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1 E145/STS173 E145/STS173 Session 2 Session 2 Silicon Valley and Entrepreneurship Silicon Valley and Entrepreneurship Professor Randy Komisar Stanford University Copyright © 2006 by the Board of Trustees of the Leland Stanford Junior University and Stanford Technology Ventures Program (STVP). This document may be reproduced for educational purposes only.

E145/STS173 Session 2 Silicon Valley and Entrepreneurship...A race against time to create value and reduce risk Framework #3: Dynamics of the Start-Up Game (1) Founding : An entrepreneur

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Page 1: E145/STS173 Session 2 Silicon Valley and Entrepreneurship...A race against time to create value and reduce risk Framework #3: Dynamics of the Start-Up Game (1) Founding : An entrepreneur

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E145/STS173E145/STS173

Session 2Session 2

Silicon Valley and EntrepreneurshipSilicon Valley and Entrepreneurship

Professor Randy KomisarStanford University

Copyright © 2006 by the Board of Trustees of the Leland Stanford Junior Universityand Stanford Technology Ventures Program (STVP). This document may be

reproduced for educational purposes only.

Page 2: E145/STS173 Session 2 Silicon Valley and Entrepreneurship...A race against time to create value and reduce risk Framework #3: Dynamics of the Start-Up Game (1) Founding : An entrepreneur

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AgendaAgenda

1. Stanford’s Office of TechnologyLicensing - Linda Chao

2. Admit and Waiting List - Eric Carr

3. Discussion of Stanford and SiliconValley - Randy Komisar

4. Key High-Technology EntrepreneurshipFrameworks - Randy Komisar

5. Opportunity Analysis Project and StudyTeam Formation - Eric Carr

Page 3: E145/STS173 Session 2 Silicon Valley and Entrepreneurship...A race against time to create value and reduce risk Framework #3: Dynamics of the Start-Up Game (1) Founding : An entrepreneur

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First, A Look at Stanford UniversityFirst, A Look at Stanford University

Page 4: E145/STS173 Session 2 Silicon Valley and Entrepreneurship...A race against time to create value and reduce risk Framework #3: Dynamics of the Start-Up Game (1) Founding : An entrepreneur

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Early Years: Fred Early Years: Fred Terman Terman and HPand HP

! Professor Terman brought Hewlett

and Packard together at Stanford

! In 1939, the two decided to “make

a run for it ourselves” and founded

HP at a now-famous garage in

downtown Palo Alto

Source: John Hennessy

Page 5: E145/STS173 Session 2 Silicon Valley and Entrepreneurship...A race against time to create value and reduce risk Framework #3: Dynamics of the Start-Up Game (1) Founding : An entrepreneur

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Another Golden Age: Early 1980sAnother Golden Age: Early 1980s

! Many new technologies as radical innovations

! Emergence of John Hennessy as another Terman

! Very productive era ...

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1990s: The Internet1990s: The Internet

!Two EE students in a trailer

!Use of Yahoo on and off-campus explodes

!Form independentcompany

Source: John Hennessy

Page 7: E145/STS173 Session 2 Silicon Valley and Entrepreneurship...A race against time to create value and reduce risk Framework #3: Dynamics of the Start-Up Game (1) Founding : An entrepreneur

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2000s2000s

!Two students dissatisfied with Netsearch

!They work furiously in their spare timeto develop a better way

!They form a company to exploit theopportunity others had left behind

Page 8: E145/STS173 Session 2 Silicon Valley and Entrepreneurship...A race against time to create value and reduce risk Framework #3: Dynamics of the Start-Up Game (1) Founding : An entrepreneur

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StanfordStanford’’s Role in Silicon Valleys Role in Silicon Valley

! Interaction with industry (via legacy just discussed)

!Research funding and creativity

!Silicon Valley as a nearby planting ground for ideas

!Role of students as inventors, as disseminators, and

as part of the workforce

!Encouraging entrepreneurship …

Page 9: E145/STS173 Session 2 Silicon Valley and Entrepreneurship...A race against time to create value and reduce risk Framework #3: Dynamics of the Start-Up Game (1) Founding : An entrepreneur

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More Success FactorsMore Success Factors

! Talent pool and social networks

" Loyalty to the technology with a unique openness

"Highly skilled and motivated

"Diverse (highly multicultural)

! Many early adopters of new technology to quickly learn from

! Services infrastructure with many suppliers for outsourcing

! Venture capital for both financing and team building

! Entrepreneurial spirit

" Role models that demonstrate both confidence and paranoia

"OK to fail, learn from it, and then try again

" Flat organizational structures

"OK to talk/partner across company boundaries about common

issues

Page 10: E145/STS173 Session 2 Silicon Valley and Entrepreneurship...A race against time to create value and reduce risk Framework #3: Dynamics of the Start-Up Game (1) Founding : An entrepreneur

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Questions for DiscussionQuestions for Discussion

1 . What could go right (and wrong) in SiliconValley in the coming 10 years?

2 . Where do you plan to live to start your careernext year and why?

References for Stanford and Silicon Valley Content:President John Hennessy of Stanford University:

James Gibbons of Stanford University; John Doerr of Kleiner Perkins;John Chambers of Cisco; Annalee Saxenian and Homa Bahrami of UC Berkeley

Page 11: E145/STS173 Session 2 Silicon Valley and Entrepreneurship...A race against time to create value and reduce risk Framework #3: Dynamics of the Start-Up Game (1) Founding : An entrepreneur

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© 2003 Mark P. Rice, Babson

Page 12: E145/STS173 Session 2 Silicon Valley and Entrepreneurship...A race against time to create value and reduce risk Framework #3: Dynamics of the Start-Up Game (1) Founding : An entrepreneur

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Key High-Technology EntrepreneurshipKey High-Technology Entrepreneurship

Framework #1: Framework #1: Dorf Dorf and Byersand Byers

Vision

Strategy

Execution

Page 13: E145/STS173 Session 2 Silicon Valley and Entrepreneurship...A race against time to create value and reduce risk Framework #3: Dynamics of the Start-Up Game (1) Founding : An entrepreneur

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Vision:

Strategy:

Execution:

Reference: Dorf and Byers (Figure 8.4)

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Fundamental Questions: VisionFundamental Questions: Vision

What do the founders wish to achieve with the business? What is our shared vision and goals?Where do we want to go and what business are we in?

Example: what business are they really in?•Yahoo … Internet Directory?•Palm … Organizers?•Google … Search?

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Do we have the right strategy?Who is going to buy?What are we selling?Why are we better?

Fundamental Questions: StrategyFundamental Questions: Strategy

Reference: Steven Brandt

Fundamental Questions: ExecutionFundamental Questions: Execution

Can we do it?What resources are needed?What is the blueprint for growth?Can we adapt?

Page 16: E145/STS173 Session 2 Silicon Valley and Entrepreneurship...A race against time to create value and reduce risk Framework #3: Dynamics of the Start-Up Game (1) Founding : An entrepreneur

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Reference: Sahlman

Key High-Technology EntrepreneurshipKey High-Technology Entrepreneurship

Framework #2: Framework #2: SahlmanSahlman’’s s Concept of FitConcept of Fit

Page 17: E145/STS173 Session 2 Silicon Valley and Entrepreneurship...A race against time to create value and reduce risk Framework #3: Dynamics of the Start-Up Game (1) Founding : An entrepreneur

A race againsttime to create

value andreduce risk

Framework #3:Framework #3:

Dynamics of the Start-Up GameDynamics of the Start-Up Game(1) Founding:

An entrepreneur begins with a vision and shares of stock in the new venture.

Entrepreneur trades stock forideas, money, and people

(2) Seed Stage:•Venture capitalists providemoney in return for stock

•Employees join via friends &associates in return for cashsalary and stock options

•Ideas become intellectualproperty which represents theinitial value in the company

Further growth is delayeduntil milestones arereached and risk offailure is reduced

(3) Growth Stage:More money, ideas, and people are

obtained, but for much less stock thanin the earlier stage due to lower risk

Company balances earningcash, taking investment, andspending cash to create value

(4) Exit Stage:•IPO or M&A

•Entrepreneur, investors, andemployees can cash in stockfor money

•A viable company has beencreated or expanded

•Each entrepreneur continuesto build the company, retires,or starts the game again

Value has beensuccessfully created.

Reference: Start-Up by Jerry Kaplan

Page 18: E145/STS173 Session 2 Silicon Valley and Entrepreneurship...A race against time to create value and reduce risk Framework #3: Dynamics of the Start-Up Game (1) Founding : An entrepreneur

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1 . Big Market?

2 . Winning Strategy?

3 . Excellent Team?

Framework #4:Framework #4:

KomisarKomisar’’s s ““3 Questions Every3 Questions Every

Venture Capitalist Wants to KnowVenture Capitalist Wants to Know””

Reference: Randy Komisar

Page 19: E145/STS173 Session 2 Silicon Valley and Entrepreneurship...A race against time to create value and reduce risk Framework #3: Dynamics of the Start-Up Game (1) Founding : An entrepreneur

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Opportunity Analysis ProjectOpportunity Analysis Project

OverviewOverview

(Eric Carr)(Eric Carr)

Page 20: E145/STS173 Session 2 Silicon Valley and Entrepreneurship...A race against time to create value and reduce risk Framework #3: Dynamics of the Start-Up Game (1) Founding : An entrepreneur

E145/STS173

2005

Team

Formation