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AUGUST 23, 2010 Objective: Students will learn about the entrepreneurial startup process.

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Presentation on theme: "AUGUST 23, 2010 Objective: Students will learn about the entrepreneurial startup process."— Presentation transcript:

1 AUGUST 23, 2010 Objective: Students will learn about the entrepreneurial startup process.

2 For Seniors: Pair up with a Senior and discuss: The difference between a Good and a Service What are the four Factors of Production? What is Scarcity? What are the two parts to Demand? Elastic Goods versus Inelastic Goods Everyone’s Back

3 My website is working!!!  http://www.ops.org/high/burke/STAFF/FacultyNZ/ NieburNichole/tabid/647/Default.aspx http://www.ops.org/high/burke/STAFF/FacultyNZ/ NieburNichole/tabid/647/Default.aspx

4  Surplus – Too much supply for demand  Shortage – Too much demand for supply  Equilibrium – The point where consumers buy all of a product, leaving neither a surplus or a shortage. Suppy

5 The Entrepreneurial Process 1. The entrepreneur 2. The environment 3. The opportunity 4. Start-up resources 5. The new venture organization

6 The Entrepreneur  Sees the opportunity  Gathers the resources to take advantage of the opportunity  Creates a company to execute that opportunity

7 The Environment All those variables NOT controlled by the entrepreneur 1. The nature of the environment (uncertain, fast, changing, stable, conservative…) 2. Availability of resources (skilled labor, start-up capital…) 3. Realized value (favorable taxes, good market, supportive government policies) 4. Incentives (enterprise zones)

8 The Opportunity  An idea of commercial value http://www.thesocialnetwork-movie.com/

9 Start-up Resources May include:  Skilled labor  Management Expertise  Legal and financial advise  Location  Equipment  Customers

10 Organization  The last step in the entrepreneurial process is to formally organize the business and open for operations.

11 How many new businesses fail?  Talk to your neighbor… what percentage of new businesses do you think fail within 10 years?  According to Dun & Bradstreet 69.7% of new businesses are still in business 10 years later.

12 Ways a Business May Look Like a Failure  Discontinuance – a business operating under a new name or a business that has been purposely discontinued to start a new one.  Organization change – example: switching from sole proprietorship to a corporation.


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