📚 EPR 121: Essentials for New Ventures Study Guide
This study material has been compiled and organized from a lecture audio transcript and a set of example questions for the EPR 121 course. It aims to provide a comprehensive and structured overview of key concepts for new ventures, covering business planning, legal structures, financial management, and team dynamics.
🚀 Introduction to New Venture Essentials
This guide offers an in-depth look at fundamental concepts crucial for new ventures, including business planning, legal frameworks, financial management, and team dynamics. It covers everything from understanding what a business plan entails to interpreting financial statements, the importance of legal agreements, and forming an effective founding team.
📝 1. Business Planning & Market Analysis
1.1. 📚 Definition and Purpose of a Business Plan
A business plan is a written narrative that describes what a new business intends to accomplish and how it intends to accomplish it. ✅ It details the steps, goals, and strategies to turn an idea into reality.
A business plan serves two primary audiences:
- Firm's Employees: Provides a roadmap and direction for internal operations.
- Investors/External Stakeholders: Demonstrates the business's potential and feasibility to attract funding and support.
1.2. 📊 Types of Business Plans
Business plans can vary in length and detail:
- Full Business Plan:
- Typically 25–35 pages long.
- Serves as a "blueprint" for the company's operations, detailing every aspect of the business.
1.3. 💡 Key Principles for Writing a Business Plan
- Conventional Structure: Using a conventional structure is generally recommended.
- Conciseness: Keeping the plan between 25 and 35 pages is often the best approach.
- ⚠️ Mistake to Avoid: Departing from the basic structure to demonstrate creativity is generally considered a mistake.
1.4. 📑 Key Sections of a Business Plan
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Executive Summary:
- Arguably the most important section.
- Often the first (and sometimes only) thing investors read.
- Must present the essence and potential of the business concisely and effectively.
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Market Analysis:
- Should break the industry into segments and focus on a specific target market.
- It's essential to deeply understand market dynamics and target audience needs.
- ⚠️ Avoid: Describing the entire industry without segmentation or focusing solely on internal operations.
-
The Economics of the Business:
- Defines the "logic of how profits are earned."
- Includes the break-even analysis, which is critical for demonstrating financial sustainability.
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Operations Plan:
- Useful to describe the business in terms of "back stage" (internal processes) and "front stage" (customer interaction) activities.
- Clarifies how business processes are managed and how customer interaction occurs.
1.5. 🗣️ Oral Presentation of a Business Plan
- 1️⃣ First Rule: Follow directions, specifically regarding time limits.
- 💡 Tip: Deliver a clear and concise presentation within the allotted time.
- ⚠️ Avoid: Speaking as long as possible to show passion or handing out the full business plan at the start.
1.6. 📈 Pro Forma Financial Projections (Introduction)
- These are projected financial statements for future periods, based on forecasts.
- An integral part of the business plan.
⚖️ 2. Legal Structures & Ethical Practices
2.1. ✅ Establishing a Strong Ethical Culture
- Most Important Action: Founders should lead by example.
- 💡 Insight: Leaders demonstrating ethical values through their own behavior is more effective than just writing a code of conduct or hiring an ethics officer.
2.2. 🤝 Founders' Agreement
- Generally deals with the relative split of equity among the founders.
- Forms the basis of the partnership structure, rather than marketing tactics or logo design.
2.3. 📜 Legal Agreements
- Noncompete Agreement: Prevents an individual from competing against a former employer for a specific period. Helps protect business secrets and customer relationships.
- Nondisclosure Agreement (NDA): (Implied, often paired with noncompete) Protects confidential information.
2.4. 🏛️ Licenses and Permits
- Federal Licenses: Required for certain businesses (e.g., selling alcohol or firearms).
- Business Permits:
- Different industries may require different types of permits.
- New businesses must be registered with the relevant authorities.
- Certain professions may require certification of successful passing of relevant exams.
- ⚠️ False Statement: Business permits are NOT applicable exactly the same in all countries; regulations vary by country and region.
2.5. 🏢 Forms of Business Organization
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Sole Proprietorship:
- Involves one person where the person and the business are essentially the same.
- Simple to establish.
-
General Partnership:
- Primary Disadvantage: All partners are liable for all the partnership's debts and obligations (unlimited personal liability).
-
C Corporation:
- A separate legal entity.
- Major Disadvantage: Subject to double taxation (taxed at both corporate and shareholder levels).
-
Limited Liability Company (LLC):
- Combines the limited liability advantage of a corporation with the tax advantages of a partnership.
- Offers flexibility and protection.
2.6. ✍️ Importance of Written Agreements
- Recommendation: To avoid legal disputes, entrepreneurs should get everything in writing.
- ⚠️ Caution: Relying on verbal agreements or avoiding attorneys can lead to problems in the long run.
💰 3. Financial Management & Projections
3.1. 🎯 Financial Objectives
- Liquidity: A company's ability to meet its short-term obligations. Shows cash flow management and short-term asset handling.
- Profitability: The ability of a business to generate revenue in excess of expenses.
- Efficiency: How productively a firm utilizes its assets.
- Stability: The overall health and long-term viability of the business.
3.2. 📊 Financial Statements
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Income Statement (Profit & Loss Statement):
- Records all revenues and expenses for a given period.
- Shows whether the firm is making a profit or loss.
-
Balance Sheet:
- A snapshot of a company’s assets, liabilities, and owner’s equity at a specific point in time.
-
Statement of Cash Flows:
- Summarizes the changes in a firm's cash position for a specified period.
- Details cash inflows and outflows from operating, investing, and financing activities.
3.3. 📈 Pro Forma Financial Statements
- Definition: Projections for future periods based on forecasts.
- ⚠️ Not: Historical records of past performance or audited statements.
3.4. 🔍 Financial Analysis
- Ratio Analysis: The most practical way to interpret a firm's historical financial statements. It involves calculating various financial ratios to assess performance in depth, rather than just looking at net income or bank balance.
- Industry Norms: Comparing a firm's financial results to industry norms helps determine how it stacks up against competitors, revealing strengths and weaknesses for strategic decisions.
3.5. 🔮 Forecasting
- Sales Forecast: Typically developed first and serves as the basis for most other forecasts (e.g., expense, capital expenditure, personnel forecasts). It determines future revenue expectations.
- Percent-of-Sales Method: Commonly used to forecast cost of sales and other expense items.
🧑🤝🧑 4. Team Building, Governance & Funding Strategies
4.1. 📉 Liability of Newness
- Refers to the fact that new companies often falter because people can't adjust fast enough and the firm lacks a track record. It's a natural challenge for new ventures.
4.2. 👥 Founding Teams
- Prevalence: Studies show that 50% to 70% of new ventures are started by a team rather than a single individual.
- Advantages of a Team: Teams bring more talent, resources, and ideas.
- Heterogeneous Founding Team: Members are diverse in terms of abilities and experiences, offering varied perspectives and expertise.
- Skills Profile: A chart that depicts the most important skills needed for a new venture and where gaps exist.
4.3. 🏛️ Governance
- Board of Directors:
- Has legal responsibility for the firm.
- Formal responsibilities include appointing officers, declaring dividends, and overseeing corporate affairs.
- ⚠️ Not responsible for: Managing day-to-day sales calls.
- Outside Directors: Individuals who are not employed by the firm.
- Board of Advisors:
- Provides nonbinding advice to the firm.
- Individuals might be more willing to serve on a Board of Advisors than a Board of Directors because it requires less time and involves no potential legal liability.
4.4. 👩💻 Support Roles
- Virtual Assistant: A freelancer who provides administrative, technical, or creative assistance to clients remotely.
4.5. 💸 Funding Needs for New Ventures
Most new ventures need to raise money for three primary reasons:
- Cash Flow Challenges: Managing the timing of expenses and revenues.
- Capital Investments: Funding for assets like equipment, property, or technology.
- Lengthy Product Development Cycles: Covering costs during extended development phases.
- ⚠️ Not a reason: To pay high salaries to the founders immediately.
4.6. 💰 Funding Sources & Strategies
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Sweat Equity:
- Represents the value of the time and effort a founder puts into a new venture.
-
Bootstrapping:
- Finding ways to avoid the need for external financing through creativity and cost-cutting.
-
Equity Financing:
- Exchanging partial ownership in a firm for funding.
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Appropriate Funding for High-Risk Ventures:
- For businesses with high risk, uncertain return, and unproven management, the most appropriate funding sources are typically personal funds, friends, family, and bootstrapping.
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Business Angels:
- Individuals who invest their personal capital directly in start-ups.
- Tend to invest earlier in the life of a company compared to venture capitalists.
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Venture Capital Firms:
- Typically come in later stages of a company's life.
- Invest other people's money (from funds) into high-growth potential companies.
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Government Grants:
- Programs like SBIR in the USA or KOSGEB in Türkiye provide cash grants to small businesses for early-stage and development projects.
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Rewards-Based Crowdfunding:
- Allows entrepreneurs to raise money in exchange for some type of amenity or reward (e.g., pre-orders, exclusive products).
4.7. 🎤 Pitching to Investors
- Elevator Speech: Should typically be around 60 seconds long. It's a concise, compelling summary of your business idea.








