Perception

14
Learn from each sale
  • You cant sell 10 until you sell 1
  • You cant sell 100 until you sell 10 Etc.
  • Each of the early sales is an opportunity
  • To test your attribute map and consumption chain
  • To learn about your product and customer
  • To innovate again and again

15
Tug of War
  • Write the challenge
  • Describe the best-case scenario and the
    worst-case scenario
  • List the conditions of the situation
  • Find the forces pushing you to the best case and
    those pulling you toward catastrophe
  • Pit each condition against its opposite on the
    continuum by specifying its push and pull powers.

16
Assessing Competitive Response
  • After youve assessed your first few buyers
  • decide how aggressively you want to move

17
Competitors propensity to respond
  • 3 Questions
  • Is this area important to them?
  • Have they been increasing their commitment here?
  • Have they invested heavily in this area?
  • This is where
  • The Porter framework
  • Is useful

18
Competitive ResponsesHeres where the book
lapses into Military jargon
19
Tactics
  • feint (fant) noun
  • 1. A feigned attack designed to draw defensive
    action away from an intended target.
  • 2. A deceptive action calculated to divert
    attention from one's real purpose. See synonyms
    at artifice.
  • gambit (gam'bit) noun
  • 1. Games. An opening in chess in which a minor
    piece, or pieces, usually a pawn, is offered in
    exchange for a favorable position.
  • 2. A maneuver, stratagem, or ploy, especially one
    used at an initial stage.
  • 3. A remark intended to open a conversation.
  • onslaught (on'slôt, ôn'-) noun
  • 1. A violent attack.
  • 2. An overwhelming outpouring an onslaught of
    third-class mail.

20
Who will feed Fluffy?
  • PETCO Case on pp. 213-214

21
Theory Practice
  • Our theory provides you an inventory of
    techniques and concepts required for success
  • The necessary conditions
  • Practice is more complex, and requires a complete
    strategy (and even then is not sufficient)

22
Practice in Competitive Positioning
  • Identify your first few customers and learn from
    them
  • Develop your strategy
  • Identify each customer arena you intend to pursue
  • Assess Corporate Support
  • Assess Motivation and Capacity of the Competition
  • Map Arena Attractiveness
  • Map Competitive Positions of each player
  • Decide on your firms preferred strategy
  • Assess strategy of each competitor
  • Map each competitor's business position against
    your own

23
Ralston
  • Developing positions in seven sub-segments of the
    pet food business
  • pp. 217 on

24
The Competitors
25
Commitments
26
Categories and Products
27
Competitive Positions
28
Ralston vs. Mars (importance)
29
Ralston vs. Mars (Attractiveness)
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