Archive for August, 2009

Much of what you read these days about entrepreneurs and ‘hot’, new businesses discusses alternative energy and pharmaceuticals or medical devices.  This makes sense because by definition hot, entrepreneurial businesses should be addressing large, wide open markets and huge problems which only their hot, new product can solve.  Unfortunately the emphasis on these companies overlooks an equally important side to their new technologies…the technology that goes into the materials to make these high tech goods, or the manufacturing processes which must be invented to produce the final products.

 

These advanced materials and manufacturing technologies lie at the heart of many of our hottest new products and offer tremendous opportunities to investors.  They have the advantage of being applicable across many lines of products and aren’t tied into just the one hot new product which may, in the end, fail.

So what’s the message here?   As a creative and energized engineer, chemist or metallurgist, don’t feel left out of the entrepreneurial joy ride…get on board and develop the next process or machine to make tomorrow’s solar cells or magnetic imaging machines.  As an investor, find those enabling technologies in composite materials for wind turbine blades or specialty metals for new batteries.

 

One last message…look for these technologies in Northwest Ohio.  We’ve been inventing new forms of metal, glass and plastic for a century or more.  We also have highly qualified machinery manufacturers who are looking for new problems to solve as our traditional industries have slowed or died out.  You’ll find that many hot, new products are relying on materials and processes made here.

 

Mike Brooks

Entrepreneur in residence

Rocket Ventures

(more…)

Typically the first question most new business owners face when looking for funding or seeking advice is: “Do you have a Business Plan?” So what is a business plan, what should be included in it, why is it important and how much time should be spent on it?

A business plan is a necessary document that will turn your entrepreneurial dream into a commercial success. Additionally, a good plan should be used as an important management tool which will provide a blueprint and “step by step” instructions leading to commercialization and hopefully a profitable business.

When deciding what information should be included in a business plan there are many web sites, libraries and economic development organizations that can provide examples, formats and outlines. However, whether your business is technology based, lifestyle or traditional, there are five essential building blocks that all plans should address:

  1. Product/Service - include information regarding uniqueness, life cycle, quality, competition, benefits and solutions.
  2. Money - How much money is needed to start-up and what kind of working capital will be needed going forward? Where will the money come from, what will it be used for and will you be personally investing?
  3. Management - What is your teams’ personal experience? Do you have good operating, management and human resource skills? Most importantly are you a great salesperson and fundraiser?
  4. Marketing - Do you understand your market niche? Have you done your research on the competition and can you integrate the 4 P’s of marketing (promotion, product, place and price) into a successful launch?
  5. Planning - your business modeling should answer the basic questions of “Who, What, Where, When, Why and How,” and make sure to include your personal goals!

The value of a business plan is that it identifies the essential events that must occur and actions that must be taken in a specific time frame to achieve a specific result. It should also provide a foundation for tracking the progress of your business and allows you to make adjustments or changes to specific operations which will help you maximize your chance of success.

As for how much time should be spent on planning, I will paraphrase what a noted economist, professor and business author once said; “The beauty of not planning is that failure comes as a complete surprise with little or no grief or remorse” In other words there is little or no chance that you will be successful in business without planning.

Dan Slifko
Business Development Manager, Rocket Ventures
slifko@rgp.org