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111 Cards in this Set

  • Front
  • Back
Intrapreneurship
entrepreneurship within large organizations/businesses
Gazelles
A “gazelle” is a business establishment with at least 20% sales growth every year (for five years), starting with a base of at least $100,000.

Gazelles produce twice as many product innovations per employee as do larger firms.
Gazelles survival
The common myth is that 85% of all firms fail in the first year.

The more accurate statement is that about half of all start-ups last between 5 and 7 years
Emerging Trends: Internet and E-Commerce
Smaller ventures use the Internet for a variety of operations, including customer-based identification, advertising, consumer sales, business-to-business transactions, e-mail, and private internal networks for employees.

#1 use of company internet sites – for Company Information
Developping a website
Attractive and Useful
Marketing the Website
“Stickiness” – keeping people on your website longer
The Evolution of Entrepreneurship
Entrepreneur is derived from the French entreprendre, meaning “to undertake”.
Most people think Entrepreneurs are Doers, not Thinkers (Myth #1)
The Corridor Principle
With every venture launched, new and unintended opportunities often arise.
Example of the Corridor Principle: 3M’s Post-it Notes
Entreprenerial Schools of thought:

Macro
The Environmental School of Thought
The Financial/Capital School of Thought
The Displacement School of Thought
1. Political Displacement
2. Cultural Displacement
3. Economic Displacement
Displacement School of thought: 3 things
Political Displacement
Cultural Displacement
Economic Displacement
Entreprenerial Schools of thought:

Micro
The Entrepreneurial Trait School of Thought
The Venture Opportunity School of Thought
The Strategic Formulation School of Thought
Strategic Formulation as a Leveraging of Unique Elements
Unique Markets: mountain gap strategies
Unique People: great chef strategies
Unique Products: better widget strategies
Unique Resources: water well strategies
Process approaches
Integrative Approach
Entrepreneurial assessment approach
Multidimensional approach
Integrative approach
provides a logical framework for organizing entrepreneurial inputs

1. enviironmental opportunities (demographic change, new technology, modifiicattion to current regulations)
2. Individual entrepreneurial
3. An organizational context
4. Unique business consepts
5. Resources
Entrepreneurial Assessment approach
making assesments qualitavitely, quantitatively, strategically, and ethically in regards to the entrepreneur, the venture, and the environment.
Multidimensional Approach
entrepreneurship is a complex, multidimensional framework that emphasizes the individual, the environment, the organization, and the venture process
3M’s Innovation Rules
Don’t kill a project
Tolerate failure
Keep divisions small
Motivate the champions
Stay close to the customer
Share the wealth
Corporate Entrepreneurship Assessment Instrument (CEAI) (measured key entrepreneurial climate factors)
Management Support
Autonomy/Work Discretion
Rewards/Reinforcement
Time Availability
Organizational BounARY
Developing Venture Teams (V-Teams)
A venture team is composed of two or more people who formally create and share the ownership of a new organization.

The leader is called a “product champion” or an “intrapreneur” – someone inside a large company who is an entrepreneur.
Twenty-First Century Characteristics of Entrepreneurs
The Top Ten Characteristics Today’s Entrepreneurs Share:
Recognize and take advantage of opportunities
Resourceful
Creative
Visionary
Independent thinker
Hard worker
Optimistic
Innovator
Risk taker
Leader
The Dark Side of Entrepreneurship(3 things)
Confrontation with Risk
Stress
Ego
1. (darkside to entrepreneurship)
Confrontation to risk:
Financial Risk
Career Risk
Family and Social Risk
Psychic Risk
third darkside to entrepreneurship
Ego: Out of control:
Extreme Sense of Distrust
Overbearing Need for Control
Overriding Desire for Success
Unrealistic Optimism
The role of creativity
Creativity is the generation of ideas that result in the improved efficiency or effectiveness of a system.
- Background or Knowledge Accumulation is Phase 1 in the Creative Process.
Right side of brain...
The right brain hemisphere helps an individual understand analogies, imagine things, and synthesize information.
Left side of brain...
The left brain hemisphere helps the person analyze, verbalize, and use rational approaches to problem solving
Innovation
The process by which entrepreneurs convert opportunities into marketable ideas.
More than just a good idea.
Types of innovation
Invention-new product
Extension-new use or different application of already existing product
Duplication- creativie replication of an existing product
Synthesis- combination of existing concepts and factors into a new formulation or use
Sources of innovation
Unexpected Occurrences
Incongruities
Process Needs
Industry and Market Changes
Demographic Changes
Perceptual Changes
Knowledge-Based Concepts
Managerial rationalizations - 4
The four rationalizations are believing….
…..that the activity is not “really” illegal or immoral;
…..that it is in the individual’s or the corporation’s best interest;
…..that it will never be found out; and
…..that because it helps the company, the company will condone it.
Types of morally questionable acts
nonrole- against firm- expense account cheating

role failure-against firm- superficial performance appraisal

role distortion- for firm- bribery

role assertion-for firm-Not withdrawing product line in face of initial allegations of inadequate safety
Code of conduct
A code of conduct is a statement of ethical practices or guidelines to which an enterprise adheres.
Approaches to managerial eithics
Immoral management- Managerial decisions, actions and behavior imply a positive and active oppositions to what is moral (ethical).
Decisions are discordant with accepted ethical principles. An active negation of what is moral is implied.

Amoral Management- Management is neither moral or immoral, but decisions lie outside the sphere to which moral judgments apply. Managerial activity is outside or beyond the moral order of a particular code. A lack of ethical perception and moral awareness may be implied.

Moral Management- Managerial activity conforms to a standard of ethical, or right, behavior. Managers conform to accepted professional standards of conduct. Ethical
Leadership is commonplace on the part of management.
A Holistic Approach- 4 principles
Principle 1: Hire the right people
Principle 2: Set standards more than rules
Principle 3: Don’t let yourself get isolated
Principle 4: The most important principle is to let your ethical example at all times be absolutely impeccable.
Social responsibility challenge
Some firms simply react to social issues through obedience to the laws – social obligation; others respond more actively; accepting responsibility for various programs – social responsibility; still others are highly proactive and are even willing to be evaluated by the public for various activities – social responsiveness.
Social obligation
Some firms simply react to social issues through obedience to the laws
Social responsibility
others respond more actively; accepting responsibility for various programs
Social responsivernes
still others are highly proactive and are even willing to be evaluated by the public for various activities
Pitfalls in Selecting New Ventures
Lack of Objective Evaluation
No Real Insight into the Market
Inadequate Understanding of Technical Requirements
Poor Financial Understanding
Lack of Venture Uniqueness
Ignorance of Legal Issues
Critical Factors for New-Venture Development
Uniqueness
Investment
Sales Growth
Lifestyle ventures
Small profitable ventures
High-growth ventures
Product Availability
Customer Availability
Why new ventures fail...
Product/Market Problems
Financial Difficulties
Managerial Problems
Types and Classes of First-Year Problems
1. Obtaining external financing
2. Internal financial management
3. Sales/marketing
4. Product development
5. Production/operations management
6. General management
7. Human resource management
8. Economic environment
9. Regulatory environment
Slide 43
know
Business incubator
Business incubator is a facility with adaptable space that small businesses can lease on flexible terms and at reduced rents.
Types of Incubators
Publicly Sponsored
Nonprofit-sponsored
University-related
Privately sponsored
Trends in Policy Formation
The Regulatory Flexibility Act
The Equal Access to Justice Act
The Congressional Review Act
The Small Business Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act
The Paperwork Reduction Act
The Unfunded Mandates Reform Act

page 251-252
A market...
A market is a group of consumers (potential customers) who have purchasing power and unsatisfied needs. A new venture will survive only if a market exists for its product or service.
Marketing Philosophy?
Production-driven philosophy
Sales-driven philosophy
Consumer-driven philosophy
Market Segmentation
Market segmentation is the process of identifying a specific set of characteristics that differentiate one group of consumers from the rest (market niche).
Consumer Behavior 5 major classifications
Convenience goods
Shopping goods
Specialty goods
Unsought goods
New products

pg 289
pg 302
look
The Balance Sheet
Represents the financial condition of a company at a certain date. It details the items the company owns (assets) and the amount the company owes (liabilities). It also shows the net worth of the company and its liquidity.
Income statement
Commonly referred to as the P & L (profit and loss) statement, which provides the owner/manager with the results of operations.
Statement of Cash Flow
An analysis of the cash availability and cash needs of the business.
Operating Budget
statement of estimated income and expenses over a specified period of time.
cash budget
statement of estimated cash receipts and expenditures over a specified period of time.
capital budget
statement of estimated cash receipts and expenditures over a specified period of time.
Operating budget
Typically, the first step in creating an operating budget is the preparation of the sales forecast. An entrepreneur can prepare the sales forecast in several ways. One way is to implement a statistical forecasting technique such as simple linear regression. Y = a + bx
The Cash-Flow Budget
The first step in the preparation of the cash-flow budget is the identification and timing of the cash inflows. For the typical business, cash inflows will come from three sources: (1) cash sales, (2) cash payments received on account, and (3) load proceeds.
Pro Forma Statements
Pro forma statements are projections of a firm’s financial position over a future period (pro forma income statement) or on a future date (pro forma balance sheet).
Capital Budgeting
The first step in capital budgeting is to identify the cash flows and their timing. The inflows, or returns as they are commonly called, are equal to net operating income before deduction of payments to the financing sources but after the deduction of applicable taxes and with depreciation added back, as represented by the following formula:
Expected Returns = X(1 – T) + Depreciation
Payback Method
In this method the length of time required to “pay back” the original investment is the determining criterion
Net Present Value (NPV method)
The concept works on the premise that a dollar today is worth more than a dollar in the future. The cost of capital is the rate used to adjust future cash flows to determine their value in present period terms. This procedure is referred to as discounting the future cash flows, and the discounted cash value is determined by the present value of the cash flow.
Internal Rate of Return (IRR method)
This method is similar to the net present value method in that the future cash flows are discounted. However, they are discounted at a rate that makes the net present value of the project equal to zero.
Contribution Margin Approach
The difference between the selling price and the variable cost per unit. It is the amount per unit that is contributed to covering all other costs. 0 = (SP –VC)S – FC or FC = (SP – VC)S
where SP = Unit selling price VC = Variable cost per unit S = Sales in units FC = Fixed cost
Inventory turnover
`cogs/inventory
inventory tur-days
360/inventory turnover
accounts recieveable turnover
sales/AR
Average collectuion period
360/accounts recievable turnover
Pitfalls to Avoid in Planning in a business plan- 5 pitfals
Pitfall 1: No Realistic Goals
Pitfall 2: Failure to Anticipate Roadblocks
Pitfall 3: No Commitment or Dedication
Pitfall 4: Lack of Demonstrated Experience (Business or Technical)
Pitfall 5: No Market Niche (Segmen
Putting the Package Together in a businesss plan
Appearance
Length – no more than 40 pages
The cover and title page
The executive summary – nore more than 2 pages
The table of contents
What To Do When a Venture Capitalist Turns You Down
Confirm the decision
Sell for the future
Find out why you were rejected
Ask for advice
Ask for suggestions
Get the name
Find out why
Work on an introduction
Develop a reasonable excuse
Know your referral
Sole Proprietorship
A sole proprietorship is a business that is owned and operated by one person. The enterprise has no existence apart from its owner.
Partneship
A partnership is an association of two or more persons acting as co-owners of a business for profit.

The Uniform Partnership Act is generally followed by most states as the guide for legal requirements in forming partnerships.

The articles of partnership clearly outline the financial and managerial contributions of the partners and carefully delineate the roles in the partnership relationship.
Corporation
A corporation is “an artificial being, invisible, intangible, and existing only in contemplation of the law”*. As such, a corporation is a separate legal entity apart from the individuals who own it. *Supreme Court Justice John Marshall
Limited Partnerships
Permits capital investment without responsibility for management and without liability for losses beyond the initial investment.

Limited partnerships are governed by the Revised Uniform Partnership Act (RUPA).
Limited Liability Partnerships
The limited liability partnership (LLP) is a relatively new form of partnership that allows professionals the tax benefits of a partnership while avoiding personal liability for the malpractice of other partners.
S Corporations
Formerly termed a Subchapter S corporation, the S corporation takes its name from Subchapter S of the Internal Revenue Code, under which a business can seek to avoid the imposition of income taxes at the corporate level yet retain some of the benefits of a corporate form (especially the limited liability).
Commonly known as a “tax option corporation”, an S corporation is taxed similarly to a partnership.
Limited Liability Companies
The LLC is a hybrid form of business enterprise that offers the limited liability of a corporation but the tax advantages of a partnership.
Perhaps the greatest disadvantage is that LLC statutes differ from state to state, and thus any firm engaged in multi-state operations may face difficulties.
Other Corporation Classifications
Domestic and Foreign Corporations
Public and Private Corporations
Nonprofit Corporations – 501(c)3
Professional Corporations
Close Corporations – 30 partners maximum!
Franchising
A franchise is any arrangement in which the owner of a trademark, trade name, or copyright has licensed others to use it in selling goods or services. A franchisee (a purchaser of a franchise) is generally legally independent but economically dependent on the integrated business system of the franchisor (the seller of the franchise).
Franchise Law: The Uniform Franchise Offering Circular (UFOC)
The UFOC is divided into 23 items that provide different segments of information for prospective franchisees.
Patent
A patent provides the owner with exclusive rights to hold, transfer, and license the production and sale of the product or process. It is basically a “right to exclude”.

Design patents last for 14 years; all others last for 20 years.
A Patent Application Has Two Parts:
Specification is the text of a patent and may include any accompanying illustrations.

Claims are a series of short paragraphs, each of which identifies a particular feature or combination of features that is protected by the patent.
Copyrights
A copyright provides exclusive rights to creative individuals for the protection of their literary or artistic productions.
Duration: life of the author plus 70 years (for publishing houses, it is 95 years from date of publication or 120 years from date of creation for works for hire).
Understanding Copyright Protection
For the author of creative material to obtain copyright protection, the material must be in a tangible form so it can be communicated or reproduced. It also must be the author’s own work and thus the product of his or her skill or judgment.

Formal registration of a copyright with the Copyright Office of the Library of Congress.
Trademarks
A trademark is a distinctive name, mark, symbol, or motto identified with a company’s product(s) and registered at the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office.
Trademark Duration
The current registrations are good for 10 years with the possibility for continuous renewal every 10 years. It is most important to understand that a trademark may be invalidated in four specific ways:

Cancellation proceedings
Cleaning-out procedure
Abandonment
Generic Meaning
Bankruptcy
Bankruptcy occurs when a venture’s financial obligations are greater than its assets.
Remember 7 & 11 can be involuntary
Chapter 7: Straight Bankruptcy
Sometimes referred to as liquidation or straight bankruptcy, Chapter 7 bankruptcy requires the debtor to surrender all property to a trustee appointed by the court
Chapter 11: Reorganization
Reorganization is the most common form of bankruptcy. Under this format, a debtor attempts to formulate a plan to pay a portion of the debts, have the remaining sum discharged, and continue to stay in operation. (can be “fast-tracked). Also known as “Debtor in Possession"
Chapter 13: Adjustment of Debts
Individuals or sole proprietors with unsecured debts of less than $100,000 or secured debts of less than $350,000 are eligible to file under a Chapter 13 procedure. In the petition the debtor declares an inability to pay his or her debts and requests some form of extension through future earnings (longer period of time to pay) or a composition of debt (reduction in the amount owed).
Debt Versus Equity
The use of debt to finance a new venture involves a payback of the funds plus a fee (interest for the use of the money. Equity financing involves the sale of some of the ownership in the venture.
Debt Financing
Commercial Banks
Other Debt-Financing Sources:

Trade Credit
Accounts Receivable Financing
Factoring
Finance Companies
Public Offerings
“Going public” is a term used to refer to a corporation’s raising capital through the sale of securities on the public markets. Here are some of the advantages to this approach:
Size of capital amount
Liquidity
Value
Image
(new issues, referred to as initial public offerings IPOs)
Private Placements
The SEC provides Regulation D, which eases the regulations for the reports and statements required for selling stock to private parties – friends, employees, customers, relatives, and local professionals. Regulation D defines four separate exemptions, which are based on the amount of money being raised:
Rule 504a – placements of less than $500,000
Rule 504 – placements up to $1,000,000
Rule 505 – placements of up to $5 million
Rule 506 – placements in excess of $5 million
Accredited Purchaser
As noted in Rules 505 and 506, Regulation D uses the term “accredited purchaser”. Included in this category are the following:
Institutional investors such as banks, insurance companies, venture capital firms.
Any person who buys at least $150,000 of the offered security and whose net worth, including that of his or her spouse, is at least 5 times the purchase price.
Any person who, together with his or her spouse, has a net worth in excess of $1 million at the time of purchase.
Sophisticated” Investors
“Sophisticated” investors are wealthy individuals who invest more or less regularly in new and early- and late-stage ventures. They are knowledgeable about the technical and commercial opportunities and risks of the business in which they invest.
Informal Risk Capital – “Angel” Financing
Many wealthy people in the United States are looking for investment opportunities. They are referred to as “business angels” or informal risk capitalists.
Strategic Planning
Strategic Planning is the formulation of long-range plans for the effective management of environmental opportunities and threats in light of a venture’s strengths and weaknesses.
The Lack of Strategic Planning
Time scarcity
Lack of knowledge
Lack of expertise/skills
Lack of trust and openness
Perception of high cost
Reported Benefits of Long-Range Planning
Cost savings
More efficient resource allocation
Improved competitive position
More timely information
More accurate forecasts
Reduced feelings of uncertainty
Faster decision making
Fewer cash-flow problems
Strategic Planning Levels
Structured strategic plans (SSP)
Structured operational plans (SOP)
Intuitive plans (IP)
Unstructured plans (UP)
Milestone Planning Approach
Using incremental goal attainment to take a venture from start-up through strategy reformulation. Each step has to be completed before moving to the next one. The three major advantages of Milestone Planning are:
The use of logical and practical milestones;
The avoidance of costly mistakes caused by failure to consider key parts of the plan;
A methodology for replanning, based on continuous feedback from the environment.
slide 108
llook
slide 109
look
Key Factors During the Growth Stage
Control
Responsibility
Tolerance of failure
Change
Methods of Going International
Importing
Exporting- freight forwarding, export management, foreign sales
Joint Venture
Direct Foreign Investment
Licensing – patents, copyrights, trademarks
The Importance of Business Valuation
Buying or selling a business
Establishing an employee stock option plan (ESOP)
Raising growth capital through stock warrants
A complete “due diligence,” which means a thorough analysis of every facet of the existing business – first question – Why is this business being sold?
Establishing A Firm’s Value valuation methods
Valuation Methods
Adjusted Tangible Book Value – goodwill plus patents
Price/Earnings Ratio (Multiple of Earnings) Method
Discounted Earnings Method
The Leveraged Buyout: An Alternative for Small Ventures
This allows the entrepreneur to finance the transaction by borrowing on the target company’s assets. This method is the leveraged buyout (LBO).
IPO – initial public offering (Going public)
Entrepreneurial Leveraged Buyout (E-LBO) is characterized by having...
At least two-thirds of the purchase price generated from borrowed funds,
More than 50% of the stock after acquisition owned by single individuals or their family, and,
The majority investors devoting themselves to the active management of the company after acquisition.