Section 3 - Bootstrapping
Section 3 - Bootstrapping
Ideating
Launching
Bootstrapping
Scaling
Enduring
What we will cover …
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Key challenges
• Hiring decisions
• Firing decisions
• Cultural and attitude t
• The important skill sets
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Founding Team skill sets
• The Genius
• The operations superstar
• The leader
• The industry veteran
• The sales animal
• The nancial suit
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Two key questions
• Relationships
• Roles
• Rewards
Case: Investic - Assembling a Founding Team
Bootstrapping
When you attempt to found and build a company from personal nances
(including friends or family) or the operating revenues of the new company.
Pros Cons
Equity retained, potentially valuable later Running on fumes
Full control over the company Less help from “external” stakeholders
Customer revenue ploughed back for growth Poor cash ows can kill you
Focus on growth, not on managing investors Potential to lose out to well funded competition
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Some domains are easier than others
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Fundamentally different approaches
Begin with a goal Begin with what you already have (your “resources”)
Put together the “resources” that you will need Put together the potential goals you can gun for
Focus on nding the resources you need Experiment with the possible end goals
• Creating a “model” for your business is the same as creating a blueprint that
you “wish” to follow.
• Both Lean and Business model canvas follow the “Causal” thinking approach
• “If I have to achieve {some end result}, I will need the following {means}
• Both Lean and Business model canvas approaches begin with the “Result”
you want to achieve, and build on the “resources” you need to achieve these
results.
Business model case studies
Wildfang / Spotify / Fasten
A fundamentally different approach
E ectuation
• E ectuation assumes that you begin with your {means} or resources that are
available to you.
• Based on what you already have, you then build on the potential {end
results}
• You could even imagine multiple possible end results, based on your
“resources” or “means”.
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An example of both logic types
• A chef using Causal Logic would decide what to cook rst, and then gather
the ingredients needed to cook it.
• A chef using E ectual logic would look in the fridge rst, see what is there
and then put together a meal based on what is available.
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What is effectuation?
What makes great entrepreneurs isn’t generic or personality traits, risk-seeking behaviour,
money, or unique vision.
Effectuation research has found that there is a science to entrepreneurship and that great
entrepreneurs across industries, geographies, and time use a common logic, or thinking process,
to solve entrepreneurial problems.
You are Gyanesh Pandey, an Electrical Engineer from IT BHU (1995-99), who
completed his Masters at Renssaelaer Polytechnic. You come from the
outskirts of Patna, in Bihar.
After working for a few years in the US, you return to India (in 2005) to “do
something” for the poor in India.
You initially work on solar lights, and a project to generate biofuel using
Jethropha seeds; both of which are not scaling.
You now meet with your classmate from IT BHU; Manoj Sinha, who is an
electronics engineer, studying at the University of Virginia, Darden school of
Business.
You also have a chance meeting with a gasi er salesman in Patna. You also
notice that there are over a million kilograms of rice husk from rice mills in Bihar,
which are all waste.
You realise that in Bihar, most localities outside the main cities su er from severe
lack of power. There is no grid connecting these locations to the main power.
You now focus on the development of the circuitry that would allow the systems
to most e ciently generate power. A friend working with the Ministry of New
and Renewable Energy (MNRE) helps you to get clearances.
You optimize the gasi er to use rice husks alone, then using the output of the
gasi er, fuel a generator and assemble a crude local power distribution network.
But ….
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What would you do?
Bihar is NOT a place where people are used to paying for power!
And so it is in the village of Tamkuha. Most people cheerfully tap into the “grid” you
create; and don’t pay for it.
The few who do pay, su er as you can’t sustain the power plant that you have built.
Your initial money ($60,000), that came from winning a social business competition
is rapidly running out.
200 people