Intro To Innov Entrep
Intro To Innov Entrep
Intro To Innov Entrep
Course Number 5915 (1.5 credits) Course Number 5913 (3.0 credits) Joe Lassiter, Bill Sahlman Winter Schedule (Tuesdays and Thursdays, Jan 28 March 12) 3:30 - 5:30 pm, Hawes 101 As a 1.5 credit course in Q3 as a 14 session classroom course at HBS, or As a 3.0 credit course in Q3 as a 14 session classroom course at HBS followed in Q4 with a fieldbased course project with periodic meetings utilizing the Harvard Innovation Lab working spaces and Experts-in-Residence.
Overview
This course is designed for non-MBA Harvard graduate students (and, with permission of the instructors, postdoctoral fellows and students from eligible programs at other Universities) who intend to start or join a new venture early in their career. Admission to this course is by permission of the instructors only. Applicants should enter the normal cross-registration process at HBS. In addition, prior to January 23, 2013 at 5 pm, the applicant must email Joe Lassiters assistant, Theresa Gaignard (tgaignard@hbs.edu), attaching a resume, a one halfpage essay describing their motivation for taking the course and, for those applying to the 3.0 credit offering, an additional one half-page description of their proposed course project.
Career Focus
This course is intended to help students identify areas in which changes in science and technology, consumer and social attitudes, or political and regulatory processes allow the creation of new businesses or the redesign of established businesses.
Educational Objectives
The classroom portion of the course covers some of the basics of entrepreneurial management and entrepreneurial finance needed to launch new ventures. Students will acquire a toolkit for identifying and forming a new venture. This toolkit can be then applied through a course project by students enrolled in the 3.0 credit course offering.
In addition to the courses faculty, students MUST engage a content expert to help focus the projects and to add real world context and expertise. Usually this will be an outside sponsor from a business, investment firm, notforprofit organization, or academic research entity. It is possible for students in this course to be part of Independent Project teams with MBA students not in the course, with permission of the course head. There are three themes to the course: 1. Applying the concepts and tools of Entrepreneurial Management and Entrepreneurial Finance to new ventures 2. Structure of key venture capital sectors; strategies of primary venture investors 3. Examples of innovations in a range of new industries
1. Innovation 2. Adoption 3. Adoption 4. Adoption 5. Venture Capital 6. Venture Capital 7. Venture Capital 8. Value & Valuation 9. Value & Valuation 10. Value & Valuation 11. Value & Valuation 12. Business Models 13. Business Models 14. Closing Lecture
Foro Energy (A) (812-136) OfficeTiger (804-109) & Moores Crossing the Chasm, Inside the Tornado Dropbox: It Just Works (811-065) Rent the Runway (812-077) Khosla Ventures: Biofuels Gain Liquidity (812-035) The Venture Capital Problem Set (812-039) Term Sheets RightNow Technologies (805-032) Airbnb (812-046) 1366 Technologies: Scaling the Venture (811-076) Sirtris Pharmaceuticals: Living Healthier, Longer (808-112) NovoCure Ltd. (810-045) Khan Academy (812-074)
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2/5: Dropbox
Introduction Accel/Sequoia-backed Dropbox offers a cloud-based service that allows users to synchronize and share files across PCs and smart phones. Well use this case to introduce several course concepts, including product -market fit, usercentered product development, customer conversion funnel optimization in a freemium SaaS context, and business development challenges for early-stage ventures negotiating with large corporations. Materials 1. 2. CASE | Dropbox: It Just Works (811-065)* NOTE | Hypothesis-Driven Entrepreneurship: The Lean Startup (812-095) * ARTICLE |Is the Tipping Point Toast?, by Clive Thompson, Fast Company (February 2008) (optional) Dropbox is a late mover in a crowded space. Do you consider the firm successful as of June 2010? Why or why not? When he applied to Y Combinator (see Ex. 1), what hypotheses did Houston hold about key elements of Dropbox's business model? As of June 2010, which of these hypotheses have been confirmed, and which have been discarded? What is your assessment of the approach Houston used to validate hypotheses? Did Houston waste time/resources or make other notable mistakes? Can you imagine other/better ways to test each hypothesis? What should Houston do about the decision posed at the end of the case, i.e., creating a professional version for business customers? What process should he use to make this decision?
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Assignment Questions Please refer to VC Problem Set Guidance Spreadsheet for help in answering questions in the VC Problem Set. Please note that the are two levels of guidance: 1. Green for beginners and black for advanced knowledge. 2. Please use the most appropriate level for you.
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Assignment Questions Among the issues you might consider are the following: 1. What value would you assign to RightNow at the time of the case? You should determine this valuation using the FCF Valuation Model together with the appropriate assumptions drawn from the data in the case. How should the company respond to the acquisition offer? What would acceptable terms be? If RightNow is not acquired at this time, what financial strategy should it pursue?
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2/26: Airbnb
Introduction Brian Chesky, Joe Gebbia, and Nathan Blecharczyk, the three founders of Airbnb, an online private accommodation rental market, stared at each other across the kitchen table in their San Francisco apartment. It was March of 2009. A single sheet of paper sat on the table in front of them. The question theyd been discussing was whether or not the company should take Sequoias money . The three founders didnt have much time to make a decision. The next day was Demo Day, the culmination of their time at YC, when each of the companies from their class would present to a room full of VCs and Angels. Sequoia expected an answer before Airbnb took the stage. Materials CASE | Airbnb (812-046)* NOTE | The Changing Face of Angel Investing (811-046) (optional) ARTICLE | Another Airbnb Victim Tells His Story: There Were Meth Pipes Everywhere (optional) VIDEO | How to Airbnb, Airbnb advertisement (optional, available after class)
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Assignment Questions 1. 2. What benefits did Airbnb receive from the YCombinator program? What did they have to give up? Why have entities like Techstars and YC emerged in the funding ecosystem? What type of entrepreneurs would be drawn to these incubators? What role do they play compared to that played by traditional venture capital firms in the 1990s and today? Should Chesky, Gebbia, and Blecharczyk accept the Sequoia offer? Why? If they do, how should they spend the money?
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Should Sirtris do the deal with the pharmaceutical company? Why or why not? If you do recommend a deal, which equity stake (20% or 51%) would you prefer? Should Sirtris launch a SRT501 nutraceuticals business? Why or why not? Please propose a launch plan for a nutraceuticals business.
Assignment Questions Among the issues you might consider are the following: 1. What is the nature of the opportunity confronting NovoCure? 2. How much money should the company raise? From whom? For what purpose? On what terms? 3. What should Bill Doyle do?
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