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15 - The identification and pursuit of new business opportunities

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  22 September 2009

Vijay Sathe
Affiliation:
Claremont Graduate School, California
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Summary

This chapter examines how the identification and pursuit of new opportunities by the division influence new business creation (Table 15.1).

New business creation requires the generation and exploration of new business opportunities, their proper specification, and a commitment to pursue them despite the attendant technical and market uncertainties.

It pays to generate and explore a large number of new business opportunities in order find the most attractive ones to specify and commit to. A disciplined system for doing this – consisting of project phases, milestones, reviews, and technical audits – yields better results than less disciplined approaches.

Generation of new business opportunities

New business opportunities can be generated by conducting market and competitor intelligence, by resurrecting discarded business ideas, and by using formal mechanisms such as a new product group or committee.

Conducting market and competitor intelligence

DGM Mike Walker of AMP Sigcom emphasized the importance of market intelligence:

My concept of business is economic warfare. The Art of War by Sun Tzu and The Book of Five Rings [by Miyamoto Musashi] are extremely pertinent. But first you need market intelligence — weather data, supply capabilities, the generals competing against you. You can know your marketplace, map out the battle plan, and make decisions [concerning threats, opportunities, and initiatives] by using intelligence. Read trade journals; talk to your suppliers, customers, and your competition. If a guy left a competitor, you interview him. You collect drops of data.

Type
Chapter
Information
Corporate Entrepreneurship
Top Managers and New Business Creation
, pp. 215 - 236
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2003

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