Entrepreneurship Uncovering Opportunities: Understanding Entrepreneurial Opportunities and Industry Analysis 2.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Market Analysis Learning Unit 3.
Advertisements

Technology Management Activities and Tools
Entrepreneurial Strategy: Generating and Exploiting New Entries
The Main Idea To ensure success, entrepreneurs need to understand the industry and the market.   They should define areas of analysis and conduct effective.
CHAPTER 13 ENTREPRENEURIAL IMPLICATIONS FOR STRATEGY
SM0374 Strategic Management and Leadership
©2009 Prentice Hall 10-1 MGMT 738 Management of Technology Lecture 5 Capturing Value from Innovation.
Topic 6 Industry Environments
The Environment Macro-environment Micro-environment
Jeopardy! Exam Review Questions Chapters ____________ is an asset, competency, skill or knowledge that is controlled and leveraged by a corporation.
Criteria for Public Support of Common Industry Initiatives (or) How to create/avoid Industrial Policy.
Strategic Management: Concepts and Cases
Entrepreneurship Is small business for you?. It’s an interesting time to be in small business The number of small businesses is growing (23 mill) The.
2 Entrepreneurship Entrepreneurial Opportunities: Their Origins, Forms, and Suitability for New Ventures.
Chapter 6 Competitive Strategy and the Industry Environment.
Entrepreneurship Intellectual Property: Protecting Your Ideas 11.
Competing for Advantage
SWOT ANALYSIS Rozet POLITI
The Strategic Management Process
©2004 by South-Western/Thomson Learning 1 Strategic Entrepreneurship Robert E. Hoskisson Michael A. Hitt R. Duane Ireland Chapter 12.
Diversification Strategy Introduction: The Basic Issues The Trend over Time Motives for Diversification - Growth and Risk Reduction - Shareholder Value:
Part 2 PowerPoint Presentation by Charlie Cook Copyright © 2003 South-Western College Publishing. All rights reserved. All rights reserved. Strategies.
Copyright © 2008 by Nelson, a division of Thomson Canada Limited ENTREPRENEURSHIP A PROCESS PERSPECTIVE Robert A. Baron Scott A. Shane A. Rebecca Reuber.
Management 538: Teams and Projects
Competing For Advantage Part IV – Monitoring and Creating Entrepreneurial Opportunities Chapter 12 – Strategic Entrepreneurship.
Technology Ventures: From Idea to OpportunityChapter 1: Introduction ENT An introduction From idea to enterprise.
What is the average size of a company in the industry?
©2003 Southwestern Publishing Company 1 Strategic Entrepreneurship Michael A. Hitt R. Duane Ireland Robert E. Hoskisson Chapter 13.
Small business management and Entrepreneurship
Chapter 5 Business-level Strategies Learning Objectives To understand: generic competitive strategies and the way they are executed the elements.
Strategic Entrepreneurship
Lecture No: 11 ENTREPRENEURSHIP Malik Jawad Saboor Resource Person:
The Strategic Management Process
©2004 by South-Western/Thomson Learning 1 The External Environment: Opportunities, Threats, Industry Competition, and Competitor Analysis Robert E. Hoskisson.
Social Biz Nuts and Bolts Environment Analysis General / External / Internal.
Do entrepreneurs cause entrepreneurship?. ENTREPRENEURship Market opportunities, technology changes, etc. play roles in entrepreneurship The entrepreneur.
Identifying and analyzing opportunities. Learning objectives To know the relation between opportunity and entrepreneurship What are the sources of opportunity.
Is the industry advertising intensive?. Objectives Examine industry structure, with a focus on advertising intensity, in the context of entrepreneurial.
Market Analysis Glencoe Entrepreneurship: Building a Business Doing Market Research Industry and Market Analysis 6.1 Section 6.2 Section 6 6.
What technical advancements are emerging?. Objectives Examine technical advancements in the context of macroeconomic change Explore the impact of technical.
Are the demand conditions in your industry favorable?
Building the Opportunity Analysis Canvas PART 2 OF 3
©2004 by South-Western/Thomson Learning 1 The External Environment: Opportunities, Threats, Industry Competition, and Competitor Analysis Robert E. Hoskisson.
1 The External Environment: Opportunities, Threats, Industry Competition, and Competitor Analysis Chapter 3.
©2004 by South-Western/Thomson Learning 1 Strategic Entrepreneurship Robert E. Hoskisson Michael A. Hitt R. Duane Ireland Chapter 12.
Michigan State University Global Online. The Structural Analysis of Industries Forces that Determine Industry Profitability Rivalry among current competitors.
©2004 by South-Western/Thomson Learning 1 Strategic Entrepreneurship Robert E. Hoskisson Michael A. Hitt R. Duane Ireland Chapter 12.
What is the lifecycle stage of your industry?. Objectives Examine lifecycle stages in the context of entrepreneurial industry status Explore the impact.
INTRODUCTION TO INNOVATION MANAGEMENT. What is innovation management? The role of innovation What is innovation (definitions, typologies of innovation)
SWOT Analysis. By the end of this session: 1. Everybody will be able to explain each element of the SWOT matrix and complete one on your chosen organisation.
ENTREPRENEURSHIP DEVELOPMENT Strategic Management and the Entrepreneur
Recognizing Opportunities & Generating Ideas
Recognizing Opportunities & Generating Ideas Chapter 2.
Shad Valley Entrepreneurship Business Strategy This presentation contains material adapted from Hill, C. & Jones, G. (2004). Strategic Management Theory:
Building the Opportunity Analysis Canvas PART 3 OF 3
Operational Objectives
MGT301 Principles of Marketing
Introduction to Strategy
Michael Porter’s Five Forces Model.
Strategic Management/ Business Policy
Chapter 6 Business-Level Strategy and the Industry Environment
INDUSTRY ANALYSIS.
International Strategy
STRATEGIC MANAGEMENT EXTERNAL ENVIRONMENT.
Strategic Management/ Business Policy
Chapter 6 Business-Level Strategy and the Industry Environment
Strategic Management and Strategic Competitiveness
Entrepreneurship and Negotiation
Social Entrepreneurship in the Dominican Republic.
Presentation transcript:

Entrepreneurship Uncovering Opportunities: Understanding Entrepreneurial Opportunities and Industry Analysis 2

2-2 “In great affairs we ought to apply ourselves less to creating chances than to profiting from those that offer.” --La Rouchefoucauld, Maxims, 1665

2-3 Better Opportunities Some industries are more favorable to new firms than others Some types of opportunities are better than others for new firms to pursue

2-4 Changes Make It Possible… To make new products To develop new production processes To organize in new ways To open up new markets To use new raw materials

2-5 Opportunities from Information Entrepreneurial opportunities exist because people have different information. (Israel Kirzner, NYU) Different information leads to different decisions. Superior information leads to better decisions.

2-6 Opportunities from Change Truly valuable entrepreneurial opportunities come from an external change that either Makes it possible to do things that had not been done before. Makes it possible to do something in a more valuable way. (Josef Schumpeter)

2-7 Change Leads to Potential New technology Political and regulatory shifts Social and demographic change

2-8 Technological Change Makes it possible for people to do things in new and more productive ways. Larger technological changes are a greater source of opportunity.

2-9 Political and Regulatory Change Makes it possible to develop business ideas to use resources in new ways that are either more productive, or that redistribute wealth from one person to another.

2-10 Opportunities from Political and Regulatory Change Deregulation Regulations that support particular types of business activities Regulations that increase demand for particular activities or subsidize firms that undertake them

2-11 Social and Demographic Change Alters demand for products and services Makes it possible to generate solutions to customer needs that are more productive than those currently available

2-12 New Businesses Entrepreneurs who create new businesses primarily focus on New products and services New markets

2-13 New vs. Established Firms Entrepreneurs founding new firms are usually the ones to introduce new products and services. Established firms are usually the ones to introduce new production processes and ways of organizing.

2-14 Success of New Firms Industry differences influencing new firm success: Knowledge conditions Demand conditions Industry lifecycles Industry structure

2-15 Knowledge Conditions New firms do better in: Industries that have greater R&D intensity Industries in which public sector organizations produce most of the new technology Industries in which small firms are the better innovators

2-16 Demand Conditions New firms do better in: Larger markets Rapidly growing markets More heavily segmented markets

2-17 Industry Life Cycles New firms do better When industries are young Before a dominant design emerges

2-18 Industry Structure New firms perform more poorly in Capital-intensive industries Advertising-intensive industries Concentrated industries (versus fragmented industries) Industries composed of mostly large firms

2-19 Advantages of Established Firms The learning curve Established reputation Positive cash flow Economies of scale Complementary assets

2-20 Advantages for New Firms Competence destroying change Discrete products and services Ideas embedded in human capital

2-21 Competence Destroying Change Large Companies Locked into old ways of thinking Must cannibalize existing business Hindered by established routines Must seek to satisfy existing customers Small Companies Can think in new ways No concerns with existing business Can form new routines easily No existing customer base to satisfy