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Corporate Entrepreneurship I MBAX 6100 Entrepreneurship & Small Business Management Frank Moyes Leeds College of Business University of Colorado Boulder, Colorado
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Corporate Entrepreneurship I Corporate Entrepreneurship Revised Schedule Week 5 Obstacles to corporate entrepreneurship Week 6 You as an Intrapreneur Week 7 Innovation in corporations Switch Week 6 & Week 7 Topics & Assignments
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Corporate Entrepreneurship I Today’s Agenda Corporate Entrepreneurship Is this a good market? Entrepreneurial market research –Gene Hayworth
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Corporate Entrepreneurship I Next Week’s Schedule Corporate Entrepreneurship – Creativity & Innovation Case: Emerging Business Opportunities at IBM Read Bringing Silicon Valley Inside Feasibility: M-4 Is This a Good Industry? Read a magazine you would never, ever read & identify a business opportunity Entrepreneurship Interview Hand in paper Be ready to discuss in class
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Corporate Entrepreneurship I What is Corporate Entrepreneurship? “Formal or informal activities aimed at creating new businesses in established companies through product and process innovations and market developments.” Zahra “…centers on reenergizing and enhancing the firm’s ability to acquire innovative skills and capabilities.” Morris & Kuratko “Cost-effective innovation or intrapreneurship” Pinchot
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Corporate Entrepreneurship I How Do Corporations Deal With Uncertainty? Thorough analysis Approval levels Must follow the plan once approved Short term time horizon Establish controls – HR, accounting, legal, marketing Rules
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Corporate Entrepreneurship I Why Do Companies Need Rules? Consistent actions Guide behavior Help make decisions Treat employees fairly Provide consistent quality & service
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Corporate Entrepreneurship I Obstacles to Corporate Entrepreneurship Systems Organization structures Policies & Procedures Strategic directions People Culture Morris & Kuratko, Corporate Entrepreneurship
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Corporate Entrepreneurship I Systems Obstacles? Reward & evaluation systems Rigid planning & budgeting systems Don’t like changes or surprises Inflexible budgeting systems Arbitrary cost allocation systems Morris & Kuratko, Corporate Entrepreneurship
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Corporate Entrepreneurship I Organizational Obstacles? Too many hierarchical levels Responsibility w/o authority Top down management Restricted communication channels Lack of accountability Lack of commitment Morris & Kuratko, Corporate Entrepreneurship
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Corporate Entrepreneurship I Policies & Procedures Obstacles? Long, complex approval cycles Extensive documentation requirements Corporate requirements Accounting HR Brand use SOX Traditional evaluation techniques don’t work (ROI, market share, quick payback)? Management reporting requirements Morris & Kuratko, Corporate Entrepreneurship
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Corporate Entrepreneurship I Strategic Direction Obstacles? Lack of commitment from senior execs No innovation goals No strategy for E No vision No E role models at top Instincts are to protect existing businesses Morris & Kuratko, Corporate Entrepreneurship
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Corporate Entrepreneurship I People Obstacles? Definition of success: promotion every 3 years, corner office, corporate kite Fear of failure/risk taking Human nature: resistance to change, turf protection, complacency Skills Inappropriate skills/talents Entrepreneurial ventures attract mavericks & risk takers Morris & Kuratko, Corporate Entrepreneurship
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Corporate Entrepreneurship I Culture Obstacles? Ill-defined values No consensus on priorities Experimentation not encouraged Values that conflict with E requirements Morris & Kuratko, Corporate Entrepreneurship
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Corporate Entrepreneurship I Personal Obstacles? Too busy with current job Fear of failure Managerial skills needed Selling skills Financial dynamics Style of management Old dog who can’t learn new tricks Political savvy Sense of urgency Morris & Kuratko, Corporate Entrepreneurship
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Corporate Entrepreneurship I What is the Problem?
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Corporate Entrepreneurship I Definitions of an Entrepreneur “Entrepreneurs are societies rejects, instead of becoming hobos, criminals or professors, the start their own business.” Thereau “Traits of entrepreneurs are closest to juvenile delinquents.” “Progress depends upon unreasonable men.” GB Shaw “If I’m in control, I’m probably going to slow.” Mario Andretti “Road less traveled”, Robert Frost: “If you ain’t makin’ waves, you ain’t kickin’ hard enough.”
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Corporate Entrepreneurship I Entrepreneurs Are Opportunity driven, which means Understands competition Understands market: size, trends, accessibility Understand customers through direct contact Tolerance for ambiguity Locus on control Take risks Creative Impatient Not tied to conventional approach
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Corporate Entrepreneurship I Entrepreneurial Ventures Good At Focus all resources & time on creating a successful venture Trial & error (ready, fire, aim) Quick decisions Using OPR’s Instant communications Recruiting & motivating world-class employees
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How Start-up Actually Happens Inspiration Goals Plan Fooling Around Doing Plans Mistakes Failure Goals Some Other Action Plan Action Goals Inspiration Success Pinchot & Pellman, Intrapreneurship in Action
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Corporate Entrepreneurship I Differences Between Start-up & Corporate Entrepreneurs Entrepreneur takes the risk Entrepreneur owns concept Unlimited rewards One error may mean failure Independence of entrepreneur Experimentation & flexibility Quick decision making Resource limitations Corporation assumes risk Corporation owns; no equity Clear limits More room for errors Interdependence of entrepreneur Rules, procedures, bureaucracy Long approval cycles Access to finances, R&D, sales force, distribution channels Start-up Corporate
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Corporate Entrepreneurship I Similarities Between Start-up & Corporate Entrepreneurs Opportunity recognition with a defined window Driven by passionate individual who uses a team to commercialize a concept Encounter resistance & obstacles requiring persuasiveness Must convince people to “invest” Leverage resources Ambiguity
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Corporate Entrepreneurship I How Can Corporations Be Intrapreneurial?
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Corporate Entrepreneurship I Conclusion – Challenges to Intrapreneurship How encourage experimentation How treat failure Types of people who work well in large organizations How establish effective reward systems Definition of success - corner office & corporate kite Traditional evaluation techniques don’t work (ROI, market share, quick payback)? Instincts are to protect existing businesses Is patient capital possible? Phil Knight “Took 18 years to be an overnight success.”
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Corporate Entrepreneurship I Building Breakthrough Businesses Within Established Organizations Emphasis is on execution Strategic experiments are highest risk and return Require unique approach – Forgetting, Borrowing & Learning Govindarajan & Trimble, HBR, “Building Breakthrough Businesses Within Established Organizations”
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Corporate Entrepreneurship I Forgetting Forget core business model Changing behavior – institutional memory Hiring, compensation, status, manufacturing, sales, marketing, R&D, new product development milestone driven, purchasing (supply chain) Planning Falling short was perceived failure Informed estimates Govindarajan & Trimble, HBR, “Building Breakthrough Businesses Within Established Organizations”
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Corporate Entrepreneurship I Borrowing I Complete separation not practical, nor desirable. Resources are too valuable NYTD needed branded content & access to exist Times advertisers Objective - Gain competitive advantage Not to get cost reduction Avoid IT & HR links
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Corporate Entrepreneurship I Borrowing II Requires proactive senior management Manage the interactions – we vs. them Performance review stressed collaboration, willingness to cooperate Make it painless to core. Replenish resources Set transfer price high enough to make it a priority
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Corporate Entrepreneurship I Learning I Strategic experiments Must have a structured learning process to reduce uncertainty Make mistakes early Evaluate leader on ability to learn & make good decisions
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Corporate Entrepreneurship I Learning II Lean to predict outcomes By analyzing the disparities between forecast and outcome Frequent, candid, open, fast Predictions can’t become too rigid Aggressive investment, followed by abandonment Guardrail to guardrail decision making Plans should be easy to revise Avoid lots of detail
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Corporate Entrepreneurship I Conclusions: Building Breakthrough Businesses Strategic experiments are highest risk and return Emphasis is on execution Require unique approach – Forgetting, Borrowing & Learning Commitment & active involvement of top management Govindarajan & Trimble, HBR, “Building Breakthrough Businesses Within Established Organizations”
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