This is 30 minutes of business studies gold dust. Evan Davis brings together three superb speakers for this edition of The Bottom Line to discuss the nature of startups in the UK and also the related topic of innovation and adaptability. Some terrific insights here for all A* students and I would highly recommend that you download the podcast for your own enjoyment too.
Click here for a link to the podcast
Matt Brittin - MD Google UK
Lara Morgan - Founder Pacific Direct (made a fortune in hotel toiletries)
Luke Johnson - serial entrepreneur (Pizza Express, The Ivy, Prada, best-selling author & FT columnist)
Some key points made (in broad order of discussion) [my points of emphasis in square brackets]
Starting a Business
Only 10% of people will ever start their business
Entrepreneurs need a “desire for gain”, not a fear of loss
Starting a business provides great freedom and creativity [than working for someone else] - links to motives for being an entrepreneur
But starting a business can be lonely - requires great self-motivation and persistence [qualities of an entrepreneur]
Most entrepreneurs who “make it” - have taken 10-15 years to build a success [rarely such a thing as an overnight success]
It is not really about the “idea” - it is about the execution of the idea [how important is the business idea?]
Business angels are under-rated - they are key to getting good businesses off the ground [sources of finance]
Friends and family finances - can cause emotional problems [a potential downside of raising finance from relatives!]
Retained profit was key to the growth of Pacific Direct - the main source of finance [a hugely important point - profits reinvested in a business for growth]
Bank funding is much easier to get when the business has a track record of profitable trading [banks see startups as high risk and are very unlikely to lend to them]
Setting up online enables a startup to check the viability of an idea much quicker, but a website alone is not enough
Do startups create jobs? Many online startups are run by just one or a few people [the govt is probably unwise relying on encouraging business startups as a way of reducing unemployment!]
Barriers to entry - are they lower for startups? [depends on which market a startup is trying to enter]
Startups have almost no chance in many markets - e.g. Google, Apple and Amazon dominate their markets [startups are better targeting a niche]
Online advertising - creates huge opportunities for startups because it allows targetted, measurable advertising [but online advertising just one part of a promotional mix]
A dramatic cultural shift in attitudes to entrepreneurship in the UK - many people turning to the idea of starting up - more advice, more role models [more competition for startups, but perhaps less risk]
Locations for startups - entrepreneurs benefit from working together / alongside each other [location benefits of collaboration]
No comments:
Post a Comment