Title: Wheelen/Hunger
1Chapter 12
- Strategic Issues in Entrepreneurial Ventures and
Small Business - Dr.Vijaya Kumar
- Skyline College
2Entrepreneurship and Small Business
- Small businesses
- 22 million
- gt95 of all businesses
- 85 new jobs created by small firms
- 2X RD dollars on fundamental research compared
to large firms - 50 of businesses found in any given year, not in
business w/i 5 years
3Entrepreneurship and Small Business
- Small business firm
- One that employs fewer than 500 people and has
sales of lt 20 million annually.
4Entrepreneurship and Small Business
- Small business firm
- Independently owned
- and operated
- Not dominant in its
- field
- Not engaged in
- innovative practices
- Entrepreneurial Venture
- Primary goals profit and
- growth
- Innovative strategic
- practices
5Entrepreneurship and Small Business
- Entrepreneur
- A person who organizes and manages a business and
who assumes risk for the sake of profit. - Ultimate strategist
6Informal Questions to Begin the Strategic
Management Process in a Small Company or
Entrepreneurial Venture
Formal Informal Define mission What do we stand
for? Set objectives What are we trying to
achieve? Formulate strategy How are we going to
get there? How can we beat the competition? Determ
ine policies What sort of ground rules should we
all be following to get the job done
right? Establish programs How should we organize
this operation to get what we want done as
cheaply as possible with the highest quality
possible? Prepare pro forma budgets How much is
it going to cost us and where can we get the
cash? Specify procedures In how much detail do we
have to lay things out, so that everybody knows
what to do? Determine performance measures What
are those few key things that will determine
whether we can make it? How can we keep track of
them?
7Entrepreneurship and Small Business
- Strategic planning
- Strongly related to small-business financial
performance - Many small firms do not use the process
8Entrepreneurship and Small Business
Not enough time
Small Business Reasons for Not using Strategic
planning
Unfamiliar
Lack of skills
Lack of trust
9Entrepreneurship and Small Business
10Entrepreneurship and Small Business
11Entrepreneurship and Small Business
- Strategic Decision-Making Process
- Develop the basic business idea
- A product and/or service having target customers
and/or markets
12Entrepreneurship and Small Business
- Strategic Decision-Making Process
- Scan the external environment
- Locate factors in the societal and task
environments that pose opportunities and threats
13Entrepreneurship and Small Business
- Strategic Decision-Making Process
- Scan the internal factors
- Objectively consider personal assets, expertise,
abilities, and experience
14Entrepreneurship and Small Business
- Strategic Decision-Making Process
- Analyze the strategic factors
- SWOT and SFAS Table (Figure 5.1)
15Entrepreneurship and Small Business
- Strategic Decision-Making Process
- Decide go or no go
- Feasibility to go or further development
16Entrepreneurship and Small Business
- Strategic Decision-Making Process
- Generate a business plan
- Specify how the idea will be transformed into
reality
17Contents of a Strategic Business Plan for an
Entrepreneurial Venture
I. Table of Contents X. Human Resources
Plan II. Executive Summary XI. Ownership III. Na
ture of the Business XII. Risk Analysis IV. Strat
egy Formulation XIII. Timetables and
Milestones V. Market Analysis XIV. Strategy
ImplementationAction Plans VI. Marketing
Plan XV. Evaluation and Control VII. Operational
PlansService/Product XVI. Summary VIII. Financia
l Plans XVII. Appendices IX. Organization and
Management
18Entrepreneurship and Small Business
- Strategic Decision-Making Process
- Strategic audit
- Framework oriented toward future
19Entrepreneurship and Small Business
- Strategic Decision-Making Process
- Implement the business plan
- Action plans and procedures
20Entrepreneurship and Small Business
- Strategic Decision-Making Process
- Evaluate the implemented business plan
- Compare actual performance against projected
performance results
21Entrepreneurship and Small Business
- Corporate Governance
- Simpler in entrepreneurial firms
- Owner as manager
- No board unless incorporated
22Entrepreneurship and Small Business
- Corporate Governance
- Closely-held firms have passive boards
- Advisory board
- A group of external business people voluntarily
meeting with owner to discuss strategic issues
23Entrepreneurship and Small Business
- Sources of Innovation
- Within the Industry
- The unexpected
- The incongruity
- Innovation based on process need
- Changes in industry or market structure
24Entrepreneurship and Small Business
- Sources of Innovation
- Societal environment
- Demographics
- Changes in perception, mood, and meaning
- New knowledge
25Entrepreneurship and Small Business
- Factors New Ventures Success
- 3 Factors
- The structure of the industry entered
- New ventures business strategy
- Behavioral characteristics of the entrepreneur
26Some Guidelines for New Venture Success
Focus on industries facing substantial
technological or regulatory changes, especially
those with recent exits by established
competitors. Seek industries whose smaller
firms have relatively weak competitive
positions. Seek industries that are in early,
high-growth stages of evolution. Seek
industries in which it is possible to create high
barriers to subsequent entry. Seek industries
with heterogeneous products that are relatively
unimportant to the customers overall
success. Seek to differentiate your products
from those of your competitors in ways that are
meaningful to your customers. Focus such
differentiation efforts on product quality,
marketing approaches, and customer serviceand
charge enough to cover the costs of doing
so. Seek to dominate the market segments in
which you compete. If necessary, either segment
the market differently or change the nature and
focus of your differentiation efforts to increase
your domination of the segments you
serve. Stress innovation, especially new
product innovation, that is built on existing
organizational capabilities. Seek natural,
organic growth through flexibility and
opportunism that builds on existing
organizational strengths.
27Entrepreneurship and Small Business
- Small Business Development
- Sub-stages
- Existence
- Survival
- Success
- Disengagement
- Growth
- Take-off
- Resource maturity
28Entrepreneurship and Small Business
- Family Businesses
- gt 1/3 of Fortune 500 family owned or dominated
- World percentage 50
29Entrepreneurship and Small Business
- Family Businesses
- Why family businesses fail
- Inherited wealth
- No allowance for changing firm
- Family is neglected
- Family lifestyles
- Family not prepared to run business
- Arena for family conflicts
30Entrepreneurship and Small Business
- Family Businesses
- Transfer of Power
- Phase 1
- Owner-managed business
- Phase 2
- Training and development of new generation
- Phase 3
- Partnership between generations
- Phase 4
- Transfer of power
31Entrepreneurship and Small Business
- Family Businesses
- Issues in evaluation and control
- Line between debt and equity is blurred
- Lifestyle is part of financial statements
- Standard financial formulas dont always apply
- Personal preference determines financial policies
- Banks combine personal and business wealth