Title: Generating
1- Generating Assessing Your
- New Venture Idea
- Prof. Rachael E. Wells
- November 20, 2008
- Workshop associated with
- Fordham GBAs 2009 Business Plan Competition
2The Venture Idea
- Your idea is the center of everything. Its the
root of all your pitches, marketing plans,
management decisions, financial analyses - What kind of idea will create value?
- Innovation is the key you are looking for an
innovative business model, product or service
3What is an innovative idea?
- Old has completely been done before
- New to me You think its new, until you do
some investigating - New-ish hasnt been literally done before, BUT
new part has no or few particular advantages - Innovative hasnt been done before is
potentially valuable - Innovative PLUS hasnt been done before, is
valuable and you can keep all that value for
yourself
4All creativity is not assessed equally Know the
difference between what will be called bizarre
vs. innovative
5- Successfully innovative ideas are more about
assembling what is already known in a unique
fashion or for a new application than an
ingenious, revolutionary brainstorm.
6- Where do ideas
- come from?
7Sources of Opportunities
- Economic Environment (esp. long-term)
- Decreasing costs
- Productivity gains
- New laws/regulations
- Improved service
- Existing supply is insufficient
- Market size/growth/outlook
- Market areas with low rate of competition,
innovation - Areas outside the experiences of the layperson
(limits future competition) - Monopolist (doesnt feel it has to innovate)
- Industry that competes on costs doesnt have
resources to devote to innovation - Industry/product/service that hasnt changed much
in years - Emerging fields
8Sources of Opportunities
- Demographic Environment
- User needs change
- User preferences change
- Market demographics may be forecasted to shift
over the long term, leading to new user
needs/preferences - Geographic Transfer
- Technology Environment
- Existing technology is replaced
- Technology creates a new nice
- Infrastructure/business system replacement or
transfer - New industry standard
9 10What resources do you have to help you come up
with new ideas?
- Previous work consumer experiences existing
social networks - Your professional social networks within
orgs/industries and outside listening to
colleagues in industry, previous customers - Some entrepreneurs set up product or service
lines similar to those in which they previously
worked/serving some of the same customers - Family/friends
- Experts
- Industry experts (including consultants)
- Potential customers
- Potential suppliers for a space
- Potential investors for a market space
- Pull a panel of a variety of the above,
representing different points of view/expertise
(not all industry insiders) together for a
brainstorming session - Is there dissatisfaction or problems with the
status quo? - What can be done better?
- What else can be done, period?
11Some Tips for Brainstorming Sessions
- Pull together as diverse a group of participants
as possible (not just your own close
colleagues/friends) - Diversity in professional expertise
experiences, social networks, even
cross-industries (as long as potentially related
to industry of interest) maybe mix customers
professionals, etc. etc. etc. better if its
people who wouldnt usually talk to one another - Locate yourselves in a good environment with no
disturbances - No cell-phones, blackberries, instant messengers
invited - Find a space that is large enough for the group
comfortable away from participants daily
routines - Supply water, coffee/tea, snacks sometimes even
a little alcohol can be helpful just enough to
loosen people up and reduce inhibitions about
proposing potentially crazy ideas
12Some Tips for Brainstorming Sessions
- Defer Judgment/Criticism or No Squelching
- Nothing can kill the spirit of a brainstorm
quicker than judging before ideas have a chance
to gain legs - You also want to maintain psychological safety of
each participant - Have an enthusiastic facilitator who will
encourage wild ideas/experimentation/building on
others ideas/no judgments - This person should ideally not be supplying ideas
him/herself - Know if you yourself are not best-suited for that
role! - This person will keep people away from buts
keep people toward ands - Stay focused on the topic (another helpful role
of the facilitator) otherwise you can waste
time and the build up of mental energy - Have only one conversation at a time
- No interrupting, dismissing, disrespect, rudeness
- Also keeps diverse perspectives interacting with
one another
13Some Tips for Brainstorming Sessions
- Go for quantity
- Aim for as many new ideas as possible. In a good
session, up to 100 ideas are generated in 60
minutes. - Be visual
- Use yellow, red, and blue markers to write on big
30-in. by 25-in. Post-its that are put on a wall. - Often nothing gets an idea across faster than
drawing it (esp. for new design or product
ideas) doesnt matter how terrible of a sketcher
you are.
14Assessing Your Idea(s) Have you pinpointed a
true, high value entrepreneurial opportunity for
yourself/your venture team?
15- Entrepreneurial Idea
- A product or service that somebody might
- find useful
- Entrepreneurial Opportunity
- A product or service for which a large number of
people will pay good money to obtain, and around
which you can build some competitive barriers
16Use the ABC TIP to help you screen
analyze A --Abundant demand, esp. over
long-term? B --Better product/service vs.
existing ways? C --Competition now? Easy entry? T
--Technically feasible, esp. over long-term? I
--Investors interested (if needed)? P
--Patentable/ protectable? S --Skills Needed?
17A is for Abundant Demand
- Whats the target market?
- Are the target buyers actually willing buyers?
- Are you trying to sell to tough customers?
- e.g., government, companies traditionally
unwilling to innovate - Do you have more than one customer group?
- How many transactions will there be (per day, per
year)? How often will customers have to buy? - Do you need to partner with one large company or
with many small companies. - E.g., easier to sell the idea once to Amazon.com
than to each of the countrys many local hardware
stores. - How susceptible to variation is this number?
- How much profit per transaction?
- Consider both gross profit (the pie) and profit
to you (your slice) - Inject a dose of realism
- If you dont have realistic reasons why youll
have 5 market penetration instead of 0.1, there
may not be enough value
18B is for Better Product/Service
- Describe the service/product
- Will it change the way people live, work or do
business? - What problem will it solve?
- WHY will customers buy?
- What are current substitutes?
19C is for Competition P is for Patentable
- Are there already competitors in this space? What
will they do? - Will they ignore you indefinitely?
- You will make profits, but no (existing or
emerging) competitors will be attracted to take
those profits - Will they buy you?
- Do they need to, or is it cheap to copy you?
- Will they just immediately copy you the moment
you prove theres value in the idea? - Can you obtain patents?
- Inhibits (free) copying by others
- More revenue opportunities through licensing,
partnerships, etc.
20I is for Interest of Investors
21Investors back lt5 of the venture ideas they
screen
- Venture-backed projects MUST HAVE
- A product offering/ concept that solves a
significant problem or unmet need - Significant means a problem or need where
customers will pay for a solution - In a very large potential market
- High of transactions each transaction can
support incremental charge of a few - That can yield a large return (5-10x) on their
original investment in 5-7 years - Other key characteristics
- Good economic model
- Does it cost more to acquire new customers than
the profits you ultimately collect from them? - Good fit with founder/ management
- Do you have some basis for knowing this industry?
- Effective staging of capital
- Does it cost a lot of money to build the first
version of the product and see if anyone wants to
buy it?
22T is for Technical Feasibility S is for Skills
Needed
- Make sure you know that this idea is technically
possible even better if the technical capacity
is projected to improve over the next months,
years - Seek input from a technical expert if you dont
have the expertise needed to assess this - Do you have the existing skills/capabilities
needed to execute get this venture running? - If you dont, how will you get them? Can you
build them? Can you buy them?
23Resources to draw on in your analysis of market,
competition, etc.
- Research into existing businesses
- Patent brokers
- Trade shows and associations
- Customers
- Suppliers/distributors
- Competitors
- Former colleagues
- Industry professionals experts
- Consultants
- Networking
- Websites like Hoovers, ProQuest, Investext,
- Mags like Business week, Inc, Forbes, Fast
Company, Fortune - Investors targeting a particular space