Planning The New Venture

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Planning the New

Venture
Having great ideas and singling out the great opportunity is only the first step in a
long journey to a viable venture.
The next steps typically need some planning, mostly packaged into what will
eventually become a business plan. The business plan is a document that evolves
from the initial idea into a business concept proposal (BCP) and from there into an
opportunity assessment. At each stage of this evolution, the entrepreneur can
decide to proceed or move on to a more promising venture.

What Is a Business Plan?


A business plan is a document describing a ventures opportunity, its product or
service, context, strategy, team, required resources, and potential financial returns.
It is guided by three basic questions:

Where are we now?


Where do we want to be?
How are we going to get there?

Why Write a Business Plan?


Business plans serve many functions .

Sell yourself on the business: A carefully elaborated plan can help


convince you that starting this business is the right thing for you to do.
Obtain financing: A business plan is an essential prerequisite for convincing
potential investors to finance the new venture.
Motivate and focus the management team: Developing a business plan
gets everyone thinking about the business goals and can ensure a joint
understanding of the companys roadmap.
Obtain large contracts: The fact of having thought about the future and
put some strategy down on paper provides credibility, and presenting a
sound business plan may facilitate larger contracts.
Attract key employees: The business plan might help prospective
employees to decide whether to join the venture.

Complete mergers and acquisitions: In these cases, the business plan


serves as a company resume, helping to demonstrate that the value of the
business is the highest possible.

In terms of targets for the plan, one emphasis is on raising capital. This means that
while answering the three questions about where the company is today, where it
should be in the future, and how to get there, the business plan also needs to
convincingly demonstrate the ability of the business to generate satisfactory profits.

Who Should Write the Business Plan?


Always short on resources, entrepreneurs are sometimes taken with the idea of
outsourcing the preparation of the business plan, using consultants or interns
(often the case for startups in close proximity to research institutes). The help of
such outsiders can indeed be highly beneficial, but it cannot replace the personal
commitment of the business owners and management team. Only they have the
right level of insight and imagination as to the direction their business should take.
And it is they who need to present and defend their plan and eventually build a
venture on it.

Who Will Read the Business Plan?


Business plans are detailed written overviews that outline the ways in which a
business will ideally be operated. Comprehensive plans include market research,
competition analysis, strategic marketing and operating objectives, financial
outlooks and short- and long-term goals. While many business plans are written for
the express purpose of attaining small business financing, they can be used for a
variety of other purposes as well.

Lenders
Investors
Partners
Smart Business Owners

Lenders
Before authorizing a small-business loan, a financial institution will want to read a
well-crafted business plan. This helps the lender assess if the business objectives
are sound and if youve accurately anticipated various expenditures and projected
revenue. The business plan is usually read in conjunction with the business loan
application, and the lender uses the plan to help her judge whether your business
represents a sound financial risk for the bank.

Investors
If you decide to take on investors at any point, they will want to read your business
plan before making a commitment. The business plan spells out anticipated revenue
streams, earning projections and researched plans for reaching your target
demographic. It also details the specifics of your products and services and the
potential for growth and expansion, and your financials reflect the performance of
the business to date. Reading your business plan, in essence, allows potential
investors to get a glimpse into your businesss potential future.

Partners
If you decide to bring on a partner or hire someone in a high-level executive
position, he will want to read your business plan. Reading the plan will help a
potential upper-echelon employee understand your objectives, your operating
procedures and his own potential for career growth and development. This will help
both you and your prospect decide if he is a good fit for your organization and
shares the same business philosophy and professional approach.

Smart Business Owners


Ideally, you will regularly read and review your plan to help keep your small
business on track. Your business plan should contain goals, objectives and
measurements that set the course for your business. Regularly measuring the reallife progress of your business against your business plan goals will help you
determine what parts of your operation need to be tweaked. For example, if
revenues are not as strong as anticipated, revisit the marketing plan and review the
factors you based your initial projections on. Ask yourself if the market has changed
or if there are internal measures to take to redirect the business's course.

Focus on the Important Parts


Focus, and highlight the particular strengths of your business. For example, if the
team is perhaps not as seasoned as the textbooks recommend, but the venture has
already gained renowned customers, then of course the team section will be less
extensive than the parts on the customers and track record.
Furthermore, although this may seem self-evident, the plan should follow the basic
rules of style. Information should be clearly organized, segmented, and logically
integrated. Make the executive summary as strong and compelling as you can; most
people will judge the venture on it. Creating a truly compelling plan takes time and
many, many revisions. Before the plan is declared final, it should in fact pass
several checks by outsiders. In many cases, investors will also ask you to revise
your plan after the final version!

Common Pitfalls
Venture capitalists (VCs) receive hundreds of plans each week, and each week
hundreds of plans are rejected. In addition, there are thousands of business plans
spread all over the world, collecting dust in drawers instead of being lived and
implemented. Some of the most common reasons that business plans fail are
described in Table.

New Venture Team


Many factors need to come together to start and grow a successful new venture.
However, first comes a great idea and directly after that the people who can realize
it. It is generally believed that startups thrive and prosper when standing on the
shoulders of more than one person especially science-based and high-tech
startups. A single entrepreneur typically can make a living out of the business, but

startups that are led by teams create substantial value. The advantage of having a
team is mostly in the greater network, the more diverse knowledge and skills, and
the possibility to divide and specialize tasks, which eventually enables faster
growth. However, forming a successful team is sometimes compared with the
process of courtship and marriage. And like some marriages, there are divorces. So
choose your partners wisely. This handful of individuals is likely to stick around for a
while and will have to fight some battles. The way team members find one another
varies significantly, and it is hard to say which way if any is best. Some teams
form by accidents of geography, others through common interest, still others by
working together or simply through past friendships. However, only two distinct
patterns can be identified for team formation as such: Either there is an individual
entrepreneur who will be joined over the first few years by three or four partners, or
the team was already formed at the outset. Both can be successful.

Beyond the Founders


However, apart from the founder or founders, the team is much bigger a fact that
is typically overlooked. Many more individuals, such as key employees, financiers,
and outside professionals, help build the company, and they should be chosen with
almost as much care as the founder team.

Team Quality

There is a strong connection between the growth potential of a new venture


and the quality of its management team.
The existence of a quality management team is one of the major differences
between a firm that provides its found with just a job and the ability to
employ hundreds in a high potential venture.
The most successful entrepreneurs anchor their vision of the future in certain
entrepreneurial philosophies and attitudes (attitudes about what a team is,
what its mission is, and how it will be rewarded).

The soul of this vision is based on what the founder(s) is trying to accomplish
and the unwritten ground rules that become the character and purpose
guiding how the team will work together.

The Role of the Board


First, the board can provide some legitimacy for an otherwise unknown venture. But
more important is the fact that well-chosen and well-matched board members can
provide invaluable advice. They can and should challenge the assumptions,
strategies, and actions of the entrepreneurial team. For this reason, board members
should come with seasoned industry and business experience.

Market Analysis and Sizing


Following the evaluation of the opportunity, this part of the business plan should be
quite quick to do. But a business plan does need to give credible statements on the
ventures market and size. A market consists of a group of current and/or potential
customers with the willingness and ability to buy products goods or services to
satisfy a particular class of wants or needs. These potential customers may be
consistent in their geographical location, purchasing power, or buying attitude. An
industry, by contrast, consists of sellers, i.e., you and your competitors.
Analyzing a market can and should be done on two different levels: The
macro and the microenvironment.
The macro level analysis typically asks questions about things such as the number
of customers, aggregate money spent, and number of units and usage occasions.
Answers to these questions are often to be found in secondary data sources such as
trade publications, the business press, and so on.
The micro level analysis is somewhat more intricate. It is about segmenting the
market and putting a name to potential customers. At the end of the day, a
successful business needs to find customers who are willing to pay for that
businesss product or service. Successfully entering and competing in a market is
frequently accomplished by solving a customer need, which does not necessarily
mean selling a particular feature of a technology. It is more about delivering
benefits. Convincing customers that you have the best solution to their problems,
or even teaching them that they have a need you can fulfill, is actually the
challenging task.
Typical questions to answer in the microlevel analysis are:

Is there a target market segment where we might enter the market in which
we offer customers clear and compelling benefits at a price they are willing to
pay?
Are these benefits, in customers minds, different from and superior in some
way better, faster, or cheaper to what other solutions currently offer?
Differentiation is crucial, since the vast majority of me-too products fail.
How large is this segment, and how fast is it growing?
Is it likely that our entry into this segment will provide entry to other
segments we may wish to target in the future?

Answers to these questions are often found in a combination of primary data,


mainly gleaned from talking to prospective customers, and secondary data
collected from the Internet or in libraries or from other sources, to determine
segment size and growth rate, and thus supporting the entrepreneurs learning
about customer needs.

Industry and Competitor Analysis


No serious investor will believe a startup that claims there is no competition. If there
really were no competition, there would be no market. Furthermore, even if it were
possible that there was no competition, as soon as the startup began making
money, many players would enter the market seeking to gain a share of the trail
that the entrepreneur had blazed. Therefore, any serious business plan needs to
contain a careful analysis of the industry, its outlook, and the competitive forces
inside. At a bare minimum, the plan should lay out what percentage of the market
the venture could realistically achieve, both at the beginning and five years on once
the big players and other startups enter the fray.

Competitive Advantage
So it all comes back to whether or not you have a sustainable competitive
advantage. A competitive advantage is essentially the ability to prevent others from
exploiting the same opportunity, which should usually grant you the potential for
higher returns than normal.
The critical question is how this advantage can be protected from
competitors and whether it can be maintained over a long time. Two vital
factors are:

The presence of proprietary elements, i.e., patents, trade secrets, etc.


(intellectual property), that can possibly prevent others from copying your
business.
The presence of an economically viable business model, i.e., a model that
generates sufficient revenue and gross margin to cover the cost structure of
the
business.

Intellectual Property
Intellectual property (IP) is one of the most important and, at the same time, one of
the most delicate assets to handle of the new technology-based venture. IP can be
any product of the human intellect that has value in the marketplace, i.e., products,
technologies, methods, processes, new services, and new designs. Recognizing the
value of the knowledge contained in these assets and identifying and legally
protecting the parts that are the original property of the entrepreneur can become
the heart of any commercialization strategy. Four main instruments of IP protection
exist: patents, copyrights, trademarks, and trade secrets.

Patents
Patents are official titles to exclude others from making, selling, or using an
invention for a limited time. These rights are defendable before a court. The process
of obtaining a patent is usually lengthy and expensive.

Trademarks
Words, names, or symbols that identify a company, product, or service and
distinguish it from others are known as trademarks. They help companies to be
uniquely recognized by their customers. They need to be officially registered and
are renewable every ten years, as long as they remain in use. Obtaining a
trademark is typically much faster and easier than obtaining a patent.

Copyrights
Tangible outputs of a person or company, such as a book, article, software, and the
like, are protected by copyright. It grants official ownership and the right of
commercialization. Officially, copyright is obtained by the creation of a tangible
work. It is not necessary to indicate that something is copyright protected. However,
attaching a copyright note (usually in the form [first year of publication] [author
or copyright owner]) helps make it more official and explicit.

TradeSecrets
Going beyond what is written in the technical description of a patent, trade secrets
include business or technical knowledge that is kept secret for the purpose of
gaining an advantage in business over a competitor. They are, for example,
customer lists, sources of supply, faster delivery, or lower prices. The protection is
established by the nature of the secret and the effort to keep it secret .

Licensing
All IP that is protected can essentially be licensed to another company in exchange
for
money or access to its IP and other resources. Simply speaking, a license is a
contract
by which one party commits to do or pay something in return for the other partys
doing or paying something. Any contingency that can be written into a contract can
be written into a licensing agreement. Usually the licensee, who receives a right,
pays an initial payment and ongoing royalties for permission to use the IP.

The Business Model


A business model essentially defines how a firm competes in the marketplace and
how it earns profits from this activity. This includes, in particular, how the firm
structures its relationships with customers and suppliers. All else being equal, the
profit that can be made from a technology depends on choosing the right business
model. The tradeoff is to find a balance between quick market access and, at
the same time, maximizing the returns from the investment made. It also relates to
decisions on whether to make or buy, whether to sell or license products or
components, and whether to sell a product or a service or a combination of both.

The major questions that help determine the business model are
summarized:

The Marketing Plan


There are two distinct ways in which products emerge either as a result of a
research-and-development project (technology push) or by first listening to a
customer need and developing a product accordingly (market pull). Most products in
the real world are the outcome of a mix of both models.

Challenges for Marketing in New Ventures:

Unique Selling Position (USP)


One of the first marketing tasks, typically going together with the market and
industry analysis, is to define a unique selling position (USP). This is the perceived
value of the product or service compared to competitors offerings. The main
question to answer is why the customer should buy this particular product and what
makes it so unique. A learning point for many technology-based entrepreneurs is
that the USP is essentially about selling benefits rather than features.
Mostly, it is not the technical detail that leads to the buying decision but the ease
and comprehensiveness with which a customer need is solved.

MarketingMix(4Ps)

Once the more strategic marketing plans have been shaped, it is time to define how
you actually wish to reach your target customers on the operational level. Here,
decisions need to be made on the classic four Ps: product, price, place, and
promotion.
Critical Decisions for the Marketing Mix:

Financing the Venture


Mostly, a business plan serves to raise money. To succeed in this, it will have to lay
out the investment needs and expected returns. The projections on investments and
returns will usually cover three to five years. It will contain the projected income
statement, a pro forma cash flow analysis (often monthly for the first year and
quarterly for the following years), pro forma balance sheets, breakeven analysis,
and cost controls.

Talking About Risk


Because of the many assumptions about an unknown future, most people will
readily agree that there is tremendous risk in any entrepreneurial venture. A serious
business plan needs to account for this. It needs to include statements on the risks
associated with the business and on the actions the entrepreneur envisions taking if
issues occur. Risks are inherent in all parts of the business: in people, in the
assumptions about industry dynamics, in the market, and, of course, in financial
planning.

Entrepreneurship
The capacity and willingness to develop, organize and manage a business venture
along with any of its risks in order to make a profit. The most obvious example of
entrepreneurship is the starting of new businesses.
In economics, entrepreneurship combined with land, labor, natural resources and
capital can produce profit. Entrepreneurial spirit is characterized by innovation and
risk-taking, and is an essential part of a nation's ability to succeed in an ever
changing and increasingly competitive global marketplace.

Characteristics of successful Entrepreneurs


Ability to plan: Entrepreneurs must be able to develop business plans to meet
goals in a variety of areas, including finance, marketing, production, sales and
personnel.

Communication skills: Entrepreneurs should be able to explain, discuss, sell


and market their goods or services.

Marketing skills: Good marketing skills, which result in people wanting to buy
goods or services, are critical to entrepreneurial success.

Interpersonal skills: The ability to establish and maintain positive relationships


with customers and clients, employees, financial lenders, investors, lawyers and
accountants, among others, is crucial to the success of the entrepreneur's business
venture.

Basic management skills: Even if entrepreneurs hire others to deal with the
day-to-day tasks of the business, entrepreneurs need to know whether their
company has the correct resources.

Leadership skills: The ability to develop a vision for the company and to inspire
employees to pursue it is imperative for success.

Many of history's top business leaders earned their success thorough


entrepreneurship, including Henry Ford, Bill Gates, Oprah Winfrey, Donald Trump,
Martha Stewart and Russell Simmons are among today's most successful
entrepreneurs.
Research shows that Americans are increasingly choosing entrepreneurship as the
career of choice. A study by Intelligent Office revealed that nearly 65 percent of

workers would rather be an entrepreneur or independent employee than work in an


office.

Standard of Firm
The value of the business consists of not just the Price (i.e., the amount to be paid
for the business) but also the associated Terms and the Deal Structure. Different
values for a business can exist because of different operating assumptions, deal
structures, payment terms, etc., not due to use of different valuation methods.

A few of the value drivers are:

Future Performance
Financial Leverage
Financial Return Expectation
Cash Flow, Not Profits
Deal Structure
Asset Type
Exit Strategy

Strategic Planning
Process
Its hard to accomplish anything without a plan. Whether youre coaching a football
team, cooking Thanksgiving dinner, or running a small business, you need a
strategic plan.
A strategic plan looks at all the things your small business could do and narrows it
down to the things it is actually good at doing. A strategic plan also helps business
leaders determine where to spend time, human capital, and money.
Developing a strategic plan might seem like an overwhelming process, but if you
break it down, its easy to tackle.

Heres our five-step approach:

Determine where you are. This is harder than is looks. Some people see
themselves how they WANT to see themselves, not how they actually appear to
others. Many small businesses get snared in this same trap.
For an accurate picture of where your business is, conduct external and internal
audits to get a clear understanding of the marketplace, the competitive
environment, and your organizations competencies (your realnot perceived
competencies).

Identify whats important. Focus on where you want to take your


organization over time. This sets the direction of the enterprise over the long
term and clearly defines the mission (markets, customers, products, etc.) and
vision (conceptualization of what your organizations future should or could be).
From this analysis, you can determine the priority issuesthose issues so
significant to the overall well-being of the enterprise that they require the full
and immediate attention of the entire management team. The strategic plan
should focus on these issues.

Define what you must achieve. Define the expected objectives that clearly
state what your organization must achieve to address the priority issues.

Determine who is accountable. This is how youre going to get to where you
want to go. The strategies, action plans, and budgets are all steps in the process
that effectively communicates how you will allocate time, human capital, and
money to address the priority issues and achieve the defined objectives.

Review. Review. Review. Its not over. Its never over. To ensure the plan
performs as designed, you must hold regularly scheduled formal reviews of the
process and refine as necessary. We suggest at least once a quarter.

A strategic plan is a wonderful thing. It can help you take your small business to
places you never thought possible. If you havent already done so, take the time
to lay out a strategic plan now. It will help keep your small business on track and
you focused on the future.

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