46
ORGL 2900 ENTREPRENEURSHIP ENTREPRENEURSHIP

Entrepreneurship Chapter 7 Ethan Chazin

Embed Size (px)

DESCRIPTION

Great tips, resources, best practices and strategies for entrepreneurs, start-ups, professionals and small business owners.to plan launch and grow successful businesses.

Citation preview

Page 1: Entrepreneurship Chapter 7 Ethan Chazin

ORGL 2900ENTREPRENEURSHIPENTREPRENEURSHIP

Page 2: Entrepreneurship Chapter 7 Ethan Chazin

Chapter 7

Small Business Small Business StrategiesStrategies::

Imitation with an Imitation with an Innovative twistInnovative twist

Page 3: Entrepreneurship Chapter 7 Ethan Chazin

This Week’s KEY This Week’s KEY ResourcesResources

Page 5: Entrepreneurship Chapter 7 Ethan Chazin

Resources

Page 6: Entrepreneurship Chapter 7 Ethan Chazin

Developing Your Developing Your StrategyStrategy

Page 7: Entrepreneurship Chapter 7 Ethan Chazin

• Defines how your business operates:– How you develop new offerings– How you “Go To” market– How to identify ideal prospects– How to manage existing accounts– How to engage partners, vendors, investors, the

media, suppliers– How to recruit, retain and develop talented people– How to manage your finances– How to manage inventory

Your Strategy

Page 8: Entrepreneurship Chapter 7 Ethan Chazin

• Chances are you are pursuing a business model that ALREADY EXISTS

• Copy others’ successes, avoid their failures• Developing a strategy requires four key

decisions you make about your business:– Pre-strategy– Benefits– Strategy– Competitive Analysis

Your Strategy

Page 9: Entrepreneurship Chapter 7 Ethan Chazin

Step 1Step 1: Your: Your

Pre-strategyPre-strategy

Page 10: Entrepreneurship Chapter 7 Ethan Chazin

• Choose your product / service• Identify the industries you will pursue• Find all relevant industry trade associations• SIC versus NAICS Codes?

Pre-Strategy

Page 12: Entrepreneurship Chapter 7 Ethan Chazin

My Industries

Page 13: Entrepreneurship Chapter 7 Ethan Chazin

• A “market” is a population of customers for your product / service:– Understand the scale and scope

•Scale: Mass versus Niche•Scope: Local to global

Selecting Your Markets

Page 14: Entrepreneurship Chapter 7 Ethan Chazin

To Imitate, Or To Imitate, Or Innovate???Innovate???

Page 15: Entrepreneurship Chapter 7 Ethan Chazin

66% 66% choose to IMITATE

WHY?WHY?

Innovate Approach

Page 17: Entrepreneurship Chapter 7 Ethan Chazin

• Incremental innovationIncremental innovation: Imitation plus one or two ways in which you do things completely different

• Pure InnovationPure Innovation: Results in a new product or service:– Occurs VERY rarely– Enables you to make your business fit your

values, beliefs, strengths, ideas, preferences

Imitate Approach

Page 18: Entrepreneurship Chapter 7 Ethan Chazin
Page 19: Entrepreneurship Chapter 7 Ethan Chazin

• BY imitating, customers already understand/know about your offerings.

• Most use imitation plus/minus one degree of similarity (akin to cloning, manifests in franchising.)

• Parallel competition: Copying with minor adjustments.

• Innovate approach enables you to make your business fit your values, beliefs, strengths, ideas, preferences.

Innovate Approach

Page 20: Entrepreneurship Chapter 7 Ethan Chazin

INNOVATE Path

Page 21: Entrepreneurship Chapter 7 Ethan Chazin

INNOVATE Path

Page 22: Entrepreneurship Chapter 7 Ethan Chazin

INNOVATE Path

Page 23: Entrepreneurship Chapter 7 Ethan Chazin

ConductingConducting

Industry AnalysisIndustry Analysis

Page 24: Entrepreneurship Chapter 7 Ethan Chazin

• Obtain industry codes• Size the industry• Profitability (www.bizstats.com)• How profits are made• Competitors• Analysis: consolidate data into summary

report format• Source your references

Industry Analysis

Page 25: Entrepreneurship Chapter 7 Ethan Chazin

ResourcesResources

Page 26: Entrepreneurship Chapter 7 Ethan Chazin

Assn. Directories

Page 27: Entrepreneurship Chapter 7 Ethan Chazin

Resources

Page 28: Entrepreneurship Chapter 7 Ethan Chazin

Resources

Page 29: Entrepreneurship Chapter 7 Ethan Chazin

Resources

Page 30: Entrepreneurship Chapter 7 Ethan Chazin

Resources

Page 31: Entrepreneurship Chapter 7 Ethan Chazin

Resources

Page 32: Entrepreneurship Chapter 7 Ethan Chazin

Resources

Page 33: Entrepreneurship Chapter 7 Ethan Chazin

Step 2Step 2: Benefits: Benefits

Page 34: Entrepreneurship Chapter 7 Ethan Chazin

• What benefits benefits do you plan on offering your customers?

• ValueValue benefits: Quality, style, service, technology, personalization.

• CostCost benefits: lower cost, volume (scale) savings, learning (greater efficiency) scope (ex. Multifunction printer.)

• OrganizationalOrganizational: you automate processes or mastered the production of a product or service, so you can offer it more cheaply than anybody else.

Benefits

Page 35: Entrepreneurship Chapter 7 Ethan Chazin

S.W.O.T Analysis

Strengths

ThreatsOppor-tunities

Weaknesses

Page 36: Entrepreneurship Chapter 7 Ethan Chazin

SWOT Analysis

Page 37: Entrepreneurship Chapter 7 Ethan Chazin

• Information provided can be useful• Price sensitivity, product/service features

and benefits, feelings about the product, the company, competitors

• People say one thing in a closed room, act differently when purchase is involved

• Find a representative sample that fits ideal customer profile or existing clients if possible

Brainstorming

Page 38: Entrepreneurship Chapter 7 Ethan Chazin

Step 3Step 3: Strategy : Strategy SelectionSelection

Page 39: Entrepreneurship Chapter 7 Ethan Chazin

• There Are THREE Primary Strategies – DifferentiationDifferentiation: Show how you offer a

combination of VALUE benefits unlike anyone else to pursue MASS markets

– CostCost: Tell how do you offer a combination of COST benefits

– FocusFocus: Limit your efforts to a small portion of the overall market, called a segment or niche

Strategy Selection

Page 40: Entrepreneurship Chapter 7 Ethan Chazin

Step 4Step 4: Competitive : Competitive AdvantageAdvantage

Page 41: Entrepreneurship Chapter 7 Ethan Chazin

• Implement customer benefits• Know EXACTLY what your competitors are

doing• Customer service – it’s lip service or it’s a

true advantage– Your clients will tell you what you’re doing

wrong & right– Listen to customers…EXCEPT WHEN YOU

DON’T!• Needs to be sustained over time• Know your markets inside & out

Competitive Advantage

Page 42: Entrepreneurship Chapter 7 Ethan Chazin

• Infuse the benefits your customers are looking for into every area of your business.

• Michael Porter popularized VCA, looking at the processes and activities a small business conducts to design, produce, market, deliver and support its products and services with an with an emphasis on four key areasemphasis on four key areas:– Infrastructure: Location, physical assets– HR– Technology– Procurement

Value Chain Analysis

Page 43: Entrepreneurship Chapter 7 Ethan Chazin

• Existing Competitors• Potential Entrants• Substitutes• Suppliers• Buyers/Customers

Porter’s Five Competitors

Page 44: Entrepreneurship Chapter 7 Ethan Chazin

• Leverages Jay Barney’s Jay Barney’s model for competitive advantage:

–Value

–Rareness

–Imitability

–Organization

• Used to test whether a resource will give your firm competitive advantage

• How are you leveraging all your resources

VRIO Analysis

Page 45: Entrepreneurship Chapter 7 Ethan Chazin

VRIO Analysis

Page 46: Entrepreneurship Chapter 7 Ethan Chazin

• Match your company’s strategy to the lifecycle of the industry:– Introduction– Early Adopters– Growth – Maturity– Decline – Laggards

Lifecycle Analysis