Entrepreneurial Ventures-How do you do them-Gordon Bell29 .ppt
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1、Entrepreneurial Ventures: How do you do them? Gordon Bell 29 February 2000,High Tech Ventures: A Guide to Entrepreneurial Success C G Bell & J McNamara, Addison Wesley, 1991 http:/ Bell-Mason Diagnostic,A system based on a company development model for measuring risk, predicting the course, tracking
2、 the progress, and improving high tech, high growth, early stage ventures aka startupshttp:/ Bell-Mason Diagnostic Founding Premise,“You dont have to understand the technology to ask the right business questions“ The BMD provides the critical technology, product, marketing, and people expertise,The
3、Bell-Mason Diagnostic Background,A rule-based system to assess new ventures Developed by Gordon Bell, and Heidi Mason, with Coopers & Lybrand over a 5 year period Based on experience with 100s of ventures Shows “health & risk“ of a new venture by: asking a series of questions in 12 categories, at ea
4、ch stage of 4 stages of growth Licensed to Coopers & Lybrand (1990) for startups Licensed to Digital (1991) for corporate ventures Licensed to Australian Ventures (1997) Licensed to Diamond Technology Partners (1999) for IntraVentures,Using the Bell-Mason Diagnostic a versatile tool to answer questi
5、ons about:,Readiness - Are we (i.e. the venture) ready to start up? Are we ready to go to the next stage? Initial Screening - Should we look closer at investing? Due Diligence - Should we invest now? Ongoing tracking & planning - Is the venture on track? External review - What is the health of the v
6、enture?,The Bell-Mason Diagnostic,Space: Twelve standard dimensions characterize a venture (a chapter of High Tech Ventures) Time: Four, well-defined stages of company development with 7 sub-stages of product and market development Quantification: Clear, yes/no questions (i.e. rules) incapsulate kno
7、wledge for evaluating a company Visualization: a relational graph shows company position,12 Dimensions of Analysis,Four Stages of Growth,Time: Four Stages of Growth,IPO,Overview,Outcomes of stage-to-stage transition,Move to the next stage Loop within a stage by receiving more funds License technolog
8、y or product for funds to complete the stage Return to an earlier stag, finish requirements (e.g. redesign product or address a different market) Acquisition by or merger with a stronger company Cease operations,Stage,Stages and sub-stages of a Venture,Concept I 0-? Months II Seed (Plan the Company)
9、 3 - (6) -12 III Product Development 6- (23) - 37 Hire and Plan, IIIa 0 - (3) - 6 Design and Build, IIIb 4 - (14) - 24 Alpha (internal) Test, IIIc 1 - (3) - 5 Beta (external) Test, IIId 1 - (3)- 5 IV Market Development 2 - (3) - 4 yearsCalibrate Market, IVa 3 - (6) - 9 Market Expansion, IVb (mkt. be
10、ta) 6 - (9) - 12 Steady-State Operation, IVc 12 - 18 Steady-state Company .,BMD Checklist Questions: Scoring the “Ideal“,Heuristic - It has been determined (and verified by numerous experiments in software engineering) that by using a method of inspection whereby one or more persons “walk through“ a
11、nother persons programs, fewer errors occur in the resulting product. Rule - Engineering must have a design review process which includes code inspection or code walk-throughs. BMD Question - Does engineering have a design review process which includes code inspection or code walk-throughs?,BMD Stag
12、ed Evolution of Questions,Concept - “Does the company have evidence of product possibilities, given the technology, that customers are likely to buy?“ Seed - “Does a simple product specification exist with features and functions that can be presented to potential users?“ Product Development - “Are a
13、n appropriate number of beta systems (3 for large systems, 20 for mass marketed software) operating in real user environments with users satisfied and testifying that the product exhibits unique capabilities and/or significant performance and/or performance/price benefits?“,Evolution of the “Ideal“
14、State at Each Stage,Business Plan at Concept & Seed,I. CONCEPT 6-10 page plan for technology, product, market and development of formal business plan completed plan successful in raising Seed Stage financing II. SEED 20 - 30 page formal business plan produced, with 8 key components Verifies and refi
15、nes assumptions from beginning of stage Funding requirements and milestones based on product development schedule All key risks identified, evaluated and rationalized for current plan,Examples: A Market Failure A Product Failure,Ovation: At Product Introduction,An Example, Ovation, Founded: 1982 Fun
16、ding: $6.8 million Product: Ovation, to be sold for $ 495. Next generation integrated software with word processing spreadsheet, database management, and communications. Target Market: Fortune 1000 volume corporate purchase Outcome: Chapter 11, October 1984 - having won product of the year as “vapor
17、ware“,Analytica: Market Development,An Example: Analytica, Founded 1982 Funding: $8 million Product: Reflex, to be sold for $495 Next generation microprocessor software - relational database with integrated, easy to use analytical tools Target Market: Fortune 1000, volume corporatepurchase, departme
18、ntal orientation (eg. sales) Outcome: Distress acquisition by Borland 10/85,Venture Life Cycle for e-Ventures,Ventures,Stimulating New Companies,Encouraging New Ventures,Understand the critical factors (people) that create wealth - not just those that store it or move it around Reduce and eliminate
19、bureaucracy Some examples: SJ Center for Software Innovation Boulder Tech Incubator , The Corporate Incubator: copiers to consultants Teknikron Singapore Industrial Development Japans MITI Informationalization ala Davis & Davidsons 2020 Vision,Exogenous Effectors for Each Dimension,Eng, sci., tech,
20、tech svcs, univs, other co.s, consultants,Tech workforce, sub-contractors, components,Cash & financing experience, “patience“,BOD with Industry, market, product, engineering, financial experience,Trained pool of gen. mgrs successful “role models“,Customers, sales personnel, channels to international
21、 mkt.,Market, infrastructure for “complete“ product, partners, strategic alliances, PR, etc.,Reasonable expectations, patience,Trained personnel to hire, area-specific consultants,Acctng, legal, financing infra- structure,Market,Competitive Products, co-components,MITI Role in Establishing Industrie
22、s,I. Development of a domestic Japanese industry. a. Market control. Imports limited essentially to zero. b.Borrowed technology c.Vertical integration of most manufacturing d. Major investments. Establishing an export market base. a. The establishment of world-wide sales organizations. b. Researchin
23、g and understanding of the foreign markets. c. Establishment of a reputation for quality and reasonable prices. d. A limited focus, especially in those markets less attractive to domestic manufacturers. III. Major market penetration. a. Cooperation among the Japanese companies with respect to models
24、, prices, and markets. b. Focus at the mainstream of the foreign market. c. High inventories because of poor markets in Japan, i.e., an export push at any cost is necessary and expedient. d.Extremely low prices to the mass market to gain market share IV. Market exploitation. A period marked by highe
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