The Smart Entrepreneur: How to Build for a Successful Business - Brossura

Clarysse, Bart; Kiefer, Sabrina

 
9781904027881: The Smart Entrepreneur: How to Build for a Successful Business

Sinossi

More people than ever are becoming entrepreneurs, but the perils of starting your own business are well–documented. The Smart Entrepreneur teaches you how to avoid these pitfalls and make your business a success by following a series of practical and easy–to–understand steps
 
The Smart Entrepreneur uses a combination of both mainstream business experiences and state–of–the–art academic research, distilled into an accessible reference book specifically targeted at those interested in business start–ups. Designed to appeal to everyone, from business students looking to commercialize a business idea to managers looking to inspire entrepreneurial thinking in their teams.

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Informazioni sull?autore

Bart Clarysse holds the Entrepreneurship Chair at Imperial College Business School in London. He has been an executive teacher for multinationals such as Johnson and Johnson, KLM, and Belgacom on corporate venturing and turnaround strategies. He is also founder of several high–tech start–ups. Sabrina Kiefer is a venture coach on the Innovation, Entrepreneurship and Design program at Imperial College Business School. Previously she has worked for the Associated Press, Business Week, and the Financial Times.

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The Smart Entrepreneur

How To Build For A Successful Business

By Bart Clarysse, Sabrina Kiefer

Elliott and Thompson Limited

Copyright © 2011 Bart Clarysse & Sabrina Kiefer
All rights reserved.
ISBN: 978-1-904027-88-1

Contents

Title Page,
Acknowledgements,
Introduction,
I Idea creation and evaluation,
1 Understanding the fit between opportunities and ideas,
2 Fine-tuning demand-driven ideas and solutions,
3 Shaping applications from knowledge-driven ideas,
II From idea to business proposition,
4 Segmenting your market and using preferred witnesses,
5 Carving out a place in your business environment,
6 Protecting your business ideas from imitation,
7 Choosing entrepreneurial strategies for entering new markets,
III Proof of concept,
8 Using prototyping,
9 Testing the market,
IV Marshalling resources,
10 Setting up venture teams,
11 Seeking sources of capital,
12 Introducing the venture roadmap and basic financials,
Epilogue: the entrepreneurial business case,
Notes,
Index,
Copyright,


CHAPTER 1

UNDERSTANDING THE FIT BETWEEN OPPORTUNITIES AND IDEAS

Fitting opportunities to ideas

New ventures aren't conceived in one sitting. Every new venture starts with a perception of an opportunity and the small seed of an idea. During the entrepreneurial journey that follows, this initial hunch will be investigated and developed, reality-tested, corrected, investigated and developed a bit more, reality-tested again and so on. The process continues until an entrepreneur feels enough certainty about the potential value of the idea to think investing time and money (her own and other people's) in it worthwhile – or else discards it as unfeasible.

Before anything else, your venture will rest on two essential ingredients: the identification of a good opportunity and a solution to exploit that opportunity. This stage of your entrepreneurial journey – the idea stage – introduces you to the early building blocks for finding these two ingredients.

The first thing you'll do on your journey – and the first thing an investor will eventually ask you to do when you come to meet one – is to outline your opportunity and your solution. So we devote two chapters to introducing different ways of finding and assessing opportunities and solutions. This isn't a one-off exercise, however; you'll refine your opportunity definition as you move through the subsequent stages of your journey, exploring all the factors that could help or hinder your business.

Most of this book is about testing, elaborating and modifying your initial idea about your opportunity and your solution. This first section is devoted to making a few early and basic decisions about your idea(what the business might sell, or several variations) and why it may be a sellable business proposition (the opportunity), using information you already have or can obtain fairly easily, mixed with a bit of your intuition. Later sections of the book are devoted to gathering more information to test your early assumptions.

Many aspiring entrepreneurs move straight from this early idea stage into writing a business plan, and will selectively seek out information that backs their original idea. We do not recommend this approach. Like the first draft of a document, your first idea is more of a hypothesis than a reality, and likely to need retuning before it becomes a proposal for a viable business. Stage 1 helps you make your idea clear and concrete enough for you to start i

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