The
"Defendable Swag"
from Christian Buckley of Red Hill Partners
at http://www.RedHillPartners.com
There is a fundamental flaw in the thinking process of many
entrepreneurs out there in the midst of building their companies
and seeking angel or venture capitalist investment: simply
put, their market projections cannot be defended. The total
available market (TAM), around which the typical entrepreneur
plans to build their pro forma business model, is often defined
by figures pulled from some random analyst report off the
Internet. Many times, the research performed by an entrepreneur
is nothing more than an evening of cutting and pasting data
culled from the factoid-enriched information superhighway.
So maybe you’ve read through a number of presentations,
possibly talked to some domain experts in the industry, or
even conducted your own field study to determine the size
and depth of the opportunity.
Most don’t go to this extent. In school, it was called
plagiarism, and yet many entrepreneurs are guilty of this
same practice.
But what if there are no clearly defined market boundaries?
Where do you find the data you need? What if no analyst has
invested the time to research your new and not yet mainstream
field of technology? What do you do if all the available information
you find online and through the major research firms is vague,
with wildly varying estimates, and is, in effect, useless
for your planning purposes? What then? How can you possibly
construct a reasonably sound financial model capable of resisting
the scrutiny of a potential investor?
Definition: The Software Modeling Approach
In my twelve-plus years working in technology and writing
on business and management best practices, I have often used
software modeling as an analogy of how entrepreneurs and companies
should approach their business problems. The fundamental problem
with most business planning – and market sizing, specifically
– is that the underlying business model and the components
of the “system” are ill defined and not truly
understood. In parallel, a problem among software engineers
is the urge (for some, arrogance) to code before properly
outlining the problem and potential solutions. But how often
is this same mistake made in business? Quite often, in fact.
Do you understand your product or service? What I mean is,
do you truly understand your market, your target customer,
and your competition? Before you answer ‘yes’
consider this technique:
A (simplified) modeling approach is to outline what you know
about your offerings, and to develop use cases that help you
define each of your offerings as an individual product, and
to define their uses and constraints. Try to fully document
the features, functions, and constraints of each offering.
Once you have this outlined, you can then begin to develop
scenarios for these use cases, which will help you to visualize
how your customers will use your offerings. Scenarios might
describe uses of a single offering, or combinations of two
or more offerings. The goal is to model out every conceivable
use for your offerings. These scenarios can help you to define
or create new uses, or to identify customer groups not considered
in your original plans. The trick is to be creative, to “think
outside of the box,” and to let the ideas flow freely,
abstracting your scenarios enough that you do not blind yourself
from new uses, new user groups, or new industries that may
find your offerings useful.
Outlining each of your business components, and then brainstorming
the various scenarios for using those components is a “holistic”
method of business planning and market strategy. Understand
what your product is, and you’ll better understand how
to position it in the market.
Sizing: Understanding Your Limits
Now that you have your product or service definition in hand,
it’s time to start thinking about building your “defendable
swag.” Some of you may be asking, “What is a swag,
anyway?” For those unfamiliar with the term, it is jargon
for “Scientific (or Silly) Wild-Ass Guess,” used
when establishing high level sizings for large projects.
from Christian
Buckley of Red Hill Partners
Your financial model and underlying business strategy for
execution and measurement of your model are nothing more than
an educated guess, especially when your product or technology
is untested, or in a bleeding-edge industry. How do you defend
a financial model when you’re proposing a business around
a product nobody has yet seen? There are some basic questions
you can ask that will help you build a more accurate and realistic
market model:
What is your Total Applicable
(or Available) Market?
- In general, there is data available for the TAM of any
product or service, even if your product is revolutionary.
For example, software as a category can be broken down into
business or consumer applications, and then even further
as operating systems software, games, business productivity
software, and so forth.
Rely on the work you did developing your use cases and scenarios
to help you define the proper industries to include in this
larger figure. Many entrepreneurs only use the TAM in their
calculations – this is a BIG mistake, and shows they
have not done their homework. The TAM shows the larger industry
trends, but that’s about it.
What is your Served Available
Market?
- This is the slice of your TAM, which actually applies
to your product group. If there are competitive products
on the market, the SAM is the market which all of them currently
serve. If your product or service is new, and there is nothing
like it on the market, then you need to define the value
of like-services, that is, the value of products or services
that individuals and companies use today because they do
not have your product. You may need to get creative here,
but if you understand your offerings, this is not as difficult
as it sounds.
What is your geographic reach?
- You’ve just created a product, and now you’re
going to sell it worldwide? Is that a reasonable plan? Not
likely. Understand the limitations of product and your customer
footprint. Modifying packaging and providing support for
expansion into foreign markets can be expensive, not to
mention the costs of international sales and marketing,
putting partnerships and sales channels in place, etc. Don’t
write off foreign markets – just plan for them later,
building off the success of markets you know.
What are your primary channels
of distribution within that reach?
- Once you have defined where you will sell your offerings,
you must define how you’ll move product within that
geography. Is your website enough to support your projected
sales and growth? Probably not. How are comparable products
being sold?
Who are your key partners for
sales and marketing within those channels?
- Scalability is critical to growth and market share. Do
you have the necessary relationships in place to develop
those channels of distribution, and get your product in
front of the customer?
What will it cost for you to
capture 10 to 20 percent of that market?
- Now that you’ve defined the size of your market,
your channels of distribution, and the partnerships to get
you there, what will it all cost for the next 3 to 5 years
to make this plan happen? It’s a good practice to
know the weighted cost of each employee you bring on, and
the number of resources you’ll need to achieve the
market penetration you’ve outlined in your prospectus.
Understand the numbers behind the numbers you present to
investors, and how the level of investment you need, increases
or decreases based on changes to your penetration numbers.
Investors will want to understand whether another million
more, for example, could increase penetration from 20 percent
to 40 percent, or if due to other factors (market conditions,
competition) it would only increase it to 22 percent. If
you can answer this kind of question, you will shine.
Just remember, it’s all a swag. Nobody expects you
to hit the exact numbers proposed in your executive summary
financial plan. Based on the answers to these questions, you’ll
understand the actual costs, the market factors behind your
proposal, and therefore how much money to raise to accomplish
your early goals. And, more importantly, by understanding
each of these answers, and the data behind them, you’ll
be able to defend your assertions in front of investors. And
that’s the key: it’s all about the “defendable
swag.”
About Red Hill Partners
Red Hill Partners is a consortium of business and technology
experts whose focus is helping both individuals and entrepreneurial
companies with the tools, processes, and content crucial to
achieving business and technological knowledge and market
leadership. We are global advisors, writers, and educators,
providing education, counseling, and research to individuals,
corporations, new ventures, and associations interested in
the constantly shifting patterns and prevailing practices
of modern business.
Red Hill Partners can be reached at info@redhillpartners.com
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