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Strategy and the Strategy and the EntrepreneurEntrepreneur
Elements of this Presentation are Courtesy of Dr. Mohan Sawhney @ Kellogg School of Management2
Key Ingredients for SuccessKey Ingredients for Success
Big
Idea
Competent
TeamSufficient
Money
Good
Plan
RelentlessRelentlessExecutionExecution
And a generous helping of luck…And a generous helping of luck…
Elements of this Presentation are Courtesy of Dr. Mohan Sawhney @ Kellogg School of Management3
The Idea: 7 Tests for A WinnerThe Idea: 7 Tests for A Winner
• Solve a real problem• Solve a focused problem• Solve a big problem• Solve a hard problem• Solve an obvious problem• Solve a complete problem• Solve a worsening problem
Elements of this Presentation are Courtesy of Dr. Mohan Sawhney @ Kellogg School of Management4
The Idea: Create a Value PropositionThe Idea: Create a Value Proposition
A concise statement of the compelling promise that your product or company makes to a set of target customers that is differentiated from available alternatives, and supported by reasons to believe in the promise.
Elements of this Presentation are Courtesy of Dr. Mohan Sawhney @ Kellogg School of Management5
The Idea: Assessing the BalanceThe Idea: Assessing the Balance
Promise Differentiation
Support
Price
Target AudienceTarget Audience
What’s in it for me?Why is yours better?
Why should Ibelieve you?
Is this for me?
What are my costsof making it useful?
Effortrequired
Is it worth it?
Risk
What mightGo wrong?
Elements of this Presentation are Courtesy of Dr. Mohan Sawhney @ Kellogg School of Management6
The Idea: Key Questions to AskThe Idea: Key Questions to Ask
• Who are the audiences you are addressing with your idea?
• What pain points you are addressing for these audiences?
• What evidence do you have that these pain points are real?
• What are the current solution approaches?
• What’s lacking in these approaches?
• How is your solution approach better?
• How big is this difference and what is it worth to customers?
• What’s in it for other stakeholders besides end-customers?
• Why hasn’t someone else thought of your idea yet?
• Are you sure nobody has thought of your idea yet?
• What is proprietary about your idea?
• What makes your team uniquely qualified to implement your idea?
Elements of this Presentation are Courtesy of Dr. Mohan Sawhney @ Kellogg School of Management7
The Team: A Good Foundation is KeyThe Team: A Good Foundation is Key
BUILDSTUFF
Engineering/Technology
SELLSTUFF
Marketing/Sales
RUNTHE SHOW
Finance/Administration
RAISE MONEY,HIRE TEAM,
PROVIDE DIRECTION(CEO)
The 7 Deadly Sins:Hiring based on convenienceHiring without due diligenceHiring big-company stars Hiring the wrong attitudeHiring poor listenersHiring cheap onshore executivesHiring VP of Sales with no product
Elements of this Presentation are Courtesy of Dr. Mohan Sawhney @ Kellogg School of Management8
The Team: Questions Investors AskThe Team: Questions Investors Ask
• Is the team leader strong and passionate?
• Will leader and team attract “A” players?
• Is the team appropriate for the stage of the company?
• Has the team worked together before?
• What are the team’s values and what type of culture will they create?
• Is there a strong technical leader?
• Is there a strong marketing leader?
• Does the team have deep domain or technical expertise?
• Does the team listen and take criticism in a positive way?
• Does team have a good blend of “thinkers” and “doers”?
• If current plan doesn’t work out, will team adapt?
• Will the founders give up control if that is what the venture demands?
Elements of this Presentation are Courtesy of Dr. Mohan Sawhney @ Kellogg School of Management9
The Plan: Why One is NeededThe Plan: Why One is Needed
• You need it as a roadmap• You need it to clarify priorities • You need it to attract funding • It is used as a guide when speed
bumps happen• It is your company’s & your personal
scorecard
Elements of this Presentation are Courtesy of Dr. Mohan Sawhney @ Kellogg School of Management10
The Plan: Some TruthsThe Plan: Some Truths
• The planning process is more important than the plan
• The assumptions are more important than the forecasts
• Things will never turn out as planned• It should be short enough to be
readable, long enough to be rigorous
Elements of this Presentation are Courtesy of Dr. Mohan Sawhney @ Kellogg School of Management11
The Plan: Tips for a Good One The Plan: Tips for a Good One
• Be brief and direct; get to the bottom line quickly
• Identify what the business is immediately
• Define the customers quickly and the customer problem clearly
• Define what’s compelling and unique
• Describe how you will make money
• Provide a phased snapshot of your company 12, 24 and 36 months out
• Describe how you propose to take your product to market
• Make bottom-up as well as top-down projections
• Know what 4 to 5 assumptions your plan pivots on
• Discuss the key risk factors
• State how much money you will need and how you will use it
• State your possible exit strategies
Elements of this Presentation are Courtesy of Dr. Mohan Sawhney @ Kellogg School of Management12
The Money: A Typical SequenceThe Money: A Typical Sequence
• F&F (Friends and Family)• Angel Investors• Venture Investors (Series A and
onwards)• Strategic Investors• Late-Stage and Mezzanine Funds• Public Markets
Elements of this Presentation are Courtesy of Dr. Mohan Sawhney @ Kellogg School of Management13
The Money: Important ConsiderationsThe Money: Important Considerations
• Put some of your skin in the game• Size of the pie wins every time over share of the pie• Getting a high valuation early can be fatal• Don’t value the company in the angel round• Make advisors into angel investors and vice versa• More startups die of indigestion than of starvation• Venture capital is like synthetic fertilizer – use sparingly and with
caution• Raise money when you can, not when you need it• It will take twice as long and thrice as much work as you think to
raise money
Elements of this Presentation are Courtesy of Dr. Mohan Sawhney @ Kellogg School of Management14
Final Thoughts….Final Thoughts….
• Growth vs. Profit– Growth today is worth many times the profits tomorrow
• Speed vs. Deliberation– Know your speed limit, and don’t let VCs make you exceed it
• Opportunism vs. Strategy– Start out being opportunistic, but quickly become strategic
• Service vs. Product– Servicize to learn, then productize to earn
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