Discussion 6
Feasibility
Analysis: * Is this an idea that can work?
* 4 Main Criteria
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What Is Feasibility Analysis?
Feasibility Analysis
• Feasibility analysis is the process of determining whether a business idea is viable. • It is the preliminary evaluation of a business idea, conducted for the purpose of determining whether the idea is worth pursuing.
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When To Conduct a Feasibility Analysis
• Timing of Feasibility Analysis • The proper time to conduct a feasibility analysis is early in
thinking through the prospects for a new business.
• The thought is to screen ideas before a lot of resources are spent on them.
• Components of a Properly Conducted Feasibility Analysis • A properly conducted feasibility analysis includes four
separate components, as discussed in the following slides.
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Feasibility Analysis
Role of feasibility analysis in developing business ideas.
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Forms of Feasibility Analysis
Product/Service Feasibility
Organizational Feasibility
Industry/Target Market Feasibility
Financial Feasibility
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Outline for a Comprehensive Feasibility Analysis
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Product/Service Feasibility Analysis 1 of 2
Product/Service Feasibility Analysis
Purpose
• Is an assessment of the overall appeal of the product or service being proposed. • Before a prospective firm rushes a new product or service into development, it should be sure that the product or service is what prospective customers want.
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Product/Service Feasibility Analysis 2 of 2
Components of product/service feasibility analysis
Product/Service Desirability
Product/Service Demand
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Product/Service Desirability 1 of 3
• Does it make sense? Is it reasonable? Is it something consumers
will get excited about?
• Does it take advantage of an environmental trend, solve a
problem, or take advantage of a gap in the marketplace?
• Is this a good time to introduce the product or service to the
market?
• Are there any fatal flaws in the product or service’s basic design
or concept?
First, ask the following questions to determine the basic appeal of the product or service.
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Product/Service Desirability 2 of 3
• Second, Administer a Concept Test • A concept statement should be developed. • A concept statement is a one-page description
of a business that is distributed to people who are asked to provide feedback on the potential of the business idea.
• The feedback will hopefully provide the entrepreneur: • A sense of the viability of the product or service
idea. • Suggestions for how the idea can be strengthened
or “tweaked” before proceeding further.
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Product/Service Desirability 3 of 3
New Venture Fitness Drink’s
Concept Statement
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Product/Service Demand 1 of 6
•Product/Service Demand • There are two steps to assessing
product/service demand. • Step 1: Administer a Buying Intentions
Survey (Primary research) • Step 2: Conduct Library, Internet, and
Gumshoe research (Secondary research)
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• Buying Intentions Survey • Is an instrument that is used to gauge
customer interest in a product or service. • It consists of a concept statement or a
similar description of a product or survey with a short survey attached to gauge customer interest.
• Internet sites like free Google Forms or SurveyMonkey make administering a buying intentions survey easy and affordable.
Product/Service Demand 2 of 6
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Product/Service Demand 3 of 6
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Product/Service Demand 4 of 6
• Library, Internet, and Gumshoe Research • The second way to assess the demand for a product or
service is by conducting library, Internet, and gumshoe research.
• Reference librarians can often point you toward resources to help you investigate a business idea, such as industry-specific trade journals and industry reports.
• Internet searches can often yield important information about the potential viability of a product or service idea.
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Product/Service Demand 5 of 6
Gumshoe Research
Explanation
• A gumshoe is a detective or an investigator that scrounges around for information or clues wherever they can be found. • Be a gumshoe. Ask people what they think about your product or service idea. If your idea is to sell educational toys, spend a week volunteering at a day care center and watch how children interact with toys.
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Product/Service Demand 6 of 6
• One of the most effective things an entrepreneur can do to conduct a thorough product/service feasibility analysis is to hit the streets and talk to potential customers.
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Industry/Target Market Feasibility Analysis 1 of 2
Industry/Target Market Feasibility Analysis
Purpose
• Is an assessment of the overall appeal of the industry and the target market for the proposed business. • An industry is a group of firms producing a similar product or service. • A firm’s target market is the limited portion of the industry it plans to go after.
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Industry/Target Market Feasibility Analysis 2 of 2
Components of industry/target market feasibility analysis
Industry Attractiveness Target Market Attractiveness
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Industry Attractiveness 1 of 2
• Industry Attractiveness • Industries vary in terms of their overall attractiveness. • In general, the most attractive industries have the
characteristics depicted on the next slide. • Particularly important—the degree to which
environmental and business trends are moving in favor rather than against the industry.
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Industry Attractiveness 2 of 2
• Are young rather than old
• Are early rather than late in their life cycle
• Are fragmented rather than concentrated
• Are growing rather than shrinking
• Are selling products and services that customers “must have” rather than “want to have”
• Are not crowded
• Have high rather than low operating margins
• Are not highly dependent on the historically low price of key raw materials
Characteristics of Attractive Industries
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Target Market Attractiveness
•Target Market Attractiveness • The challenge in identifying an attractive target market
is to find a market that’s large enough for the proposed business but is yet small enough to avoid attracting larger competitors.
• Assessing the attractiveness of a target market is tougher than an entire industry.
• Often, considerable ingenuity must be employed to find information to assess the attractiveness of a specific target market.
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Organizational Feasibility Analysis 1 of 2
Organizational Feasibility Analysis
Purpose
• Is conducted to determine whether a proposed business has sufficient management expertise, organizational competence, and resources to successfully launch a business. • Focuses on non-financial resources.
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Organizational Feasibility Analysis 2 of 2
Components of organizational feasibility analysis
Management Prowess Resource Sufficiency
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Management Prowess
• Management Prowess • A proposed business should candidly evaluate the prowess,
or ability, of its management team to satisfy itself that management has the requisite passion and expertise to launch the venture.
• Two of the most important factors in this area are: • The passion that the sole entrepreneur or the founding team has for
the business idea. • The extent to which the sole entrepreneur or the founding team
understands the markets in which the firm will participate.
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Resource Sufficiency 1 of 2
• Resource Sufficiency • This topic pertains to an assessment of
whether an entrepreneur has sufficient resources to launch the proposed venture.
• To test resource sufficiency, a firm should list the 6 to 12 most critical nonfinancial resources that will be needed to move the business idea forward successfully. • If critical resources are not available in certain
areas, it may be impractical to proceed with the business idea.
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Resource Sufficiency 2 of 2
Examples of nonfinancial resources that may be critical to the successful launch of a new business
• Affordable office space
• Lab space, manufacturing space, or space to launch a service business
• Availability of contract manufacturers or service providers
• Key management employees (now and in the future)
• Key support personnel (now and in the future)
• Ability to obtain intellectual property protection
• Ability to form favorable business partnerships
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Financial Feasibility Analysis 1 of 2
Financial Feasibility Analysis
Purpose
• Is the final component of a comprehensive feasibility analysis. • A preliminary financial assessment is sufficient.
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Financial Feasibility Analysis 2 of 2
Components of financial feasibility analysis
Total Start-Up Cash Needed
Financial Performance of Similar Businesses
Overall Financial Attractiveness of the
Proposed Venture
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Total Start-Up Cash Needed
• Total Start-Up Cash Needed • The first issue refers to the total cash needed to prepare the
business to make its first sale.
• An actual budget should be prepared that lists all the anticipated capital purchases and operating expenses needed to generate the first $1 in revenues.
• The point of this exercise is to determine if the proposed venture is realistic given the total start-up cash needed.
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Financial Performance of Similar Businesses
• Financial Performance of Similar Businesses • Estimate the proposed start-up’s financial performance
by comparing it to similar, already established businesses.
• There are several ways to doing this, all of which involve a little ethical detective work. • First, there are many reports available, some for free and
some that require a fee, offering detailed industry trend analysis and reports on thousands of individual firms.
• Second, simple observational research may be needed. For example, the owners of New Venture Fitness Drinks could estimate their sales by tracking the number of people who patronize similar restaurants and estimating the average amount each customer spends.
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Overall Financial Attractiveness of the Proposed Venture 1 of 2
• Overall Financial Attractiveness of the Proposed Investment • A number of other financial factors are associated with
promising business start-ups.
• In the feasibility analysis stage, the extent to which a business opportunity is positive relative to each factor is based on an estimate rather than actual performance.
• The table on the next slide lists the factors that pertain to the overall attractiveness of the financial feasibility of the business idea.
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Overall Financial Attractiveness of the Proposed Venture 2 of 2
Financial Factors Associated With Promising Business
Opportunities
• Steady and rapid growth in sales during the first 5 to 7 years in a clearly
defined market niche
• High percentage of recurring revenue—meaning that once a firm wins a
client, the client will provide recurring sources of revenue
• Ability to forecast income and expenses with a reasonable degree of
certainty
• Internally generated funds to finance and sustain growth
• Availability of an exit opportunity for investors to convert equity to cash
- Slide 1: Feasibility Analysis: * Is this an idea that can work? * 4 Main Criteria
- Slide 2: What Is Feasibility Analysis?
- Slide 3: When To Conduct a Feasibility Analysis
- Slide 4: Feasibility Analysis
- Slide 5: Forms of Feasibility Analysis
- Slide 6: Outline for a Comprehensive Feasibility Analysis
- Slide 7: Product/Service Feasibility Analysis 1 of 2
- Slide 8: Product/Service Feasibility Analysis 2 of 2
- Slide 9: Product/Service Desirability 1 of 3
- Slide 10: Product/Service Desirability 2 of 3
- Slide 11: Product/Service Desirability 3 of 3
- Slide 12: Product/Service Demand 1 of 6
- Slide 13: Product/Service Demand 2 of 6
- Slide 14: Product/Service Demand 3 of 6
- Slide 15: Product/Service Demand 4 of 6
- Slide 16: Product/Service Demand 5 of 6
- Slide 17: Product/Service Demand 6 of 6
- Slide 18: Industry/Target Market Feasibility Analysis 1 of 2
- Slide 19: Industry/Target Market Feasibility Analysis 2 of 2
- Slide 20: Industry Attractiveness 1 of 2
- Slide 21: Industry Attractiveness 2 of 2
- Slide 22: Target Market Attractiveness
- Slide 23: Organizational Feasibility Analysis 1 of 2
- Slide 24: Organizational Feasibility Analysis 2 of 2
- Slide 25: Management Prowess
- Slide 26: Resource Sufficiency 1 of 2
- Slide 27: Resource Sufficiency 2 of 2
- Slide 28: Financial Feasibility Analysis 1 of 2
- Slide 29: Financial Feasibility Analysis 2 of 2
- Slide 30: Total Start-Up Cash Needed
- Slide 31: Financial Performance of Similar Businesses
- Slide 32: Overall Financial Attractiveness of the Proposed Venture 1 of 2
- Slide 33: Overall Financial Attractiveness of the Proposed Venture 2 of 2