Reference no: EM132501142 , Length: 8 pages + 10 slides
                                                                               
                                       
GEN302 Fundamentals of Innovation and Entrepreneurship - Emirates College of Technology
In this  project, student team should pick an idea and use the time to determine  whether or not their idea is a true opportunity that can be turned into  a scalable enterprise. Students will use the study questions to guide  this exercise.
Question 1: Identify potential opportunities. Combine your own personal experiences  and creativity with external forecasts and trend analysis. How is the  world changing with respect to new technologies? What is the impact of  globalization on current solutions? What new requirements will those  changes produce? Recent media articles on trends are often a good place  to start.
Question 2: Define your purpose and objectives. Identify your most promising  opportunity, being careful to discriminate between an interesting  technological idea and a viable market opportunity. Prepare an outline  which will help you to determine what types of data and information you  need to demonstrate the attractiveness of your chosen opportunity.
Question 3: Gather data from primary sources. It is crucial for you to obtain data  from primary sources. Potential investors will place more trust in well  conducted primary research than in stacks of data from secondary  sources. There is simply no substitute for talking to potential  customers from the target market in order to validate the opportunity  you have identified. Consequently, we prefer that you spend time  gathering data from primary, not just secondary, sources.
Question 4: Gather data from secondary sources. Countless secondary sources exist  on the web and in your college's various library resources. Try not to  get too bogged down in financial and accounting data.
 Analyze and interpret the results. Persuasively summarize your results.
Assignment.
In your  written analyses and presentations, you will tell the "story" of your  proposed venture by addressing as much of the following as possible:
A.	 Concept and Vision. Where did your idea come from (e.g. a university  lab)? Explain what the market opportunity is and how your solution  addresses this. What makes your solution particularly compelling? How  does it make the world a better place? Do you have personal experiences  with this market? Is there existing intellectual property that you must  license or new intellectual property you must develop in order to pursue  this opportunity? Has anyone tried something like this before? If so,  why did they fail or succeed, and why is the opportunity still  attractive?
B.	 Market Analysis. What industry or sector of the economy are you  addressing? Why is this market attractive? What segment of the overall  market are you pursuing? What market research can be done to describe  this market need? What are the total industry or category sales over the  past three years? What is the anticipated growth for this industry? If  this is anew market, what is the best analogous market data that  illustrates the opportunity? Project the potential market size and  growth for your opportunity.
C.	 Customers and Customer Development. This is extremely important. You  need to have a clear idea of who your target customer is. The only way  for you to be able to do this is to "get out of the building" and speak  with your potential customers. You will need to answer questions such  as: What does the customer need? Why does the customer need it? What is  the customer using today? What is the customer willing to pay for your  solution? Why? How will you reach this customer? You should include both  primary (or first-hand) research and secondary research, emphasizing  primary over secondary.
D.	 Competition and Positioning. Who else serves this customer need? Who  might attempt to serve this market in the future? What advantages and  weaknesses do these competitors and would-be competitors have? What  share of the market do specific competitors serve? Are the major  competitors' sales growing, declining, or steady? What are the barriers  to entry for you? What are the barriers to entry for additional  competitors? How could partners and allies best help you overcome  competition from established enterprises or other startups?
E.	 Business Model. Now that you have discovered an opportunity and talked  to potential customers, how will you turn it into a business? How will  you make money and when do you expect your venture to be profitable?  What is the major risk to address right away (e.g., market or  technical)? In other words, which hypothesis regarding product or market  strategies need to be tested right away?
F.	 Learning and Adaptation. What did you learn and how between the time you  chose the idea in Week 9 and producing the final presentation and  written report in Week 12? Is this idea a true opportunity or not?
The  items above have no implied order. Some entrepreneurs start with a  well-defined concept and then try to identify a market for their idea;  others start by studying a market and then stumble upon an idea. Also,  please keep in mind that the specific data and information you provide  will vary according to the type of opportunity you choose to analyze. A  key success factor for a successful project is the depth of your  analysis and what you learned from it.
If  after careful research you have determined that your business idea is  not as promising as you originally thought, it is completely acceptable  to present an OAP that describes why your idea will not make sense now  rather than why it is the next big thing. An honest and rigorous  analysis of an idea that did not survive further scrutiny is preferable  to either (a) a half-baked presentation of an idea your team is unsure  of, or (b) an enthusiastic job of over selling for your current idea,  even though you know it is problematic.
Attachment:- Fundamentals of Innovation.rar