Title: Opportunity Evaluation
1- Opportunity Evaluation
- And
- Different frameworks
2Systematic screening Why?
- Most businesses fail in less than two years
- Fewer than 1 of the business plans submitted to
VCs get funded - Business failures lead to huge collateral
damages - Failures are planned by lack of planning
3Mullins 7 Domain Framework
4Mullins 7 Domain Framework
- Markets and industries are not the same things
- Both macro-and micro level considerations are
necessary markets and industries must be
examined at both levels. - The keys to assessing entrepreneurs and
entrepreneurial teams arent simply found on
their resumes or in assessments of their
entrepreneurial character.
5What do we mean by market?
- A market consists of a group of current and/or
potential customers having the willingness and
ability to buy products - goods or services - to
satisfy a particular class of wants or needs.
Thus, markets consist of buyers - people or
organizations and their needs - not products. - Example One such market, for example, consists
of businesspeople who get hungry between meals
during their workday. We'll call this the market
for workplace snacks. - markets consist of buyers, not products
6What do we mean by industry?
- An industry consists of sellers - typically
organizations - that offer products or classes of
products that are similar and close substitutes
for one another. - Example What industries serve the market for
workplace snacks? At the producer level, there is
the salty snack industry, the candy industry and
the fresh produce industry, to name but three.
There are also industries providing the
distribution of these products to workplaces,
including the supermarket industry, the
restaurant industry, the coin operated vending
machine industry, the coffee bar industry and so
on. Clearly, these industries offer varying
bundles of benefits to hungry workers. Some of
these industries are more attractive than others
to would-be entrants seeking to serve the
workplace snack market. - an industry consists of sellers
7Market, Industry - why care about the difference?
- Why is the market-industry distinction important?
Because judgments about the attractiveness of the
market one proposes to serve may be very
different from judgments about the industry in
which one would compete. - This should not be - but often is - surprising,
for the questions asked to assess market
attractiveness are different from those for
industry attractiveness, a point easily obscured
when words like 'sector' and 'space' are used
indiscriminately or carelessly in the opportunity
assessment process. (Does the user of these terms
mean 'market' or 'industry'?) - So, if market and industry attractiveness are
both important, how should each be assessed?
8Mullins 7 Domain Framework
- 1.Micro Level Market Assessment
- a) Micro level questions about target markets
- b) Three ways to define market segments
- c) Micro market test
9Mullins 7 Domain Framework
- 1.Micro Level Market Assessment
- Micro level questions about target markets
- Is there a target market segment in which we
offer the customer clear and compelling benefits,
at a price he or she is willing to pay? - Are these benefits, in the customers minds,
different from and superior in some way to
whats currently offered by other solutions? - How large is this segment, and how fast is it
growing?
10Mullins 7 Domain Framework
- 1.Micro Level Market Assessment
- b) Three ways to define market segments
- Demography
- Geography
- Customer Behavior
11Mullins 7 Domain Framework
- 1.Micro Level Market Assessment
- c) Micro market test
- What customer pain will your offering resolve?
- Will customers buy what you propose to offer?
- Who precisely are the customers?
- Do you have detailed accurate information about
who they are, where they live or do business or
what they do? - Are there other segments that could benefit from
a related offering?
12Mullins 7 Domain Framework
- 2. Macro level Market assessment
- Macro Market Test
- What sort of business is sought?
- How large is the market?
- How fast can it grow?
- How quickly can it grow in the next 6 months or
2/3/5 years? - What trends can be identified and how will it
affect the business?
13Mullins 7 Domain Framework
- 3. Macro level Industry assessment
- a) Porters Five forces analysis
- b) The macro industry test
14Mullins 7 Domain Framework
- 3. Macro level Industry assessment
- Five macro level questions to assess the industry
based on - Michael Porters five forces -
- Threat of Entry, Supplier power,
- Buyer power, Threat to substitutes, Competitive
Rivalry
15Mullins 7 Domain Framework
- 3. Macro level industry assessment
-
- b) Macro Industry Test
- What industry will you compete in? Define it
carefully. - Based on all five forces, what is your overall
assessment of this industry? Just how attractive
or unattractive is it? - If your industry is a poor performer overall, are
there persuasive reasons why you will fare
differently?
16Mullins 7 Domain Framework
- 4. Micro level industry assessment
-
- The Micro industry test
- Do you require proprietary elements - patents,
trade secrets and so on that other firms cannot
likely duplicate or imitate? - Can your business develop and employ superior
organizational processes, capabilities or
resources that others would have difficulty in
duplicating or imitating? - Is your business model economically viable i.e.
can you show that your company wont run out of
cash quickly?
17Mullins 7 Domain Framework
- Mission, Aspiration and Risk test for
entrepreneurs - Whats your entrepreneurial mission?
- What level of aspirations do you have for your
entrepreneurial dream? - What sorts of risk are you and are you not
willing to take ?
18Mullins 7 Domain Framework
- Mission, Aspiration and Risk test for
entrepreneurs - Whats your entrepreneurial mission?
- What level of aspirations do you have for your
entrepreneurial dream? - What sorts of risk are you and are you not
willing to take ?
19Mullins 7 Domain Framework
- 6. The can you and your team execute? test
- What are the few - only a handful, please
critical success factors (CSFs) in your industry?
- Can you demonstrate - in past deeds, not mere
words that your team taken together can execute
on each and every one of these CSFs? - Have you identified which CSFs your team is not
well prepared to meet, for which you need help in
filling out your team?
20Mullins 7 Domain Framework
- The connectedness test
- Who do you and your team know across the
value-chain among your customers, suppliers,
competitors and substitutes?