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Semelhante a Defining the opportunity 2013 (20)
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Defining the opportunity 2013
- 2. Broadly, business ideas have two sources:
1. ”Demand-Pull Idea” based on an observed market
opportunity
2. ”Knowledge-Push Idea” based on a new technology or
capability
© Imperial College Business School
The origins of a business idea
- 3. • An entrepreneur spots a problem that is currently
unsolved. It could be:
• a problem encountered in personal experience
• encountered through friends’ or relatives’ experiences
• Observed in the news or in current trends
...Often referred to as ‘customer pain’ or an unmet demand
• The entrepreneur studies the reasons behind the problem
then conceives and develops a product/service to solve it.
• The solution might incorporate technology, but the
technology solution is created and tailored specifically for
the problem.
© Imperial College Business School
1. Demand-Pull Idea
- 4. • A scientist/inventor makes a new discovery or develops a
new technical capability, which could have many possible
applications
Also known as a ‘platform technology’
• She then needs to identify a suitable commercial
application
Find the most compelling industry/market likely to need or adopt
the new technology at an early date – find a problem to solve!
• And develop the raw technology further so it can deliver
the applications envisioned
develop for “Market readiness”
© Imperial College Business School
2. Knowledge-Push Idea
- 5. • Once the technology is sufficiently developed, the
inventor/entrepreneur start-up can either:
1. Manufacture its own products using the technology, and sell
them to customers
2. License the protected tech to other companies, which will
develop and sell their own products using the technology
OR
3. Sell the start-up company, with its Intellectual Property and its
highly specialised managers and staff (‘human capital’), to
another (usually larger) company
© Imperial College Business School
...Knowledge-Push, continued
- 6. Demand-pull ideas usually go into the Market for Products
Make products/services and sell directly to customers
Knowledge-push ideas may end up in either
The Market for products (option 1 on previous slide)
Or the Market for Technology (options 2 and 3, previous
slide)
© Imperial College Business School
Looking ahead: Market for Products or
Technology
- 7. Entrepreneur Tom Allason noticed that courier services are
tremendously unreliable and inefficient.
After studying the problem and its causes, he got the idea to develop a
software system that could
track the progress and whereabouts of each courier using GPS, thus
assigning delivery jobs to couriers intelligently
Reduce operating overheads by using a web interface with the customer,
employing less call centre staff and paying a better wage to bike couriers
He found a logistics expert who could plan and supervise the building of
this software and founded eCourier.co.uk
Further observations about ‘customer pain’ led to a second start-up,
Shutl. (full story in Ch. 1 of The Smart Entrepreneur)
© Imperial College Business School
Demand-pull example: eCourier.com
- 8. Prof. Colin Caro of Imperial College discovered that blood vessels
are helically shaped, helping blood to flow more efficiently by
swirling, avoiding stagnation or slowdown
This discovery could lead to several ‘Biomimicry’ applications in
situations where fluid flow is important, such as
• Medical stents
• Oil and gas industry, risers, pipelines, etc.
Two companies were formed:
– Veryan Medical – designs and develops stents
– Heliswirl – develops engineering solutions to increase fluid flow
efficiency for industrial processes, increase yield and reduce cost.
(Full story in Ch. 1 of The Smart Entrepreneur)
© Imperial College Business School
Knowledge-push example
- 9. If you have a demand-pull idea
Go to ‘Idea generation and evaluation’ exercise in the
IE&D Toolbox
• benchmark your idea against other solutions
• Improve your idea
If you have a knowledge-push idea
Go to the ‘Technology/Application Matrix’ in the IE&D Toolbox
• Compare and evaluate commercial applications
Afterwards you can further reality-test your assumptions and
conclusions using Entrepreneurial Market Research and Value
Chain/Value Network analysis.
© Imperial College Business School
Suggested next steps...
- 10. © Imperial College Business School
Two possible journeys...
Your Idea/Project
Did you start with a problem or a technology/capability?
Idea Generation and evaluation Technology/Application matrix
Entrepreneurial Market Research
Value Chain/Network analysis
Knowledge push caseDemand-pull case
Evaluate, improve Evaluate, choose
Reality -test
Reconsider? Reconsider?
- 11. Clarysse, B. and Kiefer, S., 2011. The Smart Entrepreneur. London: Elliot &
Thompson, Ch. 1.
© Imperial College Business School
Further reading