Prelims
European Venture Toolbox: The Path for SMEs to Grasp and Defend Opportunities
ISBN: 978-1-80117-319-3, eISBN: 978-1-80117-318-6
Publication date: 27 September 2021
Citation
Kirk, N.H. and Zollo, L. (2021), "Prelims", European Venture Toolbox: The Path for SMEs to Grasp and Defend Opportunities (Entrepreneurial Behaviour Series), Emerald Publishing Limited, Leeds, pp. i-xvi. https://doi.org/10.1108/978-1-80117-318-620211019
Publisher
:Emerald Publishing Limited
Copyright © 2021 Nicholas H. Kirk and Lamberto Zollo
Half Title Page
EUROPEAN VENTURE TOOLBOX
Series Page
ENTREPRENEURIAL BEHAVIOUR
Series Editors:
Dr Andrea Caputo, University of Lincoln, UK
Dr Massimiliano Pellegrini, University of Rome Tor Vergata, Italy
This series is dedicated to communicating innovative and multi-disciplinary new research that advances theory and practice in Entrepreneurial Behaviour. The series is focused on expanding the scope of Entrepreneurial Behaviour theory and analysis and enriching practice by encouraging multi-theoretical, multi-cultural and multi-disciplinary approaches.
Key issues explored in Entrepreneurial Behaviour include cognition, decision-making, organisational behaviours, and identifying, creating, and exploiting opportunities concerning new products, services, processes, innovations or ventures from an entrepreneurial perspective.
The primary focus is on the study of entrepreneurs, small and medium enterprises, and family businesses, with a secondary focus on entrepreneurial and innovative behaviours in other forms of organisations, such as non-profits, corporations, and public administrations.
Editorial Page
EDITORIAL ADVISORY BOARD
Andrea Caputo
University of Lincoln (Editor)
Massimiliano M. Pellegrini
University of Rome Tor Vergata (Editor)
Afsnahe Bagheri
University of Tehran
Matteo Cristofaro
University of Rome Tor Vergata
Sally Dibb
Coventry University
Mohammad Fakher
University of Rome Tor Vergata
Marina Dabic
University of Zagreb and Nottingham Trent University
Leo-Paul Dana
Dalhousie University
Giulia Flamini
University of Rome Tor Vergata
Laëtitia Gabay-Mariani
CERAG - Grenoble-Alpes University
Anibal Lopez
Nova School of Business and Economics
Luca Gnan
University of Rome Tor Vergata
Charlott Menke
Fraunhofer Center for International Management and Knowledge Economy IMW, Germany
Damiano Petrolo
University of Rome Tor Vergata
Marco Romano
University of Catania
Yi Ruan
University of Nottingham Ningbo China
Sid Hanna Saleh
Colorado School of Mines
Anna Souakri
ESCP Europe
Marzena Starnawska
University of Warsaw
Matthias Raith
Otto-von-Guericke-Universität Magdeburg
Giuseppe Valenza
Mediterranea University of Reggio Calabria
Cizhi Wang
Capital University of Business and Economics
Title Page
EUROPEAN VENTURE TOOLBOX
The Path for SMEs to Grasp and Defend Opportunities
BY
NICHOLAS H. KIRK
University of Florence, Italy
AND
LAMBERTO ZOLLO
University of Milan, Italy
United Kingdom – North America – Japan – India – Malaysia – China
Copyright Page
Emerald Publishing Limited
Howard House, Wagon Lane, Bingley BD16 1WA, UK
First edition 2021
Copyright © 2021 Nicholas H. Kirk and Lamberto Zollo. Published under an exclusive license by Emerald Publishing Limited.
Reprints and permissions service
Contact: permissions@emeraldinsight.com
No part of this book may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, transmitted in any form or by any means electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise without either the prior written permission of the publisher or a licence permitting restricted copying issued in the UK by The Copyright Licensing Agency and in the USA by The Copyright Clearance Center. Any opinions expressed in the chapters are those of the authors. Whilst Emerald makes every effort to ensure the quality and accuracy of its content, Emerald makes no representation implied or otherwise, as to the chapters’ suitability and application and disclaims any warranties, express or implied, to their use.
British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data
A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library
ISBN: 978-1-80117-319-3 (Print)
ISBN: 978-1-80117-318-6 (Online)
ISBN: 978-1-80117-320-9 (Epub)
Contents
List of Figures | ix |
List of Tables | xi |
Preface | xii |
Acknowledgments | xvi |
PART I | |
1. The Rationale for Entrepreneurship and a Structure to Navigate Through Its Uncertainty | 3 |
2. Talking to Customers and Looking for Problems | 13 |
3. Identifying and Describing Novel Value | 21 |
4. Meeting Market’s Expectations: The Importance of Early Prototyping and Validation | 27 |
5. Framing and Positioning in the Bigger Picture | 39 |
6. EU Versus US: The European Position in the Global Frame | 51 |
PART II | |
Case Study: Olive Oil Commercialization | 65 |
PART III | |
Practitioners’ Notes: Introduction | 77 |
Practitioners’ Note 1: Vision Structuring | 79 |
Practitioners’ Note 2: Beachhead Market Selection | 83 |
Practitioners’ Note 3: Value Proposition Definition | 89 |
Practitioners’ Note 4: People Orchestration | 95 |
Practitioners’ Note 5: Financial Viability | 99 |
Practitioners’ Note 6: Return and Risk Optimality | 103 |
Practitioners’ Note 7: Selling & Negotiation | 107 |
Practitioners’ Note 8: Fundraising | 111 |
Practitioners’ Note 9: Execution Modalities | 117 |
Closing Notes | 125 |
References | 127 |
Index | 131 |
List of Figures
Fig. 1 | Psychology (Reflect Through) | 5 |
Fig. 2 | Sociology (Crossing Intersection) | 5 |
Fig. 3 | The Iceberg Metaphor | 7 |
Fig. 4 | (a) Diane, 24 years old, Paris (France) also known as The Marketing Specialist. (b) Alex, 26 years old, Berlin (Germany) also known as The 4.0 Guy | 9 |
Fig. 5 | The Entrepreneurial Journey Framework | 10 |
Fig. 6 | Problem-scouting and Solving (Rubik’s Cube) | 14 |
Fig. 7 | Entrepreneurial Sensemaking | 17 |
Fig. 8 | Sensemaking in Problem-scouting | 19 |
Fig. 9 | Link 1 of the Entrepreneurial Journey Framework | 20 |
Fig. 10 | New Idea for Needs and Expectations | 22 |
Fig. 11 | New Entrants Versus Leaders | 22 |
Fig. 12 | Link 2 of the Entrepreneurial Journey Framework | 26 |
Fig. 13 | Departing Gondola in the Venetian Lagoon (Italy) | 28 |
Fig. 14 | Minimum Viable Product (MVP) | 30 |
Fig. 15 | Turning Ideas into Opportunities | 33 |
Fig. 16 | Positioning Map: Fast Food & Drinks Market | 33 |
Fig. 17 | FICO Eataly World Expo | 35 |
Fig. 18 | Positioning Map: Luxury Car Market | 36 |
Fig. 19 | Link 3 of the Entrepreneurial Journey Framework | 38 |
Fig. 20 | Teamworking | 40 |
Fig. 21 | Business Model Framework | 43 |
Fig. 22 | The Buyer Persona Is Every First-year Entrepreneur’s Essential Target | 45 |
Fig. 23 | Touchpoints Along the Customer Journey | 45 |
Fig. 24 | Link 4 of the Entrepreneurial Journey Framework | 47 |
Fig. 25 | The Entrepreneurial Journey Framework, Re-conceptualized | 48 |
Fig. 26 | Olive Oil Grove | 66 |
Fig. 27 | The Brand Logo of Alex and Diane’s New Venture | 67 |
Fig. 28 | Königssee, Schönau am Königssee (Germany) | 80 |
Fig. 29 | Durdle Door, Wareham (UK) | 84 |
Fig. 30 | Offering a Present | 90 |
Fig. 31 | Arrows in Shooting Target | 92 |
Fig. 32 | String Quartet | 96 |
Fig. 33 | Spilled Coins from Jar | 100 |
Fig. 34 | Man on Rope | 104 |
Fig. 35 | Local Market | 108 |
Fig. 36 | Bills from All over the World | 112 |
Fig. 37 | Man Playing Piano | 118 |
List of Tables
Table 1 | Successful Business Ideas in the Food Delivery Market | 15 |
Table 2 | Spotify Users’ Pain Points and Pain Killers | 16 |
Table 3 | The “what makes us unique” Framework | 41 |
Table 4 | Applying the “what makes us unique” Framework to Instant Messaging Platforms | 42 |
Table 5 | Main Differences Between US and EU Entrepreneurial Approaches | 53 |
Table 6a | Challenges | 68 |
Table 6b | Opportunities | 69 |
Table 6c | Finance | 70 |
Table 6d | Legal | 70 |
Table 6e | Funding | 71 |
Table 6f | Marketing | 71 |
Table 7 | Categorizations | 72 |
Preface
Dear reader,
This book is written by a theoretician and a practitioner in Europe. Despite all the manuals around, many first time entrepreneurs don’t bring practicality into their passion, and fail for so many reasons. There are patterns to these, and many are avoidable, generic pitfalls, while others are very Europe-specific.
We bring experience into the equation and try to explain all the basics to go for, as well as all that has to be avoided. No matter if you are a student, first year entrepreneur, or practitioner in the field: in the following pages you’ll find many strategic “tools” which, both in theory and practice, will help you better understand how to grasp and defend the entrepreneurial opportunities present in your market of choice.
Our objective is to:
Increase chances of success of first time European entrepreneurs via a practical guide to new venture creation tailored to today’s context in Europe
Enable the reader to understand practice directly via emblematic case studies
Provide insights on the entrepreneurship phenomenon as a whole, mainly applied to European markets in crisis, via new theoretical advances mixed with practitioner experience.
Many European entrepreneurs, given the abundance of influential American companies and books, are prone to the rhetoric of company building based on the following factors, among others later discussed:
- –
fast-growing startup survivorship bias: seeing a few companies scale does not imply a general possibility for many
- –
abundance of circulating capital bias: both end customers and investors do not have the budget magnitude that American ecosystems developed
- –
market addressability restrictions: due to language and regulatory aspects, the market your service can access is not the Europe-wide ecosystem
- –
difference in European fiscal systems: location of company founding and its ecosystem is fundamental for the business viability in the first years from launch.
Let us define European entrepreneurship: given its internal diversity, as it currently stands it can be mainly defined in contrast to US theory and practice on the points mentioned above. However, what we can do is talk about the European objective, which is to maintain and expand upon its current points of leverage, such as being the largest Gross Domestic Product (GDP) block in the world.1 In order to do this, the major backbone of EU entrepreneurship, currently Small-to-Medium Enterprises (SMEs), needs to find novel structures to survive and thrive in crises. For this, we provide frameworks for the European entrepreneur, to let her/him focus on consolidating strategies, and only then to proceed toward grasping wider financial opportunities.
Our unique value:
- 1)
Part I: a series of conceptual chapters comprising examples, giving you an overarching understanding of what business value actually is, how it is created, and how it is conveyed. In particular:
Chapter 1: The rationale for entrepreneurship, why this is close to us, and what model can navigate us through structured business opportunity discovery and implementation
Chapter 2: customer-orientation and problem-scouting for formulating a business idea
Chapter 3: identifying value gaps, what solutions exist and which are feasible with the current team and resources, describing the characterized value in a narrative
Chapter 4: the importance of testing for payment with a first product prototype to probe for value perception according to the customer
Chapter 5: how can we structure our business in terms of who is the perceived value for, when, and in which context?
Chapter 6: how do the concepts of entrepreneurship learned so far compare in Europe and US in detail?
- 2)
Part II: a deep case study on a practical business idea and all the questions that come to mind, narrated from the perspective of two fictional characters who are young first year entrepreneurs, as well as how to go about beating the initial mental fog and proceed to execution; in other words, all the pro and cons related to turning an initial business idea into practice
- 3)
Part III: several “practitioners’ notes,” which discuss pitfalls and hands-on wisdom. Concise as possible, they are meant as off-the-shelf references readable when necessary, on different sequential topics, specifically:
Practitioners’ note 1: why people start companies; what impact is intended; company aim characterization
Practitioners’ note 2: understanding where to start the iterative business development process in the market; the comparison between solution-first, problem-first, and niche-first approaches
Practitioners’ note 3: identifying what value actually is; aiming for its quantification in time-cost factor reductions; the importance of focusing on high-billable priorities
Practitioners’ note 4: understanding people as the central element of any business, and how relationships are built; the importance of rapport creation and responsiveness; the first 3Cs filter for hiring
Practitioners’ note 5: the importance of a financial urgency sense; estimating business viability on the basis of customer acquisition costs and customer lifetime value; understanding KPI construction
Practitioners’ note 6: understanding return and risk as the fundamental inseparable pair to be estimated in all business decisions; concept of opportunity cost
Practitioners’ note 7: the basics of selling, identifying the main decision makers in a sale; the importance of customer qualification
Practitioners’ note 8: the traditionally known phases of investment and its prerequisites
Practitioners’ note 9: the mental models and approaches necessary to drastically improve decision-making quality and quantity.
May you enjoy reading as we enjoyed writing. And above all, may you proceed to execution and create a successful European venture.
Yours faithfully,
Nicholas Kirk & Lamberto Zollo
Note
1. The following references provide evidence for the European Union alone; the aggregation of other countries in geographical Europe increases such estimate: https://trade.ec.europa.eu/doclib/docs/2013/december/tradoc_151969.pdf; https://ec.europa.eu/trade/policy/eu-position-in-world-trade/.
Acknowledgments
This book has widely benefited from the knowledge and insights of many of our current and former colleagues, namely Cristiano Ciappei, Maria Carmen Laudano, Riccardo Rialti, and Vincenzo Zampi (University of Florence). We would like to especially thank Floris A. S. Engelhardt (MIT) for her extremely valuable comments on the first drafted version of this book, and for coming up with proactive suggestions on the structure and readability, as well as for the title.
A strong acknowledgement for contributing to the brainstorming for the practitioners’ notes goes to Simon Kaltenbacher and Shahrom Hosseini Sohi.
The investors Masoud Kamali, Fabian Leipelt, Alexander Kölpin, and Roel Bergsma provided unique and relentless mentorship that strongly influenced the mindset expressed in this book.
We thank all the survey participants who enabled the response-driven construction of the fictitious case study presented, namely Marco Lazzeretti, Marco Esposito, David Iorio, Fausto Milletarì, Konstantin Ivanov, Fabio Lopez, Philipp Walter, Alessandro Pecori, Vipul Khatana, and Elisa Baeckmann.
Last but not least, a big acknowledgement to Anthony Kirk for having revised the entire book from a linguistic perspective to a very deep extent.
We are very grateful to all our friends and family who provided moral support and preliminary interest toward this book: we hope to meet and exceed your expectations.
- Prelims
- Part I
- 1. The Rationale for Entrepreneurship and a Structure to Navigate Through its Uncertainty
- 2. Talking to Customers and Looking for Problems
- 3. Identifying and Describing Novel Value
- 4. Meeting Market’s Expectations: The Importance of Early Prototyping and Validation
- 5. Framing and Positioning in the Bigger Picture
- 6. EU versus US: The European Position in the Global Frame
- Part II
- Case Study: Olive Oil Commercialization
- Part III
- Practitioners’ Notes: Introduction
- Practitioners’ Note 1: Vision Structuring
- Practitioners’ Note 2: Beachhead Market Selection
- Practitioners’ Note 3: Value Proposition Definition
- Practitioners’ Note 4: People Orchestration
- Practitioners’ Note 5: Financial Viability
- Practitioners’ Note 6: Return and Risk Optimality
- Practitioners’ Note 7: Selling & Negotiation
- Practitioners’ Note 8: Fundraising
- Practitioners’ Note 9: Execution Modalities
- Closing Notes
- References
- Index