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PREMIUM

Angels better than VCs?

Recent Volatility

Kerry & Snowe rejuvenate the US SBIC program

Benchmark Capital creates Balderton Capital

China venture capital grew 55 percent in 2006

ETF closes $70m in first European cleantech fund

New £25m early stage venture fund launched along with ‘IQ Angel’ sector experts

Pond Ventures: a VC fund with a live technology pulse

Scotland’s Braveheart plans AIM flotation amid nervous market

Seraphim Capital, an angel-led fund with a mission

Chilli Profile: Quotient Diagnostics

INSIDE Contactless recapitalizes with new round of $25m

Applied Materials purchase of HCT Shaping Systems SA

ARC’s acquistion of Tenison EDA: a real Bargain

Giddy steps down from Amino

Mobile multimedia

MPEG4 rising fast

Sweet vengeance for Transmeta as Intel forks out $250m

CEVA DSPs shipping to 80 percent of handset OEMs

Sony Ericsson ASP drops but volume grows 59%

Tenison EDA acquisition by ARC

China to adopt single corporate rate tax for both domestic and foreign entities, and property rights law

Automotive semiconductor firm ELMOS raises sales and net income

Trade Commission’s final decision in Rambus ‘standard setting’ case

CEVA cost-cutting drive for profitability impacts first half revenue growth

US angel networks go through a renaissance

Ignios’ final curtain: lessons learned

Can start-ups compete directly with the giant gorillas?

Broadband Market Statistics

OECD Inflation Data

Europe revives optics

Cellular modems on rise

MIDs boost mobile data

Future market for PNDs

Multi-standard DTV

Digital asset opps

Nokia lowers outlook

AM-OLED debate

Mobile phones saturation

Decline in RF for 3G

Enhanced mobile HSPA

3G iPhone teardown

Solar cell parity

'Flirting with Europeans'

HSPA mobile broadband deal

GPS to hit $1bn

Downturn in all economies

Wireless semis surpass overall chips

Optoelectronics growth

Photovoltaic silicon shortage

Q108 mobile handset top five

LTE launch raises competition for WiMAX

Toshiba Exits HD-DVD

WiMAX Roll Out

LEDs drive lighting

Blade server shipments

2008 smart card mkt

LEDs and Traditional Lighting

Nintendo displaces Sony

Maps Key Part of GPS

WiFi Radio

LCD-TV revenue to reach $7.4 billion in 2011

PC Market

Microcontrollers growth: Renesas takes lion share

Optics market boost with Ericsson high capacity IPTV

OLED shipments will make a small mark in TV market

Electronic shelf display (ESL) to lead small display market

OECD broadband subscribers to hit 200 million

Content drives up mobile phone ARPU as voice declines

PMP/MP3 player is fastest growing market in consumer electronics

Is there a future for DAB, DVB-H, mobile TV in automotive infotainment?

Pay-TV, IPTV to drive premium video services market to exceed $277 billion by 2010

Freescale Semiconductor leads in $18bn automotive IC market

How much do the components cost in an iPhone?

How much do the components cost in an iPhone?

Will Europe feature in the top fabless list?

India’s chip design industry set to nearly quadruple by 2010

PlayStation 3 offers supercomputer performance at PC pricing

Smartphone sales rising fast

Quanta and Asustek lead ODM chip spending in 2006

iPod Nano teardown reveals much reduced BoM over earlier versions

Koreans take the lead over China in global television market

LED future bright despite 2005 slowdown

Clock generation market to double in five years

Broadband/Internet potentially the most disruptive market for video-on-demand (VoD)

IPTV subscriber base set for explosive growth

Temperature sensor ICs growing again

Blood pressure monitoring and tyre pressure sensors market to double

Is Toshiba taking loss on HD-DVD shipments?

China’s top 10 IC design companies - opportunities for HTSUs

New thermal IC products - ‘cool’ solutions

key trends in the Indian telecom industry

iPod and cell phones intensify market for OLED displays

Real world signal management drives $50 billion mixed-signal market

The big semiconductor company’s dilemma

Promising science: magnetic logic

China-India GDP

Indian Bio startup support

Indian Economy in 2008

Chinese EMV market

Nanotech challenges

Ericsson Deal With Idea Cellular

Rural Internet Pilot

China 3G license incentives

China GPS chipsets

India $6.59bn Consumer Electronics

Indian Telecom $4.5bn capex spend

Early Stage fund marriages

London acquires Yorkshire

Increased MEA M&A

US IPO rebounds

Europe IPO/M&A slows

Motorola’s acquisition of TTPCom will unnerve IP market

Rajeev Madhavan

Capital Markets Turbulence

Packet Switched Networks

Draft Executive Order

SBIR 20th year

3i Quits Venture Capital

IMEC Taiwan benefits start-ups

Should VC-backed companies be entitled to government grants?

Small Firms' Research

PREMIUM

Narayan Murthy, Infosys founder, speaks in London

Women entreps think tank gets £540k

BERR changes

Investment in natural speech for games

Awards reach Europe VCs

Mobile-based social network targets India

Schroder heads Arma USA

3i expert joins Wellington

Banks & small business

Motorola's deal for Jha

EDA test firm's £750k

DN Capital opens in US

SWRDA fastTrack2

Young Apprentice winner

Miracor receives €6 million

New ETF team member from Goldman Sachs

NTRglobal receives €22m

Glover review - SME feedback wanted

North-West technology network kicks off

Electronic nose tech

Enterprising Britian finalists

$4.5m for ChipVision

Ericsson reverse stock split

Schools' design challenge

$8m for travel web site

Review site funding and French portal

Selective public procurement for SMEs/HTSUs

Silicon Valley Boomer Business Competition

Firms go online to choose licensable tech

Techno gadgets burning out Brits

Serial Web entrepreneur now at Wellington Partners

More female entrepreneurs wanted

HuaXun 'sea turtles' and CEVA deliver software GPS

$10m for in-building wireless tech

$220m clean tech fund closes

5th exit for The Capital Fund

Flight search engine's new chairman

lastminute team gets second Spark

Mobius acquires Harvard technology license

SMS innovator secures £450k

FirstCapital assists Multimap in $50m buyout

Toumaz adds Australian patent

Virtual awards for mobile content

Fibre to Premises & WiFi gets boost

France stock options

Mi-Pay receives £1.8m

New VC for early stage tech

2008 tech growth despite gloom

NMI honours Ian Burnett

Scottish university projects get £3.3M

Pulsic board appoints EDA veteran

£600k for optical imaging

Join trade mission to India

London Technology Fund makes first exit

CamSemi eastern drive

ETT call for web start-ups d/l 30 Sep

XMOS raises $16m

No 9 to 5 for entreps

Belgacom satellite business acquired

Inxstor gets £600k funding

O2 entrepreneur of the year

OnRelay funding lead by IQ Capital

goSupermodel: dot bomb v2.0?

Nanotech innovator raises £225k for LEDs

Vicky Pryce appointed to Government Economic Service

Archives..

UKFI and early stage funds

A real-life dragons den, not reality TV

Co-founders' £44m cash jackpot

Intelligent mannequins

£80m R&D tax credit boost

Nokia/Qualcomm patent

Bill Gates retires, but..

Biofuels debate

UK VC capital in decline

Can EIS survive?

VCs follow new global innovation

UK's hidden innovators

Doing it in style in China

Bill Gates House Science Cttee speech

UK budget 08

A new UK talent strategy and SMEs

New Scottish can do spirit

New BERR team

Pesistence through volatile markets

HTSU's caught up in private equity crossfire

UK entreps' poor self-confidence

Goodbye DTI: game, set and ‘DIUS’

Indian KPO is the real threat to European high-tech, not BPO

Budget ’07: you have read the headlines - now read the analysis for high-tech start-ups

Independence for Technology Strategy Board (TSB)

UK businesses ignoring world’s fast growing economies are signing their death warrants

Check against delivery: Brown's Speech, Bangalore, India

Why do early stage investors stay glued to their domestic markets?

More editorials..

Antenova gets $10 million investment

Artimi raises $26.5 million in series B (R2) funding

Mirics: a fabless start-up with a clear vision

DiBcom

picoChip secures new VC fans and $20.5 million R3 funding

Esmertec IPO postponed

Smartdot

More Due Diligence..

£4m alternative funds for West Midlands

£300k investment in Bluetooth/Wi-Fi start-up

Semi investments drop 44%

Irish fabless bucks trend, secures $14m in R1

Israeli $2.3m VC funding

Intel leads solar €85m

MergeOptics rares towards IPO

CamSemi investments now total $30.5m

Scottish £1.3m grant to IC firm

No Israeli credit crunch

Cleantech investment peaks

Fuel cell tech funding

$14m for mobile voice apps

European VCs smell billion dollar exits

Use PE capital for overlooked markets

High-tech investors'optimism for 2008

Ex CSR VP leverages £1.2m in Camrivox

BoS pitches in with Oxford Angels

BoS pitches in with Oxford Angels

Israeli VCs hit six-year record

Oxford Capital ‘tees off’ with new venture

Braveheart maiden results

Israeli investments to hit record $1.7bn

New ECF candidates Q407

Q307 Euro VC trends

Earlybird VC exit award

US angel trends 1H07

VCT honeymoon over

US VC deals

First half Israeli VC rises by 10% to hit $842 million

E-Synergy to manage new Emerald Fund for university research projects

European Q1 VC flat at €1.07 billion

Venture-backed M&A/IPO levels back to 2000 level

More investor trends..

Ericsson mobile moves in Africa

Low cost photonics silicon prototyping

California complacency

Renewables report: can UK meet target?

World’s first 60GHz HD wireless chip is developed

Case report: patents/software in England

£2m funding drives microfluidics tech

70m PC buyers want mobile broadband

iPhone revenue sharing

GSMA to study mass market potential of embedded mobile broadband

UK patents: top 10 consolidates

Major company law overhaul

Durham Scientific Crystals

UK R&D

Differentiating between corporate spin-outs/carve outs/corporate venturing

VC investment slows in Q2 2005

First half Israeli high-tech venture capital rises by 15%

The US SBIR and its relevance to the UK

UK technology VC investments fall by 17% in 2004

EMV (chip + PIN): show us the money?

Digital cinema gets a kick-start

More markets..

Motivational and educational

Objective and not condescending dragon

Academics must blame themselves if they don’t patent

SFLG: independent ombudsman

SFLG sympathy: Bank managers are clueless

More right 2 reply..

Dialogue - Rajeev Madhavan

Gregory K. Hinckley

Robin Saxby

Walden Rhines

Simon Davidmann

Candace Johnson

David Srodzinski

SiGe pioneer joins semiconductor start-up

Richard Farleigh

Simon Davidmann

Gary Kildall

Walter Herriot

John Laurie

Amaratunga, CamSemi

More...

Outsourcing tips

R&D tax credits debate

Call for papers - VLSI2009

Lost years for UK innovation

Hard times, position your company for downturn

Green myths about corn ethanol

British Business Angels Association (BBAA) welcomes support for investment in early stage businesses

English Court Position on Computer Programs and Business Methods

The changing environment for life science funding

Patent, publish or perish?

More speakers corner..

Acuid in administration

MBO blues, part two

MBO blues, part one

Destructive acquisitions

The road to CEO hell

Doug Richard's downturn survival tips

Investing worst practices

To patent or not patent – that is the question

Roll up for the 3GSM Congress

Understanding key venture finance terms

The global patent

Trademarks

Steve Jobs

Investor presentations

Law firm pioneers fixed legal fees for investment solution

Top start-up tips from Mike Baker

More trade secrets..

Accountants are tech-savvy

Entrep and angel reunited at Venturefest v8

Intelligent Mechanized Mannequins

Auto PR generator

Schoolmaster claims credit for entrepreneurship programmes

Mirror TV

About Uncle Thakur

10 - the prospect, the channel

9 - Partnering

8 - Product development

7 - Stock options

6 - Building the team

5 - The term sheet

4 - Pinning down the plan

3 - Seeds of excess

2 - Dinner brainstorm

1 - Drive-by-IPO


High-tech

Media

Chilli Domain Definitions™

Chilli Value Test™

Chilli Startup Definitions™

SAMBiDS defined


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Benchmarks & Definitions

The Chilli Value Test ™


By The Chilli analysts

As an entrepreneur, you may have a 'Eureka' moment - that point in time where you have a great idea that may generate your fortune. Before you proceed to write your elevator pitch and your business plan, it's good practise to validate your business idea, to see if it will form the basis of a sustainable business. The Chilli Value Test ™ is a framework to help flesh out your thought process, strengthening the idea as well as preparing for the creation of the business plan and the due diligence from potential investors.

1. What problem are you solving?

2. What value are you adding?

3. Is the market big enough and growing?

4. How will you make money?

5. Barriers and paths to entry

6. Competition

7. Validating your idea

8. Overcoming customer inertia

9. Risk analysis - don't be surprised!

10. Key ingredients for a business plan

Summary

 

1. What problem are you solving?

You must be clear on the kind of problem you are solving. There are two categories. Are you putting out a fire? Are you solving a burning need, like the example of Cisco, who solved the problem of routing email across networks of incompatible bridges, hubs and routers?

Or are you making life easier, cheaper and faster? An example of this is the microprocessor, which allowed the mass production of computers and advanced consumer applications, such as games, set-top boxes, etc.

Startups are best focused on addressing well-defined problems. Avoid anything that is akin to a black hole that will drain your limited resources. Large companies have the advantage of resources and economy of scale. In contrast, the greatest advantage a startup has is its speed and agility in decision-making. A startup can make and execute a decision much more quickly than a large organisation.

2. What value are you adding?

If your solution is to be noticed, it should ideally address some kind of major problem. If it is a minor annoyance, you may find that people are quite happy to live with it, or may have a workaround.

How big is the problem? Can you quantify your value in terms of time, cost or speed? If your value is in terms of time to market, quantify it in terms of man months. Ultimately, it must be a tangible advantage, if you are to convince the ceo, cfo or vp of a potential customer.

It is important that you provide both a competitive advantage and a cost reduction (see 'Overcoming customer inertia').

3. Is the market big enough and growing?

Is this feast or famine? Growing markets can afford new players, and even market consolidation allows exit via merger and acquisition, making it attractive for investors. However, if the market is small with several competitors, you will find it hard to survive on reduced margins. If it is a market with one or two customers, you will find that they have a degree of monopolistic/duopolistic power over your business, and a cancelled order could kill your company. It is important to ask yourself whether this market is a growing niche, and how long it will remain so (see 'Competition'). If the area you are addressing is a commodity, beware the resources required for marketing and promotion - commodity products and services are the realm of the large enterprise - not the startup.

4. How will you make money?

Billion dollar estimates are not credible. Markets of that size consist of customers in different geographies with requirements so varied that they consume the product or service in different formats, rendering it impossible for one company to service them all effectively. Look at other companies in your niche - check their annual reports. Add up their annual sales into that segment, and that will give you an idea of the market size.

It is advisable to identify the niche that you can service, and determine who the customer actually is - many startups make the mistake of selling to the wrong part of the chain. Selling into a market is not quite the same as selling to a customer. So determine who your customers are, and how many there are in your chosen niche. Are there less than ten customers? Perhaps more than ten? Or is it a consumer mass-market proposition that will require much greater resources and indirect channels to market?

What will be the average selling price (asp)? What is the target customer's budget - can they actually afford to pay for it, and will they pay for it? Many startups pick the wrong kind of customers - check their financial viability first. It is best to stick to tried and tested business models. Will your business be based on licensing and royalties, services or unit product pricing? How many do you have to sell to reach your revenue targets? Remember that businesses sell products and services to customers that pay. Anything else is a charitable concern.

What is the sales cycle involved? You may have to allow sufficient time to start the relationship, allow an evaluation, then use of your product/service in a real project, before the project hopefully reaches volume production, turning into revenue for you. Markets with very long or complex sales cycles are not well suited to startups with limited budgets. Examples of such markets are the automotive industry as well as government tenders. However, such markets may provide an opportunity to partner with an organisation that already sells into that space (see 'Barriers and paths to entry').

5. Barriers and paths to entry

Section 1 emphasises the importance of well-defined markets. Many markets are vertically-integrated, with users, specifiers, operators, etc. Examples are the mobile phone and pay TV markets. What is the specifying authority for the market niche you are addressing? Is it a standards body or trade association? Is it a network operator or a regulatory authority? Does your product or service need approval?

Is the required know-how to address this niche freely available, patentable or proprietary? You should start identifying potential partners, that can provide you with access to specific sales channels, complementary technology and/or products and may even open up new markets to you. This is a very important point as you should aim to have some 'unfair advantages' to protect your niche from the attentions of others.

6. Competition

If you have no competitors, it may be because there is no market for what you are doing! It is important to remember that you are competing against companies, NOT products. You should investigate a company's financial and human resources, the skill set of their management team, their product/service portfolio, r & d/manufacturing capability and ownership of a channel, segment or strategic relationship.

If you have targeted a growing niche, at some point you will attract competitors, who previously ignored it. Identify when you think this is likely to happen. It is of course best to work in stealth mode for as long as is reasonably possible (but not so stealthily that potential customers, investors and partners don't know you exist!)

Can you use any unfair advantages, in terms of product proposition, partner or customers, to establish and then maintain, a rolling lead of 12-18 months ahead of the competition? Remember, a startup's strength is its speed and agility of decision-making.

7. Validating your idea

Get out there and use every moment to test and refine your idea! People love to talk. Read trade journals, pick up the phone. Visit trade shows and meet potential customers, partners and competitors - remember to remove your visitor's badge.

Flexibility is key, and you should be prepared to adapt your objectives, strategy and tactics upon receiving new information, and processing this information quickly will hold you in good stead against your larger competitors, where bureaucracy and filtering mechanisms are at work.

Read, phone, visit, ask open questions and above all, listen. By doing this, you are already on the way to building the relationships that your business needs.

8. Overcoming customer inertia

You must think about your target customers from the outset. As stated in section 4, they must attach a value to what you have, be willing to pay, and can actually afford to pay. Many customers will like you and be happy to invite you back. This may be because you are keeping a bored engineer occupied, or are developing a friendship instead of developing your business, or perhaps they are pumping you for information. In any case, you may not be any closer to a purchase order. As good practise and self-discipline, work out how much it costs you to court your target customers in terms of travel budget, preparation time, travel time, etc.

Spend your time trying to learn how the customer organisation makes decisions. Who holds the budget (signs the cheques)? Who is the influencer, and who will champion your cause internally?

You may feel like encouraging the customer to use your product or service on a trial basis, or provide free support. Try to avoid doing this, except for a special (pre-qualified) opportunity. The danger is that by doing this you set a precedent, which becomes a habit, and this forms a costly legacy that will hamper your organisation's operations and growth. Again, work out how much it costs you to trade with a customer - the cost of customers sold. The time and money wasted on a lost opportunity could have been better spent on pursuing a more worthy prospect.

If a customer already has an existing supplier, beware of the time it takes to change habits. The incumbent supplier has the advantage of an existing relationship (staff on both sides will have 'grown up' together), some track record of delivery and a price agreement. Customers will see a new startup supplier as a potential risk, and conservatism will be in play here. The sales cycle may be long and complex, and it may be better to attack the customer through partnership with an existing supplier or perhaps attack a smaller, but less risk-averse prospect, in order to gain traction in your chosen niche.

9. Risk analysis - don't be surprised!

Remember: anything that can go wrong will go wrong. Your software will be buggy, your chip may need two re-spins before it works properly as a product, rather than just sample silicon. Even if you have a signed a term sheet with an investor, you could be waiting for three months before the funds are cleared in your account.

This is your business, so of all the people involved in working for/with it, investing in it, etc, you are the one who should be least surprised when things go wrong. So prepare for it. Identify the risks and potential solutions.

If the product is behind schedule, can you increase resource, reduce the feature set, or phase the release, without losing your customer?

If a specific competitor has entered your niche, you should have seen it coming. You should have some channel or product advantage.

If your target customer falls through, your sales pipeline should have identified at least one or two more qualified opportunities.

If the customer is unable to pay…..well, this shouldn't happen. You would have selected the right customer, performed a credit check and taken some money upfront! Serious customers would have no problem with this.

If the market takes longer to develop, do you have a plan to generate some revenue in the short-term? If you foresee a funding shortfall, are there any grants, loans or saving you can tap (against visibility of your future revenues)?

Your board will expect you to anticipate things. If you don't have a plan, a less-than-ideal plan may well be imposed upon you.

10. Key ingredients for a business plan

You are now reaching the point where you are ready to start writing your business plan. Contrary to much advice, there is no standard format for this, but there are some standard points that need to be covered, including the market you are playing in, details of the niche you can service, what you will service it with. You will also include some details on how it will be developed and who by, as well as information on your competition and how you will overcome them. You should also include some details on how you will overcome customer inertia and sell into your chosen space. Don't forget background details of the management as well as detailed financials, including a breakdown of overheads, a figure for the revenue required to breakeven, a timeline showing how long it will take (with milestones on the way) as well as an estimate of how much you will burn through in the process.

Summary

After reading the ten points of The Chilli Value Test™, how many could you sufficiently address? If it's under four, then you need to conduct more research. If it's between five and eight, you can start validating your plan, and if it's over nine, you are ready to hit the road. Remember, this is an iterative process. Following this framework will improve your idea and your plan, making it stronger, and in the process, more attractive to potential investors, who will be impressed by your command of the facts and your thoroughness (they are investing in you, not just the idea). Investors expect that you know your market, competition and weaknesses.

Comments on this benchmark/definition? Send an e-mail to Editor@theChilli.com.

 

© Chilli Publishing Ltd 2003

06SEP2003

© Chilli Publishing Ltd 1999-2004