Entrepreneurship Hollis

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Genchi genbutsu

"Go and see for yourself"

What % of startups receive VC funding

.03%

Principles of Disruptive Innovation

1. Companies depend on customers and investors for resources 2. Small markets don't solve the growth needs of large companies 3. markets that don't exist can't be analyzed 4. an organizations capabilities define its disabilities 5. technology supply may not equal market demand

5 criteria for choice of entity

1. Cost of creating 2. Methods of raising capital 3. Control of decisions 4. Personal liability 5. Taxation

industry life cycles

1. Emerging (Many new entrants. No dominant players) 2. Growth (Many competitors. healthy profits. some acquisition of small companies) 3. Differentiation (intense product differentiation) 4. Shakeout (dominant firms emerge as weaker firms leave) 5. Maturity (Market is becoming saturated. Prices begin to fall) 6. Decline (Falling demand. products being dropped)

learning milestones (three)

1. Use a minimum viable product (MVP) to establish real company data 2. Tune ups towards the ideal 3. Pivot or persevere

3 stages of development

1. economy specializes in production of agricultural products and small scale-manufacturing (Entrepreneurial) 2. Economy shifts from small-scale production towards manufacturing (decrease entrepreneurship) 3. With increasing wealth the economy shifts away from manufacturing toward services (service based)

two reasons to study the industry

1. represents the business's external environment 2. Need to understand whether you can make a profit in the industry and if it is significant to make the effort to start the business

What % of firms of partnerships

10%

What % of high-tech founders have a phd

10%

costs to apply for a patent

10-40k

Average amount of money to start a business

15-20k

when did management become a discipline

1920s

What % of founders have an associates degree

2%

length of patents

20 years from date of filing (15-16 years of actual protection)

What % of women are CEOs

24%

What % of business owners are immigrants

25%

What % more-likely are immigrants to start a business than native born people

30%

What % of founders have a master's degree

30%

What % of VC backed firms were started by immigrants

30-40%

What % of CA business owners are immigrants

33%

What % of companies survive more than 10 years

33%

What % of founders have a degree in finance, accounting, or business

34%

Average combined American and federal tax rate

39.5%

What % of Founders have an JD

4%

What % of Founders have an MD

4%

What % of founders have a bachelor's degree

44%

What % of Founders have a STEM degree

47%

What % of companies survive more than 5 years

50%

What % of companies with employees survive at least 5 years

50%

What % of Founders have a high school diploma or less

6%

What % of family-owned businesses have women in top leadership positions

60%

What % of entrepreneurs take on personal debt

65%

What % of companies with employees survive at least 2 years

67%

What % of Ideas for a business come from a recent job

70-90%

What % of firms have 0 employees

78%

What % of companies have 0 employees

80%

Joseph Schumpeter said, "Competition disciplines before it attacks." What did he mean by this? A. Schumpeter meant that the awareness of competition creates an incentive for company owners to provide the best products and services possible. B. Schumpeter meant that monopolies and oligopolies provide better products precisely because they do not have to contend with competition. C. Schumpeter meant that a wise company owner can foresee and avoid competition. D. Schumpeter meant that the large amount of companies which fail prove the destructiveness of competition.

A

Which of the following were among the reasons offered in the film, "Poverty, Inc." to explain why people remain poor in underdeveloped nations? (Choose all that apply, but remember that incorrect answers will result in point deductions.) A. The legal systems are complex, bureaucratic and difficult for people without money or political connections to navigate. B. Global NGOs are corrupt and mismanaged. C. Well-intentioned aid programs flood the market with cheap or free goods, creating dependence and undermining the ability of local businesses to succeed. D. The poor are disconnected from global trade. E. The poor are ignorant and unable to help themselves.

A C D

Which of the following are among the practices of design thinking? A. Observation B. Elaborate prototyping for early feedback C. Customer engagement in the design process D. Small teams with singular, concentrated expertise E. Hypotheses and experimentation F. Expert-centric thinking

A C E

Zoom out pivot

A single is insufficient to support a whole product. What was considered the whole product become a single feature of a much larger product

Startup Runway

A startups runway is the number of pivots it can still make; How much time you have to use the cash

Effectual reasoning is based upon the logic that says: A. "To the extent we can control the future, we don't need to predict it." B. "To the extent we can control the future, we can predict it." C. "To the extent we can predict the future, we don't need to control it." D. "To the extent we can predict the future, we can control it."

A. "To the extent we can control the future, we don't need to predict it."

Eric Ries states that the two most important hypotheses that entrepreneurs make are:

A. The value hypothesis and the growth hypothesis

Which of the following were among the contributions that family businesses have made to the U.S. economy, according to data presented in class earlier in the semester? (Choose all that apply) A. Family businesses are more likely to have a company code of ethics, and to have communicated it to all employees. B. Family businesses are more likely to obtain venture capital investment. C. Family businesses are more likely to pay above-market wages. D. Family businesses survive longer than businesses that are not family-owned or controlled. E. Family businesses are more likely to promote women to positions of leadership within the company. F. Family businesses are more likely to pursue disruptive innovations. G. Family businesses account for more than 50% of all wages paid in the United States. H. Family businesses are less likely to lay off employees, even during difficult economic times.

A. Family businesses are more likely to have a company code of ethics, and to have communicated it to all employees. E Family businesses are more likely to promote women to positions of leadership within the company. G. Family businesses account for more than 50% of all wages paid in the United States

Please match the following terms and definitions that Professor Sarasvathy uses when explaining effectual decision making. A. The "affordable loss" principle B. The "lemonade" principle C. The "crazy quilt" principle 1 Leveraging contingencies 2 Creation and utilization of strategic partnerships 3 The decision to focus on obtaining information rather than maximization of profit

A3 B1 C2

What are the Three A's

Actionable Accessible Auditable

Three A's of Hypothesis

Actionable (demonstrate clear cause and effect) Accessible (make the data fairly simple to analyze) Auditable (the data is credible to employee)

Votizen

After all your A/B test and growth metrics Pivot

Which of the following statements accurately reflect how we have used the term "prototype" in our readings and in class discussions? (Choose all that apply, but remember that incorrect answers will result in point deductions.) A. Any time spent improving your prototype without knowing what your customer wants is wasted effort. B. The primary purpose of a prototype is to obtain feedback. C. Prototypes can be a good way of seeing how early adopters interact with your product. D. A prototype should be the best version of the product or service possible. E. Prototypes are useful tools for validated learning.

All except D

Porter's Five Forces

Also known as Industry and Competitive Analysis. A framework considering the interplay between (1) the intensity of rivalry among existing competitors, (2) the threat of new entrants, (3) the threat of substitute goods or services, (4) the bargaining power of buyers, and (5) the bargaining power of suppliers.

What does every business model start with?

An idea

genericide

Aspirin losing trademakr status zipper losing status escalator thermos

Choose all that apply. Which of the following are among the explanations Zoltan Acs offers for why entrepreneurial behavior increases in the "third phase" of economic development? A. Better educated and more sophisticated citizens tend to demand higher wages. B. Service firms tend to be smaller than manufacturing firms. C. The business services sector of the economy increases relative to manufacturing. D. The amount of manufacturing decreases as a share of the economy. E. There are more innovations in and adoption of information technology.

B C D E

Tim Brown credits Thomas Edison with having popularized the idea of: (Choose all that apply, but remember that incorrect answers will result in point deductions.) A. "design thinking" B. a "team-based approach to innovation" C. the genius "lone inventor" D. the modern "R & D laboratory"

B D

Which of the following statements are true of firms in the United States, according to U.S. Census and other sources of data we've examined this semester? (Choose all that apply, but remember that incorrect answers will result in point deductions) A. Of the firms that have salaried employees, most have gross income of more than $500,000/year. B. Most corporations are family-owned or family-controlled. C. Most new jobs come from companies that are backed by venture capital D. The vast majority of firms do not have salaried employees. E. The vast majority of firms have fewer than 20 employees. F. Most new jobs come from firms with fewer than 20 employees. G. Family businesses have more females in top leadership positions than other businesses.

B, D, E, F, G

Causal reasoning is based upon the logic which says: A. "To the extent we can control the future, we can predict it." B. "To the extent we can predict the future, we can control it." C. "To the extent we can control the future, we do not need to create it." D. "To the extent we can predict the future, we can create it."

B. "To the extent we can predict the future, we can control it."

Which of the following were among the data points Peter Drucker points to as proof that the United States added more jobs than it lost during the years 1965 - 1985? (Choose all that apply) A. Union membership was increasing during that time. B. Veterans of World War II were entering the work force in large numbers during that time. C. The "Women's Liberation" movement meant that women were entering the work force in large numbers during that time. D. "Baby Boomers" were graduating from college and entering the work force in large numbers during that time.

C, D

Which of the following assertions does Joseph Schumpeter make in the assigned excerpt from Capitalism, Socialism and Democracy [choose all that apply]? A. The primary basis for consumer selection among available products is price. B. Capitalism is capable of evolving toward a state of relative balance, or equilibrium. C. Innovation can come in the form of new methods of production. D. "Top-down" economic decision-making results in more efficient allocation of resources. E. Competition is a "disciplining" factor in the marketplace.

C, E

What are some of the trends Peter Drucker warns of, in the mid-1980s, which could derail the economic progress created by the birth of millions of small companies? I. Inflation II. The nuclear arms race III. The growing welfare state IV. The deficit V. The collapse of rapidly growing economies in developing nations A. All of the above B. I, III, IV and V, but not II C. I, II and IV, but not III or V

C. I, II and IV, but not III or V

What LPs do

Can advise, but cannot be involved in day to day roles

Platform Pivot

Change from an application to a platform or vice versa; solve same problem in a different manner

Channel Pivot

Change in distribution channel. Realization the same basic solution could be delivered through with greater effectiveness

Value Capture Pivot

Change in the way a company captures value can affect the business, the product, and marketing strategies; Monetization or revenue models. Capturing value is an intrinsic part of the product hypothesis.

The ongoing process of innovation, new product, new business, and new industry creation which often makes its predecessors obsolete.

Creative Destruction

Both Professor Zoltan Acs and the film "Poverty, Inc." strongly suggest that for economic development to occur, even more important than the conditions for business creation are the conditions for: emergency aid B. international adoption C. free migration of people D. business growth

D

Saras Sarasvathy defines what she calls the "bird-in-hand" principle as: A. Setting flexible goals B. Timely transitioning from "effectual" to "causal" decision-making C. Approaching potential start-up team members with different skill sets D. Working with available resources

D

What does Peter Drucker identify as the "new technology" that all of the high growth companies of the late 1970s and early 1980s had?

D. Entrepreneurial management

Even though he states that an MVP shouldn't be the best possible product, Eric Ries still insists that startup founders use their MVPs to test their riskiest assumptions first.

True

IDEO co-founder Tom Kelley says that "design thinking" sometimes means not listening to customers.

True

In the U.S., about half of new businesses fail within the first few years of launching.

True

Most innovations tend to be sustaining or incremental improvements to existing products and services, rather than disruptive, or radical, changes.

True

Professor Acs states that for an underdeveloped nation to move into the second phase of economic growth, entrepreneurial behavior - meaning the creation of firms - should decrease.

True

T/F: Perfect competition does not exist

True

TF: Most firms hire between 0-20 employees

True

TF: Most wages are paid by family owned companies

True

Zoltan Acs and his research partner Atilla Varga found that necessity entrepreneurship did not contribute meaningfully to economic development.

True

What law governs partnerships

Uniform Partnership Act, follows Uniform law and is not used in Louisiana

The essential unit of progress for startups, according to Eric Ries

Validated Learning

The benefit the customer derives from the product or service you are offering

Value Proposition

What is a partnership

Voluntary contract between 2 or more people who agree to devote certain funds, labor, skills to a business with the understanding that profits and losses will be shared two or more persons engaged in a joint venture for profit

Zoom in pivot

What was previously considered a single feature in a product becomes the whole product

analog

current good that proves your leap of faith (walkmans proved IPod demand)

market

defined by customers, those that pay for benefits of the product or service

lean thinking

defines value as providing benefit to the customer, anything else is waste

value hypothesis

determining whether the model brings value, is it the right product or service

Split tests

different versions of a product are offered to customers at the same time

requirements of s corps

domestic up to 100 shareholders taxed like a partnership retains limited liability

Factor-Driven Economy

economies that rely on unskilled labor and the extraction of natural resources for growth

Professor Sarasvathy explains that causal logic is BLANK-dependent, while effectual logic is BLANK-dependent.

effect, people

Only a minority of startups are valued over $1b

false

How is a corporation formed?

filing articles of incorporation with secretary of state

bug lists

great innovators notice things that annoy them or that can be made better - they keep a "bug list" of things that bug them and look for better alternatives

Efficiency-driven economies

growing economies in need of improving their production processes and quality of goods produced

what type of hypothesis is innovation accounting

growth hypothesis

Necessity Entrepreneurship

having to become an entrepreneur because you have no better option

what can you not patent?

ideas, abstract principles, compositions of matter, math formulas, living things you created

trademarks

identifies source of a mark/good/service (company name, logo, slogan, product names); (shapes, colors, sounds); registered with USPTO duration is in perpetuity ("genericide") brand identity = goodwill

Disruptive innovations (technologies)

innovations that result in worse product performance (at least near-term); precipitated the leading firms failure

Customer Segment Pivot

keeping the functionality of the product the same but changing the audience focus; Company realizes that the product it is building solves a real problem for real customers but they're not the type of customers it originally planned to serve

Cohort analysis

looking at the performance of each group of customers that comes into contact with the product independently

MVP's

minimum viable product, begins process of learning, test fundamental business hypotheses; Common outcome of concierge MVPs is to invalidate a companies growth model (types)

relationship between necessity entrepreneurship and economic development

negative in low-income countries, while relationship between entrepreneurship and economic development in high-income countries is most likely positive

customer need pivot

new product, same customer

are trademarks and copyrights common knowledge

no

do LLCs have personal liability

no

do partnerships pay income tax

no

NAICS

north american industry classification system

trademarks and copyrights

not public knowledge

where do trademarks protect you

only in states where you are using the trademark Lasts perpetuity

What is the maximum amount an LP can lose

original investment. assets are not liable so long as they remain passive

Sole Proprietorship

owner managed dies with owner sell entire company personally liable single taxation

corporation

owners don't manage perpetual existence shares easily sold limited liability double taxation

Partnership

owners manage dissolves easily difficult to sell interests personally liable single taxation

Limited Liability Company

owners or managers perpetual existence shares alienable (not easily) limited liability single taxation

What are limited partners considered

passive investors

"left-handed" consumers

people who are very different from you.

Fuzzy front end

period of time prior to launch and startup; name comes because everything is confusing/nothing is predictable

Ratio

ratio of opportunity-to-necessity entrepreneurship should be a useful indicator of economic development, and can be a guide for development policy; as more and more of the population becomes involved in opportunity entrepreneurship and as more and more people leave necessity entrepreneurship (self employment), the more we see rising levels of economic development

Keystoning

retailer at least doubles its cost in setting the price to the consumer

Most common source of money to start a business

savings & loans

what can you trademark

shapes, colors, sounds

are trade secrets state or federal law

state law

Optimization versus learning

the company can be executing a plan that does not make sense with due diligence (doesn't mean they are bad at their jobs they are just working in the wrong direction)

primary market

the customers or markets that have the most need for the product offered

suicide quadrant

the introduction of new products in new markets; an area where traditional marketing techniques are ineffective

Innovation-driven economies

the most advanced economies, where businesses compete based on innovation and entrepreneurship

sustaining innovations (technologies)

they improve the performance of established products, along dimensions of performance that mainstream customers in major markets have historically valued; rarerly even the most radical changes precipitated failure of leading firms

why would an LLC be taxed like a partnership?

to avoid double taxation

why would an LLC be taxed like a corporation

to reinvest profits back into business

Piercing the Corporate Veil

to rule that the shareholders are liable for company debt to creditors. Court may reach personal assets if owners perform any misconduct. Merely becoming insolvent or going out of business is not enough reason to pierce

vanity metrics

traditional numbers used to judge startups, they give the rosiest possible picture of performance (instead use accountable metrics)

liability for sole proprietorship

unlimited legal liability

what does TM mean

using in commerce, no federal protection

What does leveraging contingencies mean

using lemons to make lemonade

what is a patent

utility, design, plant NOT the right to do something, it is the power to exclude others from making, manufacturing, selling

Innovators should see products as BLANK rather than BLANK

verbs, nouns

Ethnography

way to explore the social culture of groups authentically

antilog

what drives you to address your business in a particular way (napster paved way for iTunes)

Growth hypothesis

what is the way to scale up

what is a copyright

when an idea is fixed in a tangible medium of expression registration is NOT authorship - a prerequisite for federal court

principles of disruptive innovation

when good companies fail, it is often because their management either ignored these principles of tried to fight them; b/c of "good" management

Principles of disruptive innovation

when good companies fail, it is often because their managers either ignored these principles or chose to fight them

concierge MVP

work hand in hand with customers so they enjoy the product as much as possible. very INEFFICIENT. outcome to to invalidate the companies proposed growth model

Can partners be held if liable if they did not do anything wrong

yes

are patents common knowledge

yes

What is modifiable in a partnership

Division of profits Division of losses Duration of Partnership

According to a study conducted by the Kauffman Foundation, the average age of first-time entrepreneurs in the fastest-growing businesses was: A. Nearly 50 B. Early 20s C. Mid -20s D. Early 40s E. Upper 30s

E

Industry Life cycle

Emerging Growth Differentiation Shakeout Maturity decline

What is not modifiable in a partnership

Equal rights in management of business Duty of care Duty of loyalty

Eric Ries maintains in his book The Lean Startup that "entrepreneurship" is not "management."

False

IDEO principals Tom Kelley, Tim Brown and Dennis Boyle all explained that "design thinking" is a way of developing and exploiting sudden breakthroughs.

False

Josef Schumpeter agreed with the other economists of his day that in an industrialized economy, the primary competitive advantage one producer has over another is price.

False

Peter Drucker explained that, contrary to the conventional wisdom at the time, America was actually adding jobs during the collapse of our manufacturing dominance in the 1970s, and that these were provided primarily by (then) largely unknown but promising high-tech companies.

False

Saras Sarasvathy described the "suicide quadrant" as that space where an entrepreneur is trying to launch a new product in an existing market with too much competition.

False

TF: Average self-employed person earns MORE than working for someone else

False

TF: Entrepreneurs work LESS HOURS than working for someone else

False

Tom Kelley writes in "The Art of Innovation" that great customer insight can be obtained from focus groups and market research.

False

Customer Hierarchy

Gatekeepers- hold the key to reaching particular customers, control flow of information Influencers- people who want to affect the purchase decision and whose approval is required before a decision to purchase is made Deciders- people who make final purchasing decision Purchasers- those who have the actual authority to buy a product Users- ultimate beneficiaries of the purchase

GEM

Global Entrepreneurship Monitor research program; annual assessment of the national level of entrepreneurial activity

Business Architecture Pivot

High margin, low volume (complex systems model) or low margin, high volume (volume operations model); First is associated more with B2B and latter is associated with consumer products

Burn Rate

How fast you are going through cash

lean startup case studies

IMVU Case Study: MVP led to low sales, assumed the product was at fault; they made many changes to the product but made no impact on customer behavior; used google ads to analyze customer behavior

migration of capabilities

In the start-up stages of a business, much of what gets done is attributable to its resources; institute processes and values into employees and company functions (establish a culture); every organizational change entails a change in resources, processes, or values or some combination

In his Harvard Business Review article, what names does Tim Brown give to the three steps of "design thinking" as they are practiced at IDEO?

Inspiration, Ideation, Implementation

What is a "business model"?

It is the structure of an organization That provides a good or service Provides value to a set of customers Profitably

According to historical research, what percent of startups receive venture capital? Less than 5% Between 5% and 6% Less than 10% ~12%

Less than 5%

Synonym of value proposition

Market Pain

A very small number of startups in the U.S. ever receive venture capital, but between 30 - 40% of those that do are started by immigrants.

True

Is a written partnership agreement required?

No

LLC

Owners manage Perpetual Existence Limited Liability Single Taxation MOST STARTUPS ARE LLCs

design patents

PURELY ORNAMENTAL, 15-16 years of actual patent protection

UPA Defaults

Partnership will dissolve if any partner leaves or dies (can be modified in agreement) will always dissolve if only one partner left

How do taxes work in partnerships?

Pass through taxation persons pay income taxes based on individual income tax rate

Four stages in the creative process

Preparation - looking at a problem from a variety of perspectives Incubation - letting the problem lie in the subconscious for a period of time Illumination - discovery of solution Verification - bringing the idea to an outcome

What provides the most up to date information on an industry

Primary field data

What is harder to change: resources or processes?

Processes because they have worked for years

RPV

Resources (people, equipment, technology, product designs, brands, information, cash, relationships, etc) Processes (transformation of resources into products and services of greater worth), Values (standards by which employees make prioritizations decisions)

customer segment pivot

Same product, new customer

Technology Pivot

Same solution by using completely different technology. More likely to be for sustaining innovation. Established companies excel at this.

Kondratieff cycle

Stagnation occurs in economy 50 years after a new technology innovation is made, which leads to 20 years of slow growth

Customer Need Pivot

The problem we are trying to solve for the customer is not very important. However, because of customer intimacy we notice other needs that can be solved. Could be repositioning current products or brand new products.

Metcalfe's Law

The value of network as a whole is proportional to the square of the number of participants; the more people the more valuable

Engine Growth Pivot

Three types of engines of growth: viral, sticky, and paid growth models; Change its growth strategy to seek faster or more profitable growth. Usually also required change in how value is captured

Can 2 corporations form a partnership

Yes. They are fictitious persons

industry

a grouping of businesses that interact in a common environment as part of a value chain or distribution channel that delivers a particular good

Validated learning

a rigorous method of demonstrating progress when one is embedded in the soil of extreme uncertainty in which startups grow; Process of demonstrating empirically that a team has discovered valuable truths about a startups present and future business prospects

Innovation accounting

accounting geared towards disruptive innovation, allows startups to objectively prove they are learning how to grow a sustainable business helps separate good from bad growth (Success theater - using appearance of growth to make it seem that they are successful)

Choose all that apply. The term "proof of concept," as we use it in class, refers to: A. Technological feasibility B. The existence of a functional prototype C. A business model that demonstrates potential for growth

all of the above

Benefit Corporation

amendment to existing state business corporation act explicitly allows management to make decisions to benefit society into articles of incorporation

Opportunity Entrepreneurship

an active choice to start a new enterprise based on the perception that an unexploited or underexploited business opportunity exists; has a positive and significant effect on economic development

copyright

an idea that is fixed in a tangible medium of expression; anything textual, musical, artistic, sculptural; Life + 70 (individual-author) 120 years (corporate author)

patents

are public knowledge; power to exclude others from making, manufacturing, selling; 20 years from date of filing (15-16 years of actual patent protection), application costs $10,000-$40,000

Effectual reasoning

begins with a given set of means and allows goals to emerge contingently over time from the varied imagination and diverse aspirations of the founders and the people they interact with (explorers)

Causal reasoning

begins with a predetermined goal and a given set of means, and seeks to identify the optimal―fastest, cheapest, most efficient, and so on―alternative to achieve the given goal. (Conquerors)

cross-pollinate

borrow ideas from one area for use in another.

assumptions about capitalism and growth

capitalism means dealing with an evolutionary process; method of economic change and not only never is but never can be stationary capitalism is the process of creative destruction (according to Schumpeter)

Is creative destruction about equilibrium or change

change


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