As per PTU B.Com Entrepreneurship Development Syllabus , Unit No. 2: Identification of Business Opportunities and tests of feasibility Project Management Feasibility and Viability analysis – Technical -Financial – Network – Appraisal and Evaluation – Project Report Preparation, Mobilizing resources for start-up. Basic start-up problems.
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Entrepreneurship Development: Unit No. 2
1. Unit No. 2
Identification of Business Opportunities and tests of feasibility
Project Management Feasibility and Viability analysis – Technical –
Financial – Network – Appraisal and Evaluation – Project Report
Preparation, Mobilizing resources for start-up. Basic start-up
problems.
2. Discover
The stage in which the entrepreneur
generates ideas, recognizes
opportunities, and studies the
market
Idea
OpportunityInnovation
3. What is An Idea, Opportunity and
Innovation?
• An idea is a concept for a product or service that does not
exist or is not currently available in a market niche.
• In contrast, an opportunity is an idea for a new product or
service with a market that is willing to pay for that
product or service so that it can form the basis of a
profitable business.
• Innovation is the process of making changes to
something that adds value to customers.
9. Entrepreneurial Process
• Generating Business Idea
• Opportunity recognition
• Environmental Scanning: Internal and External
• Feasibility Analysis
• Business Plan
• Preparing Project Report
9
10. Where do I begin?
Idea Generation
Fun
95% perspiration and 5% inspiration
11. ‘Business is not about
the idea of power, but
the power of ideas’
•IDEA GENERATION is the creative
process of generating, developing, and
communicating new ideas.
12. From Where the Good Idea
came????????
• Customer needs and wants are the logical place to start
the search for ideas.
28. Head start for village India
• Company: Hippocampus Learning
Centres
• Founder: Mr. Mahesh Malhotra
• Inception: 2011
• Area of business: Pre-schools of
rural kids: tries to bridge the urban-
rural gap in kindergarten education
• Funding: $21 mn in 5 rounds
• Investors: Asian Development
Bank, Unitus Seed Fund, Khosla
Impact, Acumen and Lok Capital
28
29. • In rural India, a vast majority of parents are less exposed
to education facilities and demand far less than their
urban counterparts
• While addressing pre-schooling needs, it also generates
employment for women who are trained for 15 days.
Things taught during six months of Montessori training
and two years of experience are condensed into a two-
week curriculum.
29
30. • HLC charges Rs 2,000 per year per child as fees.
• It has reached about 11,000 pre-school students and has a
little over 600 teachers.
• They invested in a business that is highly scalable and
profitable, while serving a dire social need
• Also, unlike these training centres where the pedagogy is
mostly in English, HLC offers bilingual training.
30
31. Format of a Project Report:
• 1. Cover Sheet
• 2. TABLE OF CONTENTS
• 3. EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
• 4. THE BUSINESS
• 5. Funding Requirement
• 6. The Product or Services
32. Format of a Project Report:
• 7. The Plan
a. Marketing Plan
b.Operational Plan
c. Organization Plan
d.Financial Plan
• 8. Critical Risks
• 9. Exit Strategy
• 10. Appendix
34. THE BUSINESS
• Details about the business concept
• Objective of the business
• A brief history about the past performance of the
company
• Form of ownership
35. Legal Forms of Business
Three basic legal forms of business:
• Proprietorship - Single owner, unlimited liability, controls all decisions,
and receives all profits.
• Partnership - Two or more individuals having unlimited liability who
have pooled resources to own a business.
• Corporation - Most common form of corporation; regulated by statute;
treated as a separate legal entity for liability and tax purposes.
36. Funding Requirement
• Investors & financial institutions
• A careful, well- planned funding requirement
should be documented.
• It is also necessary to project how these
requirements would be fulfilled.
38. The Plan- Marketing Plan
• Marketing Mix strategies are to be drawn based on the market
research
• Taste, needs, habit of the customer – Marketing Segmentation and
Targeting
• Marketing mix strategies
• Budget
40. Organization Plan
• Responsibilities & duties amongst people in the
organization
• Information about board of directors
• Manpower plan
• Details about the laws that would be governed in
managing the employees of the organization
• Budget
41. Financial Plan
• Two to five years for an existing company
• 1.Projected sales
• 2.Projected income & expenditure statement.
• 3.Projected breakeven point
• 4.Projected profit & loss statement
• 5.Projected balance sheet
• 6.Projected cash flows.
• 7.Projected fund flows.
• 8.Projected ratios
42. Critical Risks
• The investors are interested in knowing the tentative risks
• Purpose- To evaluate the viability of the project & to
measure the risks involved in the business
• It give confidence to the investors as they can calculate the
risks involved
43. Exit Strategy
• How the organization would be dissolved,
what would be the share of each
stakeholder in case of winding up of the
organization.
44. Appendix
• The curriculum vitae of the owners, ownership agreement
• Certificate from pollution board
• Memorandum of understanding, article of association
• All the supporting agreements/documents that can help in marketing the
project viability at large.
45. Essentials for Project Report
• 1. The project report should be sequentially arranged.
• 2. The project report should be covering all the details about the
proposed project.
• 3. The project report should not be very lengthy a subjective.
• 4. The project report should justify the financial needs and
financial projection.
• 5. The project report should also justify market prospects and
demands.
• 6. The project report should be attractive to the financial agencies
and investors. 45
48. • Being born blind was just
one part of the story. He
was also born poor
• They are raising $2-
million (around Rs 13
crores) in funding and
have already raised Rs 9
crores.
48
52. Feasibility study
• Feasibility study is an assessment of the practicality of a
proposed project.
• Preliminary evaluation of idea to determining if it’s
worth pursuing
• Provides more secure notion that a business idea is
viable
52
53. • A feasibility study aims to objectively and rationally
uncover the strengths and weaknesses of an existing
business or proposed venture, opportunities and threats
present in the environment, the resources required to
carry through, and ultimately the prospects for success
• In its simplest terms, the two criteria to judge feasibility
are cost required and value to be attained.
53
54. Why to do feasibility Analysis
• Assess Economic Viability of Project
• Protects from large capital investment
• Outline ideas before implementation
• Presents associated risk and return
• Gives objective evaluation of project to lenders
54
56. Economic feasibility
• The purpose of the economic feasibility assessment is to
determine the positive economic benefits to the
organization that the proposed system will provide.
• It includes quantification and identification of all the
benefits expected. This assessment typically involves a
cost/ benefits analysis.
57. METHODS
• Economic rate of return (ERR)
• Social rate of return
A vision to build a sustainable company with a workforce
comprising 70 percent people with disability is no mean
task. “Srikanth’s vision is inbuilt in the company. It is not
just a lip service to CSR
59. Technical feasibility
• This assessment is based on an outline design of system
requirements, to determine whether the company has the technical
expertise to handle completion of the project.
• The technical feasibility assessment is focused on gaining an
understanding of the present technical resources of the organization
and their applicability to the expected needs of the proposed system.
• It is an evaluation of the hardware and software and how it meets the
need of the proposed system
60. • When writing a feasibility report, the following should be
taken to consideration:
• A brief description of the business to assess more
possible factors which could affect the study
• The part of the business being examined
• The human and economic factor
• The possible solutions to the problem
61. Factors
• Material Inputs
• Manufacturing Process and Technology
• Plant Capacity
• Location
• Machinery and Procurement
62. Financial Feasibility
• Capital requirements
• Financial rate of return
• Overall attractiveness of the investment
• Sources of Financing the project
62
65. Marketing
• Demand: Bobba estimates the in-home health care sector
to be growing at 25-30 per cent compounded annually. It
will be a $100-billion market in 15-20 years, he says.
• Prices: It provides post-surgery care and senior care using
high-end technology. Among the healthcare packages is a
~9,999 scheme for individuals, including a visits by
doctors and services including blood pressure, sugar
checks and email consultations.
66. • Supply and Distribution: Here, there are no operating
beds and there’s no real estate. It is about last-mile
delivery. It’s about remote patient care
66
68. Factors
• Marketing Potential: In-home healthcare is estimated to be
a $3-billion opportunity in India.
• Competitors: With the number of old people rising, the
business can only grow and more players are looking
to enter the segment
• Cost of Project
• Economic Trends:
69. Operational feasibility
• Operational feasibility is a measure of how well a proposed system
solves the problems, and takes advantage of the opportunities
identified during scope definition and how it satisfies the
requirements identified in the requirements analysis phase of system
development.
• The operational feasibility assessment focuses on the degree to which
the proposed development projects fits in with the existing business
environment and objectives with regard to development schedule,
delivery date, corporate culture, and existing business processes.
71. Managerial Feasibility
• Purpose: determine if business has sufficient skills/resources
to bring product/service to market successfully
• Non-financial factors important to consider here
• 2 primary issues to consider:
1. Management prowess
2. Resource sufficiency
72. Importance of Feasibility Analysis
• Understanding Demand
• Assessing resources
• Marketing feasibility
• Marking a Time line
73. Project Management
• Discipline of planning, organizing and managing
resources to bring about the successful combination of
specific project goals and objectives
75. Story of Entrepreneur
• Startup is like jumping off the cliff and then building a
parachute before you hit the ground.
• Tried with website for alumni for collaborate, help and
connect with friends but it was very costly project
• The experimented with website for vocational training in
city and review for it and make board with friend 75
76. • Took nearly a month
• Website offers the course, review, location, demo lecture
etc.
• Got order from 10 colleges for the startup
76
77. • Focus shifted from Great product to generating revenues.
• Validation from Student: Zero
• No one cared about the same
77
78. • Promoted through college festival and web traffic
increased by 300% but no one opted
• Promoted through advertisement and heavy discounts but
got only 11 applicants
• Students bypassed them and gone for group discounts ,
some joined govt colleges 78
79. Learning
• Plan and Validate
• Find a great founder
• Don’t fall in love with prototype
• Define your end user
• Advertising is bad option
• Don’t run after review
79
80. Resourcing
The stage in which the entrepreneur
identifies and acquires the
financial, human, capital and
material resources needed for the
venture startup, etc
Start-up resourcesStart-up resources
83. Human Resource Mobilization
• Helps in achievements of organization goals
• Employ skills and abilities of workforce efficiency
• Ethical and Social needs of society
• Maintain Quality of Work life
83
84. Material Mobilization
• Two Categories
• Raw material to produce goods and services
• Managing the administration
84
86. Basic Start Up Problems
• Poor Planning
• Lack of Govt. Support
• Ineffective advertising
• Fund raising issues
• Location
• Poor Industry Knowledge
• Expansion beyond resources
86
87. Basic Start Up Problems
• Legal Problems
• Poor Management Skills
• Inability to forecast demand
• Lack of Technical competence
87
88. Network Analysis
• Graphical representation of project operation and
composed of activities and events that can be completed
to reach the end of the project
88
89. PERT/CPM
• PERT
• Program Evaluation and Review Technique
• Developed by U.S. Navy for Polaris missile project
• Developed to handle uncertain activity times
• CPM
• Critical Path Method
• Developed by Du Pont & Remington Rand
• Developed for industrial projects for which activity times generally were known
• Today’s project management software packages have combined the best
features of both approaches.
90. PERT/CPM
• PERT/CPM is used to plan the scheduling of individual activities
that make up a project.
• PERT/CPM can be used to determine the earliest/latest start and
finish times for each activity, the entire project completion time and
the slack time for each activity.
• Both rely on a logical sequence of tasks
• Organized visually (Charts), tabular or simple lists
• PERT and CPM are similar in their basic approach, they do differ in
the way activity times are estimated.
91. • For each PERT activity three times (optimistic, pessimistic
and most likely times) are combined to determine the
expected activity completion time and its variance. Thus,
PERT is a probabilistic technique: it allows us to find the
probability of the entire project being completed by any
given date.
• CPM, on the other hand, is called a deterministic
approach. It uses two time estimate, the normal time and
the crash time, for each activity
91
92. Critical Path Method
• Finding the critical path is a major part of controlling a
project.
• The activities on the critical path represent tasks that will
delay the entire project if they are delayed.
• Manager gain flexibility by identifying noncritical activities
and replanning, rescheduling, and reallocating resources
such as personnel and finances
92
93. Example: ABC Associates
• Consider the following project:
Immediate
Activity Predecessor time (days)
A -- 6
B -- 4
C A 3
D A 5
E A 1
F B,C 4
G B,C 2
H E,F 6
I E,F 5
J D,H 3
K G,I 5
97. Appraisal And Evaluation
• Step by step process of collecting , recoding and
organizing the information about the project result
including both short and long term outcomes.
99. Techniques of Project Appraisal
and Evaluation
• Non Discounting Techniques: Payback period and Return
on Investment
• Discounting Techniques: Net Present Value, Profitability
Index and Internal Rate of Return
Editor's Notes
The new-product development process starts with the search for ideas. Some marketing experts believe the greatest opportunities and highest leverage with new products are found by uncovering the best possible set of unmet customer needs or technological innovation. New-product ideas can come from interacting with various groups and using creativity-generating techniques.
Encouraged by the open innovation movement, many firms are going outside their bounds to tap external sources of new ideas, including customers, employees, scientists, engineers, channel members, marketing agencies, top management, and even competitors.
INTERACTING WITH EMPLOYEES
Employees can be a source of ideas for improving production, products, and services.55 Toyota claims its employees submit 2 million ideas annually (about 35 suggestions per employee), over 85 percent of which are implemented. Kodak, Milliken, and other firms give monetary, holiday, or recognition awards to employees who submit the best ideas.
STUDYING COMPETITORS
Companies can find good ideas by researching the products and services of competitors and other companies. They can find out what customers like and dislike about competitors’ products. They can buy their competitors’ products, take them apart, and build better ones. Company sales representatives and intermediaries are a particularly good source of ideas. These groups have firsthand exposure to customers and are often the first to learn about competitive developments.