David Rachamn, Michael Mescon, Courtland Bovee, John Thill - Chương 3
David Rachamn, Michael Mescon, Courtland Bovee, John Thill - Chương 3
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
After studying this chapter,
you will be able to:
       Differentiate     between
lifestyle businesses     and high-
growth ventures.
the economy.
 o
 **    List   the pros and cons of
owning      a franchise.
                       Small Businesses,
                       New Ventures,
                       and Franchises
                       more cheaply than the Asians, in spite of their lower wage rates. Ward
                       thought that maybe he could modify a Popsicle-stick machine so that it
                       would produce chopsticks instead. Sure enough, he was right. The idea for
                       automating the inspection process occurred to him when he was reading an
                       article on the use of vision technology in sorting Brazilian coffee beans. He
                                                                                                    55
 56                                                                               Part   One: Focus on Business Today
                                      had a similar system designed that would inspect the color of the chopsticks
                                      and reject those with dark spots.
                                          But turning a good idea into reality costs money, and Ward needed
                                      plenty of capital to build a factory capable of producing 6 million or 7 million
                                      pairs of chopsticks a day. To get started, he decided to sell Industrial Devel-
                                      opment Bonds. He also had a piece of good luck. The governor of Minnesota
                                      heard of Ward's concept and offered him free land and a grant of $1.25 mil-
                                      lion to locate the production plant in Hibbing, Minnesota, an economically
                                      depressed area with plenty of high-grade aspens. Ward gladly agreed and
                                      began construction on the plant, which will eventually employ 120 people.
                                            Meanwhile, Ward got busy on the marketing end of the business. After a
                                      little negotiating, he was able to line up a deal with a group of Japanese
                                      importers, who guaranteed to buy all of the output of the plant for the next
                                      five years.
                                           But despite Ward's many successes, no start-up is without its problems.
                                      There were a few glitches in the equipment that slowed up production, thus
Operating from a manufac-             delaying the flow of revenues into the business. Ward needed more money to
turing plant    in   Hibbing,
                                      correct the production bottleneck and cover expenses until sales reached the
Minnesota, entrepreneur
Ian     Ward
          plans to pick off           break-even point. He took the company public, raising $206 million (Cana-
5 percent of the Japanese             dian dollars) on the Vancouver stock exchange, and managed to raise another
market for disposable                 $3 million from outside financial institutions.
chopsticks.
                                           Lakewood still faces many uncertainties. The production process is new
                                      and experimental, and further problems could arise. Costs may be higher
                                      than anticipated. Competitors could enter the business. But if all goes ac-
                                      cording to plan, Lakewood Forest Products will soon have sales of close to
                                      $20 million per year and an after-tax profit of $5 million. Ian Ward is opti-
                                      mistic about the future. He is exploring markets for chopsticks in other parts
                                      of Asia and in the United States as well. He's also considering additional
                                      products using some of the scrap wood from the chopstick manufacturing
                                      process. One possibility: wooden prayer boards that are displayed in Japa-
                                      nese temples for a few days, then burned by the priests. Says Ward, "They use
                                      them up even faster than chopsticks. ... I am totally enamored of disposable
                                                    1
products."
high-growth ventures                                           est Products, arcsmall simply because they are new. These high-growth ven-
Small businesses intended                                      tures                   aim
                                                                            outgrowing their small-business status as quickly as possible.
                                                                                                     at
to achieve rapid         growth and                            Often run by a team rather than by one individual, they obtain a sizable
high profits         on investment                             supply of investment capital and then attempt to introduce new products or
                                                               services to a large market.
                                                                              The most rapidly growing                                       of these ventures are listed                                                  by       Inc.      magazine
                                                               every year.                             On      the average, their sales are increasing by 90 percent per year.
                                                               The                Inc.           list       includes such firms as Orbital Sciences (manufacturers of NASA
                                                               space launch vehicles) and Enreco (provides environmental cleanup ser-
                                                               vices). In recent years, the list has been dominated by computer-related com-
                                                               panies and firms engaged in business services. 7
This checklist will help you 2. I'll work hard for a while. But when I've had
        [J2.    If   someone             gets          me   started.              I    keep going                     all   right.            decided the other way.
        3. Easy does don't put myself out
                                        it.   I     have                                             until        I            to.      [Zl3.   don't like to be the one who has to decide
                                                                                                                                                 I
        LZl2.   I'll take over                if   I   have   to.       but           I'd   rather let                                    02. have energy for most
                                                                                                                                                 I                         things want to do.              I
                someone        be responsible.
                                     else                                                                                                 3.     I    run out of energy sooner than most of my
        D3.     There's always some eager person who wants to                                                                                    friends       seem      to.
                look smart. I'm glad to let that person do the
                work.                                                                                                                Directions: If most of your checks were beside the
   E.   How good            an organizer are you?                                                                                    firstanswer, you probably have what it takes to oper-
        Dl. likeI           to have a plan before                         I       start. I'm usually                         the
                                                                                                                                     ate a business successfully. If not, you are likely to
                one to get things lined up when the group wants
                to do something.                                                                                                     have difficulty and should consider getting a partner
        D2.     Ido all right unless things get too confused. Then                                                                   to compensate for your weaknesses. If most of your
                I    quit.                                                                                                           checks were beside the third answer, not even a good
        D3. When        get all set. something comes along and
                             I
                                                                                                                                     partner will enable you to overcome the deficiencies
                presents too many problems. So just take things                              I
                                                                                                                                     indicated.
                as they come.
   F.   How     good a worker are you?
           l.   Ican keep going as long as need to. don't                     I                         I
                             America's small-business roots run deep. The country was originally founded
The small-business           by small-business people        —
                                                           the family farmer, the shopkeeper, the crafts-
                  revival    man. Successive waves of immigrants carried on the tradition, launching
                             restaurants and laundries, driving taxicabs, opening newsstands and baker-
                             ies and the like. These small businesses are the cornerstone of our economic
                             system.
                                 Yet, despite our independent heritage, we have become a nation of em-
                             ployees. In 1800, 80 percent of Americans were self-employed; today, the
                                                  8
                             figure is 10 percent. The trend away from self-employment began after the
                             Civil War, when big business emerged as the primary economic force. Aided
                             by improvements in transportation and communication, large producers
economies of scale    Sav-   were able to achieve economies of scale, which are the savings resulting from
ings from manufacturing,     manufacturing, marketing, or buying large quantities of an item. These large
marketing, or buying large   producers could manufacture goods at lower costs than their smaller rivals
quantities                   and, hence, were able to charge lower prices. The small, independent busi-
                             nesses could not compete. As scores of them closed their doors, the dominant
                             firms became increasingly powerful, making it virtually impossible for new
                                                                       9
                             rivals to enter   many      industries.
                                 In the last 15 or 20 years, however, the trend toward bigness has slowed.
                             To some extent, this reflects the economy's shift toward services, where econ-
                             omies of scale are often elusive. But even in the manufacturing sector, small
                             firms have been able to hold their own against larger rivals. In many indus-
                             tries, the advent of computer-aided manufacturing equipment has enabled
                             small plants to operate just as efficiently as larger ones, eliminating the econ-
                             omies of scale that used  to benefit the large-scale producer. Because of their
                             simpler organization and management structure, these small plants can
                             often provide customized service or deliver goods more quickly than their
                             larger rivals.
                                 At the   same   time, a   number                               more peo-
                                                                       of other factors have encouraged
                             ple to leave the corporate world   and form businesses of their own. Demo-
For many, the American       graphic trends have had something to do with it. Baby boomers have reached
dream  is still "to own      their 30s and 40s, the prime age for starting businesses. Furthermore, many
my own business." Since      of these people are frustrated by their career progress. With so many baby
1970, the number of self-    boomers competing for the same positions in big companies, the odds of
employed people has in-
                             rising to the top are slim. Add the fact that many big companies have been
creased by 50 percent.
                             laying off middle managers, and you get a large pool of frustrated, experi-
                             enced people looking        for a better option.
                                 The movement       of   women    into the   work   force has also been a factor. In-
                             deed,   women    are starting businesses at twice the rate of men.         They currently
                             own about 25   percent of all small businesses, and by the year 2000 they are
                                                                             10
                             likely to own  as many businesses as men do.       For many of these women,
                             self-employment provides an opportunity to combine a career with family
                             life. Many of their businesses are operated from the home; about half have
                                                                 11
                             sales of less than $5,000 per year.
                                  The upshot of all these forces has been a revival of the small business
                             sector. During the 1980s, three times as many new businesses have been
                             incorporated as was the case during the 1960s. 12 In 1988, Americans were
                             expected to form 700,000 new corporations, 500,000 sole proprietorships,
                             and 100,000 partnerships, bringing the total number of small businesses to
                             somewhere between 12 million and 17 million. 13 Exhibit 3.1 indicates which
                             kinds of businesses are started most often, which have the best chance of
                             surviving,   and which are most        likely to   grow   significantly.
Chapter    3:       Small Businesses,     New   Ventures, and Franchises                                                           59
                                            not easy to run a small business. Those who succeed, whether they run a
                                        It is
        men and
          The                           lifestylebusiness or a high-growth venture, have certain characteristics in
 women who build                        common. They are generally well organized and responsible, able to commu-
                    businesses          nicate well with customers and employees, willing to work hard, comfortable
                                        with a degree of financial uncertainty, and passionately involved with their
                                        work.
                                            Small-business owners share another trait: resilience. They regard diffi-
                                        culty as a challenge and learn from their mistakes. They stick to their princi-
                                        ples and refuse to take no for an answer. When things go wrong, they bounce
Businesses owned by
women   are the fastest-
growing segment of the
small business sector.
60                                                                                              Part   One: Focus on Business Today
EXHIBIT 3.2
What Makes
Entrepreneurs Different
The young and the restless
are most likely to be
entrepreneurs.
                             The data   in    the chart are based    on   a tele-         executive officers and other senior executives
                             phone survey       that the Gallup Organization did          from Fortune magazine's list of the 500 larg-
                             for   The Wall   Street: Journal.   Small business           est American corporations. The respondents
                             executives   own    or   manage     a broad cross sec-       were almost exclusively male. The entrepre-
                             tion of businesses with      20 or more employees            neurs — 55 percent of whom are under the
                             but with sales of less than $50 million per                  age 45 — are a generation younger than the
                             year. Entrepreneurs are chief executives of                  corporate executives. Although most entrepre-
                             companies listed by Inc. magazine as among                   neurs run companies founded in the past de-
                             the 500 fastest-growing smaller companies in                 cade, the small business sample consists of
                             America. The Fortune 500 executives are chief                more established companies.
                             back and try again. Even Henry Ford had two business failures before he
                             founded the Ford Motor Company.
                                 Something more is required to run either a high-growth venture or a
start-up   company   New     start-up company, in which all the necessary resources must be assembled
venture                      and organized from scratch. An entrepreneurial outlook helps the owner of
                             either type of business find creative solutions to challenges and cope with
                             substantial personal and financial risks. Among the most important compo-
                             nents of that outlook are vision and the persistence to make the vision a
                             reality. For example, when Ian Ward had problems with his production
                             equipment, he plunged ahead, raising more money to get the plant up to
                             speed, because he had faith in his idea.
                                 Interestingly enough, entrepreneurs, small-business executives, and top
                             managers in Fortune 500 companies display some striking differences (see
                             Exhibit 3.2). As a group, entrepreneurs are younger and more likely to start
                             businesses while in school. They are not always academically inclined. Most
                             have held several different jobs, and manv have been fired or dismissed from
                                    14
                             a job.
                             Regardless of what makes them                          tick, the   people      who   build businesses per-
The economic role            form a valuable service for the rest of                     us.   Small businesses play a number of
of small businesses          important roles in our economy.
                             Providing jobs
                             Stop and think for a minute about the people you know who have jobs. Where
                             do they work? For big companies? For the government? Or for small busi-
                             nesses? If you're typical, at least half of your friends and relatives work for
                             small businesses.           And      the   number who do             so   is   likely to increase.
Chapter      3:   Small Businesses,     New     Ventures, and Franchises                                                    61
EXHIBIT 3.3
                                        0-19
Sources of New Jobs
Companies with fewer than
                                        Employees
                                        20-99
                                                                   L                    ~\ 35%
                                                                                                                       1
                                                                                                                           74%
                                        Employees                  l
100 employees are respon-
                                         100-499
sible for virtually   all   of the
                                        Employees
                                                      I
                                                                 1-11%
new   jobs created     in   the past
                                                      |
                                           As Exhibit 3.3 illustrates, virtually all of the new jobs created in the
                                       United States in the past decade are in businesses with fewer than 100 em-
                                       ployees. And most of that growth occurs in the new high-growth ventures like
                                       Lakewood Forest Products or the firms on the Inc. 500 list. These rapid grow-
                                       ers represent only 7 percent of all businesses in the country but create 67
                                                                 15
                                       percent of the new jobs.
                                           The jobs created by small businesses differ from those created by big
                                       companies in several key respects. For one thing, small businesses generally
                                       pay less in terms of both cash compensation and employee benefits. A signifi-
                                       cant share of these jobs           —
                                                                    roughly 25 percent      —
                                                                                          are part-time. They tend to
                                       be filled by employees who are either younger or older than the average
                                       big-company employee. Many of these employees have never worked before;
                                       many others have been out of work for a long time before finally finding a job
                                       with a small company. On average, employees in small businesses have less
                                       formal education than their counterparts in large companies. By hiring
                                       workers who don't quite fit the corporate mold, small businesses serve as an
                                       important safety net in our society. 16
                   companies tend to shy away from businesses of this type because there isn't
                   enough demand to make mass production worthwhile.
                       Today, affluent consumers have "custom" tastes. They often seek out the
                   individualized or different item. Some small businesses have thus become
                   successful by meeting some of these far-fetched "needs." In New York City,
                   for example, you can buy a box of 12 small chocolate replicas of yourself for
                           19
                   $22.50.    The market for chocolate people may be small, but businesses that
                   offer such unique products can often find a niche.
                         Of course new businesses do   fail.   .   .   .   But   it's   not anything like the lambs-to-
                         slaughter affair that the 85 percent figure suggests. They start out, these
                         new businesses, and within the first year 20 percent of them are gone, van-
                         ished. Then in the second year another 1 5 percent are gone, in the third year
                         another 10 percent and so on  —  the curve flattening out. In other words, the
                         chance of your failing in the first seven years in a new business in this
                         country is closer to 50 percent.
                   But, Birch goes on to say,       some of those "failures" may really be success
                   stories.   These businesses disappear for many reasons, only one of which is
                   failure.   "In fact," he says, "we know that out of the 550,000 business closings
                                                                   20
                   each year, only 15,000 or so are bankruptcies."
                   If   you decide   to take the risk, there are three                     ways   to get into business for
      Finding an
                   yourself: Startfrom scratch, buy an existing operation, or obtain a franchise.
     opportunity   Starting from scratch is the riskiest and most difficult option, but it gives you
                   the most scope for creating something.
                       You can reduce the risks somewhat by giving careful thought to your new
                   business concept. Try to choose a field in which you have an advantage based
                   on experience, knowledge, interests, or contacts. If your own experience fails
                   to yield good concepts, you might try reading business publications to get
                   ideas for companies that are likely to succeed. If possible, work for a while in
                   a business similar to the one you hope to start. And do plenty of research to
                   test your idea. Talk to potential customers, suppliers, and competitors. At-
                   tend seminars and trade shows. Discuss your plan with a lawyer, an account-
                   ant, a banker. Exhibit 3.4 suggests some avenues for developing entrepre-
                   neurial ideas.
                       Buying an existing business reduces the risks considerably. When you
                   buy a business, you instantly acquire a known product or service and a sys-
                   tem for producing it. You don't have to go through the painful period of
                   building a reputation, establishing a clientele, and hiring and training em-
                   ployees.And financing the venture is generally much easier; lenders are reas-
                   sured by the history and assets of the going concern. With these major details
                   already settled, you can concentrate on making improvements.
Chapter      3:   Small Businesses,   New   Ventures, and Franchises                                                          63
EXHIBIT 3.4
How to Get Good Ideas                 Upgrade                  Take a basic product, and       Designer blue jeans, gour-
for New Businesses                                             enhance it.                     met cookies
In   looking for ideas for   new      Downgrade                Take a quality product, and     No-frills motels,   budget
companies, think in terms of                                   reduce its cost and price.      rental cars
what people want but can't            Bundle                   Combine products   to pro-      Laundromats that serve
                                                               vide double benefits.           food or beverages
get. According to the ex-
perts.   "Inventing a fancy           Unbundle                 Take a product that has         Term life insurance that
                                                               multiple features, and offer    has no savings value
gizmo       and then finding
         first
                                                               only one of those features
out later that no one wants                                    independently.
it is a waste of time."
                                      Transport                Move a product that sells       "Ethnic" restaurants
                                                               well in one area to another
                                                               area.
                                      Mass-market              Take a product that has         Industrial cleaners repack-
                                                               been used for a specific        aged   for   consumer markets
                                                               purpose and find a larger
                                                               audience for it.
                                      Narrowcast               Aim  for a narrow portion       Cable TV service for rural
                                                               of a large market.              markets
                                      Think big                Offer the broadest possi-       Electronics
                                                               ble selection of a general      "supermarkets"
                                                               category of goods.
                                      Think small              Offer a complete selection      Bookstore that    sells only
                                                               of a specific type of           mystery novels
                                                               product.
                                      Compete on    price      Offer more value for the        "Warehouse" stores
                                                               same price, the same value
                                                               for a lower price, or lower
                                                               quality at a far lower price.
                                   Once you have identified a promising opportunity, you need to decide on the
          Deciding on a            form of business you will use. You can choose a sole proprietorship, a part-
form of ownership                  nership, or a corporation, depending on your needs and the advantages and
                                   disadvantages of each, spelled out in Chapter 2. For each type of organiza-
                                   tion, certain legal formalities must be met.
                                       The sole proprietorship can be started by opening a checking account for
                                   the business, obtaining invoices and other forms, and accumulating the cash
                                   to pay a month's rent. But you may also have to obtain a business license and
                                   take care of other legal details, depending on the type of business.
                                       To start a partnership, you need two additional things: a partnership
                                   agreement, which spells out the basic outlines of your arrangement with
                                   your partner or partners, and a buy/sell agreement, which defines what will
                                   happen if one of the partners dies.
                                       For a corporation, you must choose the state in which you want to incor-
                                   porate, file incorporation papers, form a board of directors, name officers,
                                   and also set up a stock redemption plan, which serves the same functions as
                                   the buy/sell agreement in a partnership.
64                                                                                                             Part One: Focus                on Business Today
                          .                          Perhaps the most important step in launching your own business is planning.
              Developing a                           y u need   to develop a written statement that explains what you are going to
              DUSineSS plan                          do. Your plan should describe the basic idea for your business and set forth
                                                     specific goals and objectives. This plan not only guides your efforts but also
                                                     helps convince lenders and investors to finance your business.
Experts maintain that the A summary of your financial projections and expected return
entrepreneurs seeking financing but also by executives k. Market. Provide data that will persuade the investor that
     seeking funding for an independent project or a new                             you understand your market and can achieve your sales
     product line within the company they work for. The                                                   open-ended markets to be more
                                                                                     goals. (Investors find
                                                                                     desirable.)
     principle behind the plan                  is   to persuade someone else
     that a promising project should                     be financed. In short,      5. Marketing strategy. Provide projections of sales and mar-
                                                                                     ket share,and outline strategy for identifying and contacting
     a business plan          is   the ticket        of admission to the in-
                                                                                     customers, setting prices, servicing customers, advertising,
     vestment process.
                                                                                     and so     forth.
                                                  With your business plan in hand, you can begin the search for financing. The
                         Obtaining                most common sources of funds for new businesses fall into two basic catego-
                         financing                ries: debt and equity. Debt must be repaid with interest out of earnings;
debt Funds obtained by                            equity does not have to be repaid, but it entitles the investor to a piece of your
borrowing                                         company and a share of future profits. Most businesses are financed with a
equity          Funds obtained by.                mix of debt and equity.
selling shares of      ownership                       Once the business is launched, it will have a continuing need for money,
in   the    company                               as Ian Ward discovered when he ran into production problems and had to
     10. Financial information. The           amount you provide will de-              WHAT TURNS INVESTORS OFF
     pend on the stage                             Aim for completeness,
                                  of your financing.
     with three-year projections for profit and loss and for cash                      Four danger signs stand out most to financiers:
     flow.
                                                                                       1.   A product    orientation.     If   there's a single cause of exces-
          The plan should be written with the particular                               sive entrepreneurial optimism,             it's   infatuation with the    com-
     audience in mind. A plan designed to raise financing                              pany's product rather than with the market for                 it.   Business
     from venture capitalists will need a different approach                           plans that devote more space to describing the product than
     than one designed to obtain financing from a bank.                                to detailing who will buy it and how it will be sold make
Venture capitalists want to see a strong return on investors suspect that the company is really just a playpen in
their investment; bankers are more concerned with which the founders can fiddle with their latest toys.
     the survival of the business so that                  it   can repay   its        2. Projections that deviate excessivelyfrom industry norms.
     loans.                                                                            Each industry has a range of accepted financial results. If a
                                                                                       fledgling company's business plan makes projections that
                                                                                       differ sharply from acceptable ranges in an industry, inves-
     WHAT TURNS INVESTORS ON                                                           tors will worry that the entrepreneur hasn't done his or her
                                                                                       homework or is being unduly optimistic.
     As investors skim through the hundreds of business                                3. Unrealistic growth projections. Entrepreneurs tend to have
     plans that land on their desks, they are looking for                              exaggerated expectations of long-term growth. Investors
     four ideal characteristics:                                                       know     that   and expect   it.   But when the projections begin             los-
                                                                                       ing touch with reality, all kinds of alarms go off in investors'
     1. Evidence of customer acceptance. Investors like to know                        minds. Unless the spectacular projections are explained and
     that a company's new product is already being used, even if
                                                                                       argued convincingly in the business plan, investors are likely
     only on a         trial   or demonstration basis.
                                                                                       to be skeptical. Only slightly less bothersome to investors
     2.    Appreciation of investor needs. Investors usually want to                   are entrepreneurs who are excessively cautious in their
     recoup      their     investment within three to seven years, so they             growth projections.
     want      to see    some evidence that entrepreneurs have thought                 4. Reliance      on custom or applications work. When a com-
     about      how     to make this possible.
                                                                                       pany's basic product needs to be altered or specially de-
     3.    Evidence of focus. Investors want           to feel that a   com-           signed for each customer, potential investors see high costs
     pany's founders     know which one or two things the firm does                    and low    profits. Specially      designed goods or services may be
     best and will concentrate their efforts on them. Investors                        successful, but entrepreneurs forming                companies of      this   type
     know       that   companies      trying to   do too many     things won't    do   should expect resistance           when    they try to raise investor
     any single thing well enough to allow               for fast-track growth.        funds.
     t*.   A   proprietary position. Exclusive rights to a product or
     process usuallycome in the form of patents; they alsc may                              The challenge for entrepreneurs as they put to-
     be obtained by copyright or trademark protection. A com-                          gether their business plans, then, is to convince inves-
     pany with such protection has an advantage over its                               tors that the new venture will exploit high-growth
     competitors.                                                                      opportunities while minimizing possible risks.
66                                                             Part One: Focus       on Business Today
     raise   money buy new equipment. You can't expect to obtain all the financ-
                       to
     ing you need in one fell swoop. Although a few businesses do grow entirely
     some special arrangements with customers. Perhaps you can take a deposit
     for merchandise or arrange to be paid when the product is delivered.
            Later,   you can ease your financial situation by negotiating                     liberal pay-
     ment terms with your vendors or by using the money                        that others    owe you    to
     secure a loan.
     private investors As the figure indicates, wealthy individuals are one of the
     most promising sources of equity financing. However, finding a so-called
Chapter         3:        Small Businesses,           New   Ventures, and Franchises                                                                              67
 company.
     State and local programs. Venture capital pools in approximately
 twenty states. These programs usually fund companies with good job-crea-
 tion potential.
     Public stock offerings. Raising capital by selling shares in a company.
 This expensiveand involved process is only appropriate for ventures that
 have reached a significant sales level.
                                       Regardless of the business you're   in,   however, you   may have   trouble find-
                                   ing venture capital. There are only about 300 private venture-capital firms in
                                                                                                               24
                                   the country, and each of them funds only 10 or 15 new companies per year.
                                   state and local programs In the past five years, a       new source   of equity fund-
                                   ing has opened up. Today, about 20 states have created their own venture-
                                   capital companies, and similar programs are pending elsewhere. Unlike
                                   other sources of equity funding, state and local programs tend to fund busi-
                                   nesses that have the potential to boost employment in the state or locality.
                                   Lakewood Forest Products benefited from such a program run by the State of
                                   Minnesota.
                                       In a related development, many state and local economic development
                                   offices and universities are forming "incubator" facilities to nurture fledg-
                                   ling businesses. In a typical incubator, new companies can lease space at
                                   bargain rates and share secretaries, receptionists, telephone equipment, fi-
                                   nancial and accounting advice, marketing support, and credit-checking ser-
                                   vices. Some incubators are open to businesses of all types, but many special-
                                   ize. For example, the Spokane Business Incubation Center operates the
                                   Kitchen Center, where small food-processing companies can share a com-
                                   mercial kitchen. 26 There are 209 incubators now in operation in 39 states, a
                                   fivefold increase in the past two years. These facilities can make a big differ-
                                   ence to the success of a start-up business. According to the National Business
                                   Incubation Association, 8 out of 10 of the businesses nurtured in incubators
                                              27
                                   succeed.
                                   public stock offerings After a high-growth venture has been operating for a
going public Act of raising        few years,  has the option of raising capital by going public, or selling stock
                                                   it
capital by selling shares in a     in the    company onthe open market. Going public achieves two purposes:
company        to the public for   (1) It   raises moneyfor the company, and (2) it enables the founder and
the   first   time                 other early equity investors to make money by selling at a profit the
                                   stock they obtained at low prices.
        tapter 3: Small Businesses,           New      Ventures, and Franchises                                                    69
EXHIBIT 3.6
Why New   Ventures
Succeed or Fail
                                              The case of Paul Brainerd is an interesting example. In 1984, Brainerd
All         new companies have
problems. The companies
                                          founded Aldus Corporation, which makes a popular software program for the
that succeed do so because                desktop publishing industry. In June 1987, when he took the company public,
                                                                                                                      2
                                          Brainerd could theoretically have made $80 million by selling his holdings.
                                                                                                                                       *'
                                          Assuming   that you obtain adequate financing to start or buy your own busi-
                      Managing the        ness, your next job is to run it. You may find yourself working 12-hour days
                              business    week in, week out         —
                                                                with no boss to blame for your miseries! It is common
                                          for small-business owners not only to put out the product             —
                                                                                                       be it chopsticks,
According to Paul Hawken,                 video tapes, homemade bread, or legal advice              —
                                                                                          but also to function as sec-
a successful entrepreneur
                                          retary, personnel manager, financial planner, public-relations expert, and
and author, "Good man-
agement is the art of mak-                janitor all rolled into one.
ing problems so interesting                   The manager of a big business doesn't have this problem. In other re-
.   that everyone wants to
    .   .                                 spects, however, managerial tasks are the   same in big businesses and small
get to work and deal with                 ones. Just as a manager in a large, established company must make business
them.      Bad manage-
                                          plans, organize resources, select and lead a staff, and monitor the outfit's
                  .   .   .
                                              starts to change         —
                                                                  even for the better? An influx of wealthier neighbors may
                                              cause such a steep increase in rent that your business must move. Also, tough
                                              competition may move into the neighborhood along with the fatter pocket-
                                              books. Do you have an alternative location staked out? What if fashions sud-
                                              denly change? Can you switch quickly from, say, hand-painted T-shirts to
                                              some other kind of shirt?
     of oft-repeated blunders and oversights that consis-                          problems, the opportunities, and the necessary technical
     tently spoil the   dream of entrepreneurial success.                          skills, (b) Go directly into business with a partner strong in
     Consider the following mistakes, along with the                               management experience. A hobbyist chef and an experienced
 guidelines for avoiding them, a survival guide for                                restaurant     manager may have the             right    combination of              skills
           Hobbies can serve as promising springboards               for busi-     For example, appeal to a single age category (senior citizens
Chapter        3:   Small Businesses,           New      Ventures, and Franchises                                                                 71
                                              prices. To set prices at the optimum level, you have to analyze with a critical
                                              eye your competition, your area, your costs, and your profit requirements.
                                              And once you've set those prices, you have to remain tuned in to changing
                                               conditions in the marketplace, so you don't get caught with too                      little   demand
                                               tor your supply or with too little reward lor your risks.
                                                   Choosing the ideal outlet for your product is another problem. To build a
                                               distribution network, you must convince wholesalers or retailers to carry
                                              your product. You also need to analyze how to use your promotion budget to
                                              the fullest. Advertising is worthless if it doesn't reach potential customers
                                              and bring them to you. Countless new businesses spend a fortune on advertis-
                                              ing and have little to show for the expense                 —
                                                                                                 because they've chosen the
                                              wrong medium or the wrong message. What's worse is the opportunity cost
Thanks to his raw material                    ot spending money ineffectively; a new business can always use more money
cost advantage and auto-                      for something.
mated production methods,
Ian Ward can sell his chop-
sticks for 25 percent less                    Monitoring and controlling operations
than his foreign rivals can.
                                              In addition to marketing your product, you need to develop an effective rec-
                                              ordkeeping system that will handle customer files, billing, production and
                                              inventory data, employee information, and basic accounting functions. New-
                                              businesses must usually start from scratch in organizing the paperwork, and
                                              the process can be time-consuming. The alternative, however, is chaos     not                   —
                                              only a drain on everyone's patience and good will but also a source of expen-
                                              sive mistakes. Many a business has gone under because of a lax attitude
                                              toward supplies, quality, money management, bill collection, and the like.
  or teen-agers) or focus on one socioeconomic group, and                  6.   Bleeding the business Generous        salaries,   bonuses, and
  stick to a single selling point (discount prices, high fashion.          company cars    are seen as the rewards of success. But they
  or attentive customer service).                                          may also sow    the seeds of catastrophe. Disaster can be
  basis minimum revenue and maximum expenses for the first                 7. The Fortress complex. Unlike their counterparts in large
  two years. Note the point at which income will cover ex-                 companies, small-business owners tend to run their ventures
  penses, and calculate the amount of money necessary to                   single-handedly, making all key decisions without going
  cover the shortfall until then. Add to this the amount of the            through an elaborate approval process. Although there is
  initial investment required to launch the business and to                strength in that approach — the company can respond faster
  cover ongoing expenses for inventory and equipment. This                 to emerging opportunities — the owner is insulated from
  total is the minimum amount required to launch the busi-                 other points of view. The best way to overcome this prob-
  ness, (b) Try to arrange a line of credit at a bank so that you          lem is to bring in outside opinions by assembling an infor-
  can draw cash to cover expenses as required. A reserve like              mal board of directors. Ask a banker, an accountant, and
  this serves as a buffer between you and your creditors, al-              another local business owner to sit on the board, joining you
  lowing you to keep the business going even when income                   once a month to discuss the company and to give their in-
  fails   to cover expenses.                                               sights into its needs and requirements.
                                           Adjusting to growth
                                           One        of the       most    difficult   management problems you may face in a new busi-
                                           ness       is   success. Trouble often occurs         when the founder   fundamentally an—
                                           "idea person"              —
                                                            assumes the role of manager. Many people who are good at
                                           launching new companies lack the skills needed to manage them over the
                                           long run. The person who excels during the start-up phase may not be able to
                                           delegate work well or may have problems figuring out how to expand the
                                           business.
                                                     And even        if   the person       is   flexible   enough    to adjust to   changing conditions,
                                           there       is   a lot to learn as a        company grows. Arranging additional financing,
                                           hiring          new     people,     adding new products, computerizing the recordkeeping                    —
                                           all       these activities are demanding.
Franchise Outlets   (in   thousands)                  Retail Franchise Sales   (in   $ millions)     Franchise Market Shares
                                                                                              1987   (in    $ billions;   1987       estimate)
                                                                                                                          Convenience
                                                                                                           Retailing        stores          Auto products
                                                                                                        (nonfood)            $12.8               &   services
                                                                                                          $25.2                  \                   $12.9
                                          Jl
                                           u
          ,<^N ,                      1
  ~A
mJ.
                \
                    |^    t^r~-   /
V^ :
420
  \
 V\
EXHIBIT 3.7
The Growth of
Franchising
Both the number and rev-
                                          Frie J Chicken. Franchises account for about one-third of all retail sales in the
enues of Franchises have
increased over the past                   United States and employ 7 million people. With sales growing at four times
decade.                                   the rate of the GNP, franchises will be responsible for half of all retail sales
                                          within 20 years. 31
                                              Franchising is not a new phenomenon. It has been around since the nine-
                                          teenth century, when such companies as Singer and International Harvester
                                          established dealerships throughout the world. Early in this century, Coca-
                                          Cola, General Motors, and Metropolitan Life Insurance Company, among
                                          others, used franchises to distribute or sell their products. But the real boom
                                          in franchising began in the late 1950s, with the proliferation of hotels and
                                          motels like Holiday Inn and fast-food establishments like Baskin-Robbins
                                          and Dunkin' Donuts.
                                              The latest trend in franchising has been diversification in the variety of
                                          products and services offered. Today, over 2,000 companies offer franchises,
                                          ranging from day-care centers and health clubs to dental clinics, video-tape
                                          rental outlets,      and funeral       parlors.      By and   large,     most are service operations.
                                      The biggest winners are generally the      franchisers,   who are able   to   expand
                               their businesses through franchised outlets without depleting their             own capi-
                               tal.   For example, take the case of     I           It's Yogurt, Inc. The com-
                                                                            Can't Believe
                               pany was founded by       Julie   and            brother and sister team, who
                                                                       Bill Brice, a
                               invested $10,000 of their own money in a frozen yogurt shop while they were
                               still students at Southern Methodist University. With the help of friendly
                               service, good promotion, and solid management methods, the Brices were
                               able to show a profit within four months. They opened seven more company-
                               owned stores within six years, but then they realized that further expansion
                               would require debt. At that point, they turned to franchising to finance their
                                                                                33
                               business. The chain currently has 100 outlets.
                                    Franchisers not only expand their business using other people's money,
                               they also receive regular income from franchisees, who pass on a percentage
                               of their gross revenues and help pay for advertising and promotional costs.
                                    Investing in a franchise can also be good for the franchisee, because the
                               risk is reasonably low. Ninety-two percent of all franchise outlets make it
                               through their fifth year. 34 When you invest in a franchise, you know that you
                               are getting a viable business, one that has "worked" many times before. You
                               also have the advantage of instant       name    recognition   and mass   advertising.   An
                               independent hamburger stand can't afford a national TV advertising cam-
                               paign, but McDonald's, Burger King, and Wendy's can.
                                   In addition to giving you a proven formula, buying a franchise helps you
                               solve one of the biggest problems that small businesses face: lack of money.
                               Franchisers generally use a number of methods to make sure the franchisee is
                               on firm financial footing. First, before approving prospective franchisees, the
                               franchiser weeds out those whose own finances are in unacceptable shape; a
                               franchiser will not grant a franchise unless the applicant has enough money
                               for start-up costs. (The franchiser, unlike many independent proprietors, has
                               enough experience to estimate start-up costs realistically.) The total invest-
Chapter     3:   Small Businesses,   New       Ventures, and Franchises                                            75
                                 ment required varies widely, depending on the franchise (see Exhibit 3.8),
                                 but covers the cost to build or lease the structure, decorate the building,
                                 purchase supplies, and operate the business for 6 to 12 months. The one-time,
                                 up-front franchise fee covers such franchiser services as site location studies,
                                 market research, training, and technical assistance.
                                     Few franchisees are able to write a check for the amount of the total
                                 investment. Most obtain a loan to cover at least part of the cost. According to
                                 the Department of Commerce, 16 percent of all franchisers provide some
                                 form of financial assistance such as low-rate loans. Another 34 percent assist
                                 the franchisees in preparing loan applications for banks, private investors, or
                                                                                     35
                                 the Small Business Administration.
                                     Besides financial aid and advice, the franchiser gives a new franchisee
                                 training in how to run a business. For example, I Can't Believe It's Yogurt
                                 operates a "Yogurt University" at company headquarters in Dallas, where
                                 new franchisees go through a 10-day indoctrination program. Their training
                                 includes role-playing exercises, where some franchisees play the parts of
                                 salespeople while others act like temperamental customers. By offering this
                                 course, I Can't Believe It's Yogurt is able to teach standard procedures to
                                 each operator and thus maintain its distinctive image. 36 Many franchise or-
                                 ganizations offer advice on advertising, taxes, and other business matters, as
                                 well as instructions in the day-to-day operation of the franchise.
                                 Although franchising offers many advantages, it is not the ideal vehicle for
   Disadvantages of              everyone. For one thing, owning a franchise is no guarantee of wealth. It may
                 franchising     be the safest way to get into business, but it is not necessarily the cheapest.
                                 According to some analysts, it costs 10 to 30 percent more to buy a franchise
                                 than to open a business independently. 37 And not all franchises are extremely
                                 profitable operations.
                                  the business, down to the details of employees' uniforms and the color of the
                                  walls. Franchisees may be required to buy the products they sell directly
                                  from the franchiser at whatever price the franchiser feels like charging.
                                  Franchisers may also make important decisions without consulting
                                  franchisees.
                                      Although most franchise opportunities are legitimate, it pays to be wary.
                                  Franchises and "business opportunities" are occasionally fraudulent. Gail
                                  Casano learned this painful lesson the hard way. In 1986, she invested
                                  $125,000 in a Movieland video-rental franchise. But, as Casano says, "Buying
                                  the franchise was the worst thing I ever did." After taking her money, the
                                  franchiser never even bothered to visit the store. "We never received promo-
                                  tional material. We never saw any advertising, though we, and other fran-
                                  chisees, were responsible for paying 3 percent of our monthly gross to Movie-
                                  land for this service." Nor is it likely that Casano will ever receive the
                                  support she was promised. The owner of Movieland has disappeared amid
                                  charges of fraud, deceit, incompetence, drug abuse, and intimidation. 38
                                  The best way           to protect yourself      from a poor franchise investment        is   to study
       Evaluating the             the opportunity very carefully before you                 commit    yourself. Since 1978, the
            franchise             Federal Trade Commission has required franchisers to disclose information
                                  about their operations to prospective franchisees. By studying this informa-
                                  tion, you can determine the financial condition of the franchiser and ascer-
                                  tain whether it has been involved in lawsuits with franchisees.
                                      Another good source of information about a franchise is other fran-
                                  chisees. Find out what they think of the opportunity. If they had it to do over
                                  again, would they still invest? That's the bottom line.
      Differentiate   between   lifestyle         <y     List four factors that   have        3     List four   important functions
 1    businesses and high-growth                     contributed to the revival of                  of small business in the
ventures.                                      the small business sector.                   economy.
Most small businesses are   lifestyle        The       revival of the small-business        Small businesses provide jobs,
businesses, intended to provide the          sector reflects a shift to services, a         bring out new goods and services,
owner with a comfortable    living.          diminution in the advantages                   supply the needs of large corpora-
High-growth ventures, on the other           afforded by large-scale manufactur-            tions, and provide specialized
hand, are businesses with ambi-              ing, the maturation of the baby-               goods and services,
tious sales, profit, and growth              boom generation, and an increase
objectives.                                  in the      number   of   women   in the        A      Identify three   ways   of getting
You can sunt        a   mow company from            franchise (72)                                      $300 for a jacket, $650 for a coat
scratch, buj a going concern, or                    franchisee (72)                                     (setby Wolfson at about double the
invest in a franchise.                              franchiser (72)                                     costs of production).                 No wonder
                                                    going public (68)                                   the usual       customer         for Patricia
 f     Name        five factors that are
                                                                                                        Clyne     &    Associates        is   a    woman
       critical for the success of a
                                                    high-growth ventures (57)
                                                                                                        making between $30,000 and
                                                    lifestyle businesses (56)
small business.                                                                                         $50,000 a year — in               addition to her
                                                    small businesses (56)
Success requires a promising busi-                                                                      husband's $60,000 or                  so.
ness opportunity, an appropriate
                                                    start-up    company       (60)
                                                    venture capitalists (67)                            Despite the big price tags, the com-
ownership structure, a good plan,
                                                                                                        pany's first year was tough, as in
adequate financing, and effective
                                                                                                        any new business. By the second
management.
                                                                                                        year, Patricia Clyne              &       Associates
                                                     REVIEW QUESTIONS                                   came      out slightly ahead. In their
                  sources of financing
 U     List four
                                                                                                        third year, Clyne              and Wolfson
       for lifestyle businesses.
                                                    1.   What   qualities usually charac-               made $15,000 on                sales of $370,000.
Lifestyle businesses        ma> be                  terize the       men and women who run              They put the         entire profit back into
financed through personal savings,                  successful small businesses,          and           the business.
loans from friends and relatives,                   why?
commercial-bank loans, loans                        2.   Why    are small businesses being              To     date, Patricia Clyne               &   Associ-
from the Small Business                             started in record         numbers    in recent      ates has been run  on the slimmest
Administration, and credit from                     years?                                              of shoestrings. The company's big-
suppliers.                                          3.   What   class of business organiza-             gest expense         is   for materials:
                                                    tions creates the        most new jobs        in    $157,600 for fabrics for samples
 •m    List six sources of equity
                                                    the United States?                                  last year alone. Although Clyne and
       capital available to                                                                             Wolfson recently gave themselves
                                                    4.   In   what ways do small busi-
high-growth ventures.                                                                                   raises, they each make only
                                                    nesses     complement big businesses
High-growth ventures may raise                      in   our economy?                                   $20,000. Their only other employee,
equity capital through private                      5.   Why   do many new businesses                   seamstress Corina Jimenez, makes
investors, venture capitalists, cor-                fail,   and how might such failures                 $800 more. Nobody has much of a
porate sources, Small Business                      be avoided?                                         financial cushion for times of
Investment Companies and Minor-                     6.   What   are the principal sources               emergency.
ity Enterprise Small Business                       of financing for         new   businesses?          Although Clyne's designs are catch-
Investment Companies, state and                     7. What are the motives that en-
                                                                                                        ing favor with such tastemakers as
local programs, and public stock                    courage big businesses to support                   Bloomingdale's and Vogue maga-
offerings.                                          start-up companies?                                 zine, the company cannot afford
                                                    8. How does a franchise operation
 r%    List the pros       and cons     of                                                              the $20,000 a modest fashion show
                                                    work, and what are some of its                      would cost. Instead, during market
       owning a         franchise.
                                                    advantages and disadvantages for                    weeks when buyers flock to New
A franchisee has         the advantages of          the franchisee?                                     York to see the new fashions,
low risk, wide          name   recognition
                                                                                                        Clyne's designs are modeled infor-
and mass advertising, financial
                                                                                                        mally in a small showroom she
help, and training and support.
                                                                                                        shares with seven other designers.
However, owning a franchise
                                                                                                        The designers also share a sales
involves considerable start-up
                                                                                                        representative, w hose commissions
                                                                                                                                   r
 ing ends meet, but Clyne and Wolf-            opening such a center. Being ambi-              ations.     The centralized purchasing
 son are hoping for an even brighter           tious, you thought you might even               and shipping department obtains
 performance in their fourth year:             open a bunch of centers. After all,             supplies and equipment in large
$80,000 on sales of $600,000. Wolf-            if one is good, aren't two better?              quantities at reduced prices and
son,    who manages          the   company's   And why stop at two? Why not                    passes the savings on to individual
production and merchandising, is               open centers in every town and                  franchisees.The headquarters de-
the source of these forecasts. Indus-          neighborhood throughout the coun-               sign and construction staff helps
try experts say he's too optimistic,           try? You had a few reservations,                local owners plan their centers
however, given the cost of making              though. There was nothing patent-               more efficiently and get good deals
samples to show buyers and the                 able about your idea. Anybody                   from national suppliers on cabi-
need to absorb markdowns at the                with a little capital could duplicate           netry and fixtures. The MBE ad-
end of the season. Other advisers              your service. If you were successful,           ministration and franchise support
have suggested that the company's              people might imitate you and grab               departments provide customized
prices are too high. Clyne and                 the best locations before you could             computer software to help fran-
Wolfson just wish they knew more               afford to expand. So what should                chisees     manage   their accounting
about running a business. 39                   you do?                                         and inventory      control.
~,