Much of the literature on entrepreneurship focuses on how to find and evaluate opportunities. But for many entrepreneurs and managers, seeing the opportunity is the easy part. The real challenge lies in seizing it.
Those who have identified a gap in the market often stumble because they can’t scale their organization to meet booming customer demand before competitors encroach. To use a military metaphor, a general must not only spot an opening in the enemy’s defense, but also marshal the resources to execute an attack before the window of opportunity closes.
The rapid growth required to seize an opportunity places enormous strains on a company’s resources, organization, balance sheet and management. Here are five key questions entrepreneurs and managers should ask themselves before scaling a promising initiative:
Ready for Growth
- The Issue: Entrepreneurs and managers with good ideas often stumble by being unprepared for the countless challenges involved in scaling a promising initiative.
- Why It Matters: The rapid growth required to seize an opportunity can strain an organization’s resources, balance sheet and management.
- The Prescrip/The Advice:tion: Test your preparedness with a series of questions, including: “Do you know what you’re betting on?”
1. What Are You Betting On?
This is a fundamental question, and should be easy to answer. “I don’t know” is a bad answer. When entrepreneurs cannot provide a clear or compelling answer to this question, it typically signals that they haven’t yet articulated a clear customer need or settled on a business plan that makes financial sense and provides an advantage over competitors.
The most compelling answers to this question often link back to changes in the broader context, including technology, the economy or society, that spur demand for new products and services or better ways to meet existing needs. The combination of increasing disposable income and growing health concerns, for instance, spurred demand for bottled water in China, an opportunity Groupe Danone seized.
Whatever the source of the opportunity, clarity on what the big bet is provides a focus for subsequent activities and clarifies the pitch for resources.
It is normal for entrepreneurs to go through several business models before settling on one, but a common mistake among both start-ups and established companies is to overcommit resources before the business model has been nailed down. Premature commitment will expose the problems in the business model but leave little time to resolve them.
One technology founder decided to launch his product nationally, against the advice of his board, because
Get Premium Already a Premium Subscriber? Sign In
Purchase
Buy this article
Purchase one or more copies as a PDF

Copyright © Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1977-2011. All rights reserved.











