New Venture Financing Lecture Note (Ch-1)
New Venture Financing Lecture Note (Ch-1)
New Venture Financing Lecture Note (Ch-1)
(Entrepreneurial Finance)
Integrate
What I
know What you
know
The Entrepreneurial process
Entrepreneurship is a way of thinking, reasoning, and acting that is opportunity
obsessed, holistic in approach, and leadership balanced for the purpose of value
creation and capture.
Entrepreneurship results in the creation, enhancement, realization, and renewal
of value, not just for owners, but for all participants and stakeholders. At the
heart of the process is the creation and/or recognition of opportunities, followed
by the will and initiative to seize these opportunities.
Entrepreneurship requires a willingness to take risks, both personal and financial
but in a very calculated approach in order to constantly shift the odds of success,
balancing the risk with the potential reward.
When starting a new business, there is an entrepreneurial process that is often
followed to identify, evaluate, and develop an opportunity (an entrepreneurial
idea) by overcoming the forces that resist the creation of something new.
The entrepreneurial process has four distinct phases:
i) Identification and evaluation of the opportunity (the entrepreneurial idea
generation and evaluation),
ii) Development of the business plan (Planning),
iii)Determination and mobilization of the required resources, and
iv)Launching the enterprise, harvesting, and managing growth.
The Opportunity: Seeking (recognizing), Screening,
Seizing and Nurturing
In the complex maze of business, seeking, recognizing, screening, and seizing
opportunities is a defining factor for successful entrepreneurs.
The entrepreneurial mindset transforms mere possibilities into tangible results
through nurturing the opportunities, and devising and implementing effective
strategies.
Opportunity-seeking is the pursuit of new possibilities that can lead to
significant growth or improvement. It involves observing the environment,
understanding economic and market trends, and identifying gaps that can be
exploited profitably.
Screening: once potential opportunities are identified, screening comes into
play, which is evaluating these opportunities based on their technical,
economical, political, social, environmental and technological feasibility and
potential benefits.
In screening opportunities, entrepreneurs use criteria, such as market size,
resource requirements, competitive landscape, and personal capacity to deal with
entry and exit barriers.
Seizing the opportunity as a final step involves implementing a strategy to
exploit the opportunity effectively and efficiently.
The decision-making and leadership capacity of the entrepreneur plays a pivotal
role in opportunity seizing. Innovative and leader entrepreneurs provide the
vision, inspire the team, make tough decisions, and ensure the efficient
execution of plans. Their ability to communicate, motivate, and manage
resources is instrumental in successfully seizing opportunities.
Once opportunities are seized, they have to be Nurtured. Nurturing in business
is building smooth and profitable relationships with prospects. It is caring for,
listening to and translating the needs of customers into valuable offerings that
the customers become willing and able to purchase the offerings.
Those entrepreneurs who seize and nurture opportunities encourage innovation,
embrace risk-taking, and are responsible for all their decisions and actions.
They persistently work to expand, grow and harvest their businesses.
Screening New venture opportunities
New ventures are mostly established as small businesses.
Small businesses differ in size, in growth potential, in organizational structure,
and often in culture.
Within a small business category, New Venture refers to the establishment and
development of a business or project with a fresh vision, purpose, and high-
potential for growth. It involves an assumption of risk and creation of an
enterprise that introduces innovative products, services, or business models into
the market.
Establishing a New venture as core of the entrepreneurial process, it is key to
recognize and screen an entrepreneurial opportunity (attractive, growth
potential and profitable opportunity).
Entrepreneurs could come across with multitude of opportunities, but they don’t
have time and other resources to engage in and manage all. Hence, they have
to screen them to choose the most economically attractive and timely
opportunity that creates value both for prospective customers and for
the entrepreneur (Win-win).
Time is the most valuable asset and also most scarce resource for any
entrepreneur. It is a reality that No entrepreneur will never have
enough time to pursue all the business ideas s/he can come up with. The
entrepreneur’s paradox is that s/he must find and make time for the good
ones. Complicating this paradox is that ‘s/he do not have a strategy until
s/he is saying no to lots of potential opportunities ’. Estimates show that
only about 10% of potential opportunities generate acceptable levels of
sustainable income for the founder(s).
Following the opportunity recognition either through outside-in (entrepreneurs
looking for needs in the marketplace and then determine how to use their own
capabilities to pursue those opportunities) or inside-out analysis (evaluating)
their capabilities and then identify new products or services they might be able
to offer to the market), it is a must to screen and focus on the most promising
one(s).
To do the screening, entrepreneurs should undergo a complete and in-depth
feasibility analysis to determine whether the idea the entrepreneur has selected
is viable and merits the investment of time and money that will be necessary to
launch it.
As the quality of the final evaluation will be only as good as the reliability of the
information used, new venture business ideas screening requires adequate
background research and informed estimations for the final decision to be
based on trustworthy facts and reasonable judgments.
The New venture business idea screening should account for the following
factors:
Strength of the business idea: The best business ideas will meet a definite
market need, create value for end users, and offer products or services that
customers favor and find easy to use. They also will have no fatal flaws.
Targeted market and customers: Businesses are more likely to thrive if they
focus on a sizeable market that is easy to identify, growing rapidly, and
composed of customers with high levels of purchasing power that they are very
willing to use.
Industry and competitive advantage: The most favorable industries for
startups have few or no competitors, are growing quickly (to allow room for
new entrants), present few or no barriers and would allow startups establish and
sustain a competitive advantage.
Capability of founder(s): In a best-case scenario, the founder(s) will have
industry-related experience, skills, and networks, as well as a great passion for
and a good fit with the new business.
Capital requirements and venture performance: An entrepreneur will fare
best when the venture needs little capital to launch, its anticipated profit
potential is great, and similar enterprises perform very well.
Stages of New venture development
The general business (product) lifecycle.
Business enterprises go through varied stages of development: they come into
existence; they may undergo stages of rapid growth, slow growth, or stagnation;
and they may fail.
The following figure depicts a more generalized stages of new venture
development from inception of the opportunity through its development and
eventual harvesting, the stage where the investors and maybe the entrepreneur
can successfully unwind their positions.
Reading materials/books
Spinelli, S., Ensign, P. C., & Adams, R. J. (2014). New
venture creation. McGraw-Hill Ryerson.
Timmons, J. A., Spinelli, S., & Tan, Y. (2004). New venture
creation: Entrepreneurship for the 21st century. New
York: McGraw-Hill/Irwin.