Mgmt 470 Test 3

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Problems with Comparable Sales Method

First, no two firms are exactly alike. Second, there are often no recent sales to use for comparison

Conversion (hit) Rate

How many prospects or leads you need to approach in order to make one sale

Key Performance Indicators (KPIs)

Measures or metrics that identify the outcomes that are most important to the success of a business

Effectuation

People may assess the assets available to them and the limits under which they must operate to establish the goal to be obtained and the methods of reaching the goal

Legitimacy

belief that a firm is worthy of consideration or doing business with because of the impressions or opinions of customers, suppliers, investors, or competitors

Value Strategy

best price, best product, best service

Industry

general name for the line of product or service being sold, or the firms in that line of business

Cost Strategy

generic strategy aimed at mass markets in which a firm offers a combination of cost benefits that appeals to the custome

Due Diligence

he process of investigating to determine the full and complete implications of buying a business

Business Incubator

organizations that provides financial, technical, and managerial help to start-up businesses

Mission Statement

paragraph that describes the firm's goals and competitive advantages

Secondary Research

past research which has already been performed and often already published

Spin-off

regular business practice that is done by businesses of all sizes and at all stages of development

External Legitimacy

extent to which a small business is taken for granted, accepted, or treated as viable by organizations or people outside the small business or the owner's family

Focus Strategy

generic strategy that targets a portion of the market, called a segment or niche

Business Life Cycle

introduction stage growth stage boom shake-out maturity stage decine stage

Process of Due Diligence

1. Conduct extensive interviews with the sellers of the business. 2. Study the financial reports and other records of the business. 3. Make a personal examination of the site (or sites) of the business. 4. Interview customers and suppliers of the business. 5. Develop a detailed business plan for the acquisition. 6. Negotiate an appropriate price for the business, based on the business plan projections. 7. Obtain sufficient capital to purchase and operate the business.

Three Major Problems with Book Value

1. The original cost of an asset might bear no relation to its current value 2. Depreciation is an arbitrary, although systematic, method of transferring asset value to expense 3. Internally developed assets, such as patents, trademarks, and trade secrets, do not have book value

Three Strategies for Businesses

1. differentiation strategy 2. cost strategy 3. focus strategy

Primary Goals for Performing Due Diligence

1st- information that greatly affects the value of the business and the advisability of purchasing it 2nd- how you, as a new owner, can make changes to increase its value. Both goals can give you a negotiating advantage

Elevator Pitch

30-second (100 words or less) action-oriented description of a business designed to sell the idea of the business to another

Decline Stage

A life cycle stage in which sales and profits of the firm begin a falling trend

Boom

A type of life cycle growth stage marked by a very rapid increase in sales in a relatively short time

Core Competencies

Skills, knowledge, and abilities that employees must possess in order to successfully perform job functions that are essential to business operations.

Introduction Stage

The life cycle stage in which the product or service is being invented and initially developed

Competitive Advantage

The particular way a firm implements customer benefits that keeps the firm ahead of other firms in the industry

Maturity Stage

The third life cycle stage, marked by a stabilization of demand, with firms in the industry moving to stabilize or improve profits through cost strategies

Distinctive Compentencies

Those features, benefits, or aspect of your business that are unique to your firm, or more strongly identified with your firm than with your competitors. This is the specialty for which your firm is best known

Bootstrapping

Using low-cost or free techniques to minimize your cost of doing business •Do without as long as you can. •Cut your personal and business expenses to the bone (e.g., take no salary, work from home). •If you need something, see if you can get it for free (like help from SCORE or former professors). If you cannot get it free, then borrow it, barter your time for it, rent it, or lease it before you buy it. •If you need to buy outside services, consider offering equity instead of money, but be stingy with this.

Sole Proprietorship

a business owned and managed by a single individual

Earned Media

a category of promotional tactic based on a public relations or publicity model that gets customers talking about products or services

Takeover

seizing of control of a business by purchasing its stock to be able to select the board of directors Is a hostile event In a takeover, the buyer (often called a raider) seizes control of the business without the permission of all owners

Earnings Multiple Ratio

simply firm value divided by actual or expected annual earnings

Industry Heuristics

simply rules of thumb that are commonly used to estimate firm value in relation to some easily observable characteristic of the business

Value Proposition

small business owners' unique selling points (also known as benefits) that customers can expect from your goods or services, including benefits that differentiate your offering from those of the competition

Types of Entry Wedges

supply shortages unutilized resources customer contracting second sourcing market reliquishment favored purchasing government rules

Strategy

the idea and actions that explain how a firm will make its profit. Whether you know it or not, all small businesses have a strategy. The strategy may be a blueprint for planning or a standard to compare actions against. Either way, strategy defines for you, your customers, and your competition how your business operates

Altruism

unselfish regard for the welfare of others

Three Keys to CRM

- One is handling problems that crop up after a sale. - The second is called customer relationship management (CRM), which focuses on the longer-term monitoring and promotion of customer interest and loyalty. - The third is growing customer sales, which builds from the customer development model of Blank and Dorf and the lean business practices movement.

Prototype

- name given to the first model of a product or service - Some prototypes may be functioning, but built in a way that no consumer would buy it (e.g., with exposed wires and sharp edges) but shows the product can do what is promised - Some prototypes look like the final product, but might not be functional - Prototypes are made to prove aspects of the idea and are seen as the first stop along the path of product/service creation

Lean Business Practices

- refer to systematically eliminating waste of time, materials, and money throughout a business - application created by Eric Ries that addresses the specifics of new business creation, particularly Internet-based businesses, where rapid experimentation and - constant monitoring of viewers' choices are possible include a set of tried-and-true methods that can lessen capital requirements and reduce cash outflows from the business

Brand Ambassador

A person who represents your brand, company, product, or service to others to increase brand awareness, sales, and positive attitudes among the public. They can be paid or volunteer. They often receive your products and services to use and show off to the public. Also called a spokesperson.

Shake-Out

A type of life cycle stage following a boom in which there is a rapid decrease in the number of firms in an industry

Growth Stage

An industry life cycle stage in which customer purchases increase at a dramatic rate

Incremental innovation

An overall strategic approach in which a firm patterns itself on other firms, with the exception of one or two key areas

Comparable Sales

Comparable sales of other firms in the same industry are commonly used to estimate the value of a business

Primary Research

Conducting research to collect new data to solve a marketing information need

Augmented Product

Core product plus features that tend to differentiate it from the competition

Cognitive Dissonance

Doubt that occurs after a purchase has been made. An inconsistency between experience and belief

Paid Media

a category of promotional tactic based on the traditional advertising model, whereby a brand pays for media space

Owned Media

a new category of promotional tactic based on brands becoming publishers of their own content in order to maximize the brands' value to customers

Pivot

a term describing a change of direction in the thinking of an entrepreneur or a firm, often based on new data or other findings

Business Format Franchising

agreement that provides a complete business format, including trade name, operational procedures, marketing, and products or services to sell

Product Distribution Franchising

agreement that provides specific brand-name products that are resold by the franchisee in a specified territory

Trade Name Franchising

agreement that provides to the franchisee only the rights to use the franchisor's trade name and/or trademarks

Key Resource Acquisitions

also called bulk asset purchases, are the only way a sole proprietorship may be purchased

Intangibles

assets, such as patents or trademarks, and liabilities, such as accounts payable, that have no physical existence 1. accounts receivable, 2. patents 3. licenses 4. liabilities

Customer Development Funnel

awareness interest consideration purchase unbundling up-sell cross-sell referalls

Operational Plans

business plan designed to be used internally for management purposes

Scope

characteristic of a market that defines the geographic range covered by the market—from local to global market scope refers to the geography of your target market

Scale

characteristic of a market that describes the size of the market—a mass market or a niche market

Synergy

combination in which the whole is greater than the sum of its component parts

Mass Market

customer group that involves large portions of the population

Book Value

difference between the original acquisition cost and the amount of accumulated depreciation

Replacement Value

estimate of what an identical asset would cost to be acquired and readied for service

Tangibility

item's capability of being touched, seen, tasted, or felt

Shared Media

media shared by consumers with other consumers, such as social media, blogs, mobile media, and viral channels as well as traditional word of mouth

Niche Market

narrowly defined segment of the population that is likely to share interests or concerns

Entry Wedge

opportunity that makes it possible for a new business to gain a foothold in a market

Retrenchment

organizational life cycle stage in which established firms must find new approaches to improve the business and its chances for survival

Buyouts

purchase of substantially all of an existing business - restricted to businesses that have a formal legal form of organization - accomplished through purchasing the ownership interest in the entity (partnerships and sole proprietorships do not exist separately from the owners and thus cannot be purchased)

Blue Ocean Strategy

pure innovation which results in a new product or service. These situations are rare. Typically with a new product or service, you also have a unique setting

Industry Analysis

research process that provides the entrepreneur with key information about the industry, such as its current situation and trends

Churn

turnover rate for your customers—the percentage of customers you typically lose after their first purchase from you

Co-marketing

type of media partnership where two products jointly pay to advertise together. Usually this is when customers use the two products together, like chips and salsa

Me-Too Enterprises

vast majority of start-up businesses are "me-too" enterprises. The business idea is simply to create another occurrence of a common business: a hair salon, restaurant, bar or lounge, rock band, sign company, plumbing service, yard care, and so on

Vision Statement

very simple 5- to 10-word sentence or tagline that expresses the fundamental idea or goal of the firm

Bricolage

word derived from the French verb bricoler ("to tinker"). In entrepreneurial usage bricolage refers to the process of analyzing the resources available and creating a product or service from them

Differentiation Strategy

ype of generic strategy aimed at clarifying how one product is unlike another in a mass market


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