1 / 17

E102 Lecture 2 Introduction (continued)

E102 Lecture 2 Introduction (continued). Jan 06, 2011. Today. More Introductory Comments Guest Speaker Fred Farina Guest Introduction Kristin Buxton Look again at ideas Time runs out (tomorrow 9:00AM) for choice of Ideas. Event Announcement.

tracy
Download Presentation

E102 Lecture 2 Introduction (continued)

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. E102 Lecture 2 Introduction (continued) Jan 06, 2011

  2. Today • More Introductory Comments • Guest Speaker Fred Farina • Guest Introduction Kristin Buxton • Look again at ideas • Time runs out (tomorrow 9:00AM) for choice of Ideas

  3. Event Announcement • Stanford/Princeton national entrepreneurship conference April 7-10 • A Bootcamp • Stanford • all-expenses-paid • brings together students with founders, entrepreneurs, and venture capitalists for an intensive learning experience.

  4. Applications close Feb 1, 2011 • Applicants will be evaluated • on idea • Student entrepreneurial potential • Event will feature  • small-group workshops • participants will competitively present business ideas • ebootcamp@bases.stanford.edu.  Apply at bases.stanford.edu/e-bootcamp!

  5. Grading HW presentations 20% Midterm presentation 10% Midterm paper (5 pages) 10% Criteria 1. Depth of market research- especially primary research 2. Quality of understanding of the problem Quality of Final presentation 15% Quality of Final paper (20 pages) 25% Criteria: 1. Convincing argument (logic, self consistency, flow) 2. Originality of thought 3. Depth of Understanding Class contribution 20% 1. Prepared, show up, volunteer opinions, extra credit “learnings”, attends TCA, Caltech-MIT enterprise forum, etc. 2. Individual differentiator (all other grades above are as a team)

  6. Grading • Extra credit for Individual: A 10 minute presentation on “New Learnings” At your volition, if you come across a subject of relevant entrepreneurial business interest to the class, you can research it and apply to the instructor to present it. The extra credit will be 0-5% depending on quality of insight.

  7. Technology Push Vs Market pull Caltech spin-out example Technology Push Market A Market B Market C Consumer need example Market A Pull Technology A Technology B Technology C Market A

  8. Types of ideas • An IP protected “cool technology” • “Technical Barrier” areas such as • Energy • Batteries, more efficient turbines, solar power) • Energy efficient devices • Information • Right data at the right time to the right person • A product area you feel passionate about • A product you can learn from

  9. Funding • Not necessary to be an Angel or VC idea as long as it can be self-funded. • But what if you want some outside investment? • What works . . .

  10. Funding • Not necessary to be an Angel or VC idea as long as it can be self-funded. • But what if you want some outside investment? • What works . . . • And what doesn’t work

  11. VC: “Thanks, but don’t call me- I’ll call you. . .” • An idea which affords you no competitive advantage and no barrier to entry from competition • Something that is “nice to have” rather than something which addresses a real market pain • An idea which requires a large infrastructure as a core competence • Something which is a “feature” on a present product • Something which attacks an entrenched competitor

  12. VC: “Great idea- but not in our space. . .” • Something which requires a very large Capital Outlay • Something where it is very hard to prove the business model quickly • Something where the investment cannot be returned in <5-7 years • Something where there is no “path to profitability”

  13. VC: “What did you say your name was?” • Something which is unmanufacturable using current technology • Something where you are only 2X better than current product • Something where you say your unproven idea is worth 5 million dollars • Something which says that you will be successful in China if only you got 1% of the market • Etc, etc.

  14. Final take-away thoughts The biggest barriers to building a successful technology-based business are

  15. Final take-away thoughts The biggest barriers to building a successful technology-based business are Poor Management

  16. Final take-away thoughts The biggest barriers to building a successful technology-based business are Poor Management Poor Marketing

  17. Final Final take-away thoughts . Success is the ability to go from failure to failure with no loss of enthusiasm -Winston Churchill

More Related