Entrepreneurship in Action: From Idea to Opportunity {II} - - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
Entrepreneurship in Action: From Idea to Opportunity {II} - - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
Entrepreneurship in Action: From Idea to Opportunity {II} Means-Ends Framework in Action: Trajectory of New Technologies Emergence of a New Venture Through Superior Value Proposition Storage Primary Secondary storage storage
Means-Ends Framework in Action: Trajectory of New Technologies Emergence of a New Venture Through Superior Value Proposition
Storage
Primary
storage
Volatile Temporary
Secondary
storage
Nonvolatile Permanent
Secondary storage
characteristics
Media Capacity Storage devices Access speed
Characteristics of Storage
Volatility
DRAM / SRAM
Mutability
Read / Write; Read Only; Slow Write, Fast Read
Accessibility
Random / Sequential
Addressability
Location; File; Content
Capacity
Raw Capacity / Storage Density
Energy Use
Moving Parts / Solid State
The Cost of a Disk Access
Time Component Action
Seek Time Time to move the read/write arm to the correct cylinder Rotational delay (or latency) Time it takes for the disk to rotate so that the desired sector is under the read/write head Transfer time Once the read/write head is positioned
- ver the data, this is the time it takes
for transferring data
Floppy Disks
Diskettes Floppies Portable storage
media
Floppy disk drives
(FDD)
Traditional Floppy Disk
Traditional Floppy Diskette
Types of Floppies
High capacity Known as a floppy-disk
cartridge
Require special disk
drives
Three well known types
Zip disks HiFD disks SuperDisks
Ends Means Old New Old New
Hard Disks
- Use thicker, metallic platters for
storage
- Faster than a floppy diskette
- Large capacity
Ends Means Old New Old New
Located inside system unit Known as a fixed disk Designated as the C drive Advantages over floppies
Access speed Capacity
Hard-Disk Cartridges
Removable hard disks Used to complement
internal hard disk
Capacities of 10 to 20
GB
PC Card Hard Disks
Ends Means Old New Old New
Hard-Disk Packs
Removable Massive storage
capacity
Common in
mainframes
Resembles stack of
vinyl records
Ends Means Old New Old New
Performance Enhancements
Disk caching Redundant arrays of
inexpensive disks (RAID)
File compression
and decompression
Ends Means Old New Old New
Optical Disks
Compact Permanent storage Laser beams reflect
- ff pits
Two common types
CD DVD
Ends Means Old New Old New
Compact Disc
Optical format From 650 MB to 1 GB
capacity
Rotation speeds vary Types
Read only: CD-ROM Write once: CD-R Rewriteable: CD-RW Picture CDs and Photo CDs
Ends Means Old New Old New
Digital Versatile Disc
Digital Versatile Disk or Digital
Video Disk (DVD)
Similar to CDs, but can store
more data
Types
Read only Write once Rewritable
Ends Means Old New Old New
DataPlay
Optical disk Write once format Quarter size
500 MB capacity Holds 5 hours of CD-
quality sound
Use for storing and
playing music files
Ends Means Old New Old New
Solid-State Storage
Flash memory cards
Widely used in notebook
computers
Used to record MP3 music
files
Key chain hard drives
Key chain flash memory
devices
Connects to a USB port
Ends Means Old New Old New
Internet Hard Drives
Ends Means Old New Old New
Always On the Move
One Trillion digital images will be
captured in 2015
700 billion of these will be captured on
mobile phones
300 hours of video are uploaded to
YouTube every minute
Biggest customers
Mobile and Tablets Consumer Electronics Computing
Secondary Storage Pioneers
Seagate Western Digital Terradata Micron EMC
Means-Ends Trail
Chief Executive Officer Sanjay Mehrotra, President and Chief Executive Officer
Eli Harari and Sanjay Mehrotra Honeywell and Intel Set up SanDisk in 1988
- Dr. Eli Harari, an Israeli engineer, began making early contributions to
electrically erasable programmable read-only memory [EEPROM]
- a precursor to flash memory
- Harari worked on flash memory at Intel, leaving to found a start-up
which failed
- In 1988, Harari launched the company that would become SanDisk
with Sanjay Mehrotra and Jack Yuan
- Early on, SanDisk had recognized that digital cameras would need
digital storage, and computers could become ever more mobile and light and would require a similar storage technology
- In 1988 Harari offered the flash memory card technology to Kodak for
inclusion in their cameras.
- Kodak offered to fund the development with the condition that
SanDisk offer a three year exclusive contract for the 'digital film'.
- Harari and SanDisk rejected the offer, preferring to have competition
in the marketplace
From Idea to Start-up
- high-density flash
memory process, module integration, device design and reliability;
- securing data on a
flash memory device;
- controller design and
firmware;
- system-level
integration;
- multi-die stacking and
packaging technology; Removable cards Embedded products USB drives Digital media players Solid state devices Mobile Consumer electronics Computing
SanDisk 1995-2010
Year Revenue, $ million 1995 62 2000 602 2005 2,310 2010 4,830
2014: $ 7 Billion
- From a 3 person start up SanDisk has 4,000 employees
SanDisk shipped 700 million units last year SanDisk R & D spending $513 billion
19 nm technology
- On average, customers purchased over 2 million SanDisk
products each day
- In fiscal 2011, SanDisk delivered record revenue with
strong profitability and cash generation, driven by a leading position in a broad range of markets
- Grew sales to $5.7 billion representing a 17% growth
year over year
- Focus on profitable growth allowed SanDisk to generate
more than $1 billion in cash flow from operations
SanDisk Becomes Ubiquitous
FISCAL 2014 KEY FINANCIAL METRICS
Metrics in millions, except percentages and per share amounts FY’14 FY’13 Revenue $6,628 $6,170 Gross Profit percent of revenue $3,068 46% $2,867 46% Operating Income percent of revenue $1,558 24% $1,562 25% EPS $4.23 $4.34
5,000 patents: named a Thomson Reuters 2014 Top 100 Global Innovator for the fourth consecutive year. Introduced the iXpand™ Flash Drive, designed specifically for iPhone and iPad, allowing quick photo and video transfers from an iPhone or iPad to a Mac or PC.
Beyond the Horizon
A critical ability for a successful entrepreneur is to
make appropriate predictions regarding the uncertain future
Discovery of new resource New consumer desires New technological opportunities
Correctly anticipate consumer preferences and efficiently use resources to meet these preferences The goal of an entrepreneur is to know the consumer’s future wants
Before the consumer knows them
Characteristics of an Opportunity
Creating value
Not necessarily low cost
Opportunity is not always (rarely?) found
in well-documented growth markets
Opportunities
are not necessarily the result of inventions by the entrepreneur
Not everyone pursues opportunities, even
if they are obvious
Nine Categories of Opportunity
Increasing the value of a product/service New applications of existing means of
technology
Creating mass markets Customization for individuals Increasing reach Managing the supply chain Convergence of change Process innovation Increase the scale of the firm
Preparing a Concept Statement
Concept statement should provide
- a description of the product or service
being offered
- the intended target market
- the benefits of the product or service
- a description of how the product will be
positioned relatively to similar ones in the market
- a description of how the product or
service will be sold and distributed
Means-Ends Framework
Commodity Product Improvement Process Improvement Breakthrough Innovation
Old Means New Means
Creating a New Value Equation
What factors should be reduced well below the industry standard ? What factors should be raised well beyond the industry standards ? What factors should be eliminated that the industry has taken for granted ? What factors should be created that the industry has never
- ffered ?
Reduce Eliminate Create Raise New Value Equation
Specific business
- pportunity
Technologies and Competencies Customer Segment Applications Technology-Driven Businesses
Opportunity Checklist
Product, market and industry
Demand, current market size and growth
rate
Cost structure
Economics
Profit potential Time to breakeven Capital requirements Financial returns
Opportunity Checklist
Competitive Advantage
Variable/ fixed cost Entry barriers Protectable Intellectual Property
Personal
Personal goals and fit Upside v/s downside Stress tolerance
Sustainable Advantage
Opportunities for extensions Management team Harvest
Exploring the Opportunity
What is the opportunity?
Why? Who for?
How does the opportunity create new value?
How is it different? What benefits will the
customers obtain which are not currently available?
How does the opportunity score on the four
essential qualities?
Attractive; anchored in a product/service that
creates value; timely; and durable
How to realize the opportunity?
Where? When? Scale?
Essential Qualities of an Entrepreneurial Opportunity Attractive Timely Durable
Anchored in a product, service or business that creates or adds value for its buyer or end user
Opportunity (rather than just an idea)
The Window of Opportunity
Market Size Time (Years)
5 10 15 20 10 100 1000 10000
January 9, 2007
From Apple Computer to Apple Inc.
Year 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 Sales 5 6 8 14 19 Profit 0.04 0.06 0.27 1.3 1.9 Year 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 Sales 25 37 43 65 108 Profit 3 6 8 14 26