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ENTREPRENEURSHIP: STARTING & OPERATING A SMALL BUSINESS


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ENTREPRENEURSHIP: STARTING & OPERATING A SMALL BUSINESS


Fourth Edition


Steve Mariotti • Caroline Glackin


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Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Mariotti, Steve, 1953- Entrepreneurship: starting & operating a small business/Steve Mariotti, Caroline Glackin.—Fourth Edition. pages cm Includes index. ISBN 978-0-13-393445-8—ISBN 0-13-393445-4 1. New business enterprises—Management. 2. Entrepreneurship. I. Glackin, Caroline. II. Title. HD62.5.M3567 2015 658.1’1—dc23


2014032028


10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1


ISBN 10: 0-13-393445-4 ISBN 13: 978-0-13-393445-8


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Special thanks to Shelby Cullom Davis. Also thanks to Kathryn Davis, Shelby M. C. Davis,


Kimberly La Manna, Abby Moffat, and Diana Davis Spencer.


—Steve Mariotti


To my children, Elise and Spencer, whose support and love are essential parts of this book.


To my parents, Howard and Maria Wiedenman, who truly understood the importance of education. My love and gratitude.


—Caroline Glackin


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Brief Contents


UNIT 1 Entrepreneurial Pathways 1 Chapter 1 Entrepreneurs Recognize


Opportunities 2 Chapter 2 The Business Plan: Road Map


to Success 34 Honest Tea Business Plan 65


Chapter 3 Creating Business from Opportunity 92


Unit 1 Entrepreneurial Pathways: SPANX—Idea to Entrepreneurial Opportunity 123


UNIT 2 Integrated Marketing 127 Chapter 4 Exploring Your Market 128 Chapter 5 Developing the Right Marketing


Mix and Plan 156 Chapter 6 Smart Selling and Effective


Customer Service 196 Unit 2 Integrated Marketing:


Kitchen Arts & Letters, Inc.—An Independent Bookstore Defies Industry Odds 219


UNIT 3 Show Me the Money: Finding, Securing, and Managing It 223


Chapter 7 Understanding and Managing Start-Up, Fixed, and Variable Costs 224


Chapter 8 Using Financial Statements to Guide a Business 250


Chapter 9 Cash Flow and Taxes 286 Chapter 10 Financing Strategy & Tactics 316 Unit 3 Show Me the Money: Finding,


Securing, and Managing It— Lee’s Ice Cream 346


UNIT 4 Operating a Small Business Effectively 351


Chapter 11 Addressing Legal Issues and Managing Risk 352


Chapter 12 Operating for Success 384 Chapter 13 Management, Leadership, &


Ethical Practices 416 Unit 4 Operating a Small Business


Effectively: ONLC Training Centers—Virtual IT Training in a Classroom 453


UNIT 5 Cashing in the Brand 457 Chapter 14 Franchising, Licensing,


and Harvesting: Cashing in Your Brand 458


Unit 5 Cashing in the Brand: Honest Tea— From Start-Up to Harvest 477


Appendix 1 Sample Student Business Plan 483 Appendix 2 BizBuilder Business Plan 511 Appendix 3 Resources for Entrepreneurs 519 Appendix 4 Useful Formulas and Equations 525


Glossary 527 Index 533


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UNIT 1 Entrepreneurial Pathways 1


Chapter 1 Entrepreneurs Recognize Opportunities 2 Entrepreneurship 3


What Is an Entrepreneur? 3


The Free-Enterprise System 4


Voluntary Exchange 5


Benefits and Challenges of Free Enterprise 5


What Is a Small Business? 6


Definitions of Success—Monetary and Other 6


Taking the Long View 7


Benefits and Costs of Becoming an Entrepreneur 7


Potential Benefits of Entrepreneurship 8


Potential Costs of Entrepreneurship 9


Cost/Benefit Analysis 10


Opportunity Cost 11


Seeking Advice and Information to Succeed 11


Entrepreneurial Options 13 How Do Entrepreneurs Find Opportunities to Start New Businesses? 15


Entrepreneurs Creatively Exploit Changes in Our World 15


Where Others See Problems, Entrepreneurs Recognize Opportunities 16


Train Your Mind to Recognize Business Opportunities 16


Entrepreneurs Use Their Imaginations 17


An Idea Is Not Necessarily an Opportunity 17


Opportunity Is Situational 18


The Five Roots of Opportunity in the Marketplace 18


Integrating Internal and External Opportunities 18


Establishing Strategies 19


Paths to Small Business Ownership 20 Securing Franchise Rights 21


Buying an Existing Business 21


Licensing Technology 21


The Many Faces of Entrepreneurship 22


Making the Business Work Personally and Professionally 23


A Business Must Make a Profit to Stay in Business 23


Profit Is the Sign That the Entrepreneur Is Adding Value 23


Profit Results from the Entrepreneur’s Choices 23


Seven Rules for Building a Successful Business 24


The Team Approach 24


Chapter 2 The Business Plan: Road Map to Success 34 Feasibility Analysis: Does My Idea Work? 36


Analyzing Product and/or Service Feasibility 36


Analyzing Market and Industry Feasibility 37


Analyzing Financial Feasibility 39


Creating a Business Model Canvas 40 What Is a Business Plan? 43 Why Do You Need a Business Plan? 44


Writing a Business Plan Early Will Save You Time and Money 44


Your Business Plan Is the Key to Raising Capital 45


The Business Plan Is an Operations Guide 45


Business Plan Components 45 Cover Page and Table of Contents 46


Executive Summary: A Snapshot of Your Business 46


Mission and Culture: Your Dreams for the Organization 47


Company Description—Background and Track Record 48


Opportunity Analysis and Research— Testing Ideas 48


Marketing Strategy and Plan: Reaching Customers 49


Management and Operations: Making the Plan Happen 50


Financial Analysis and Projections: Translating Action into Money 51


Funding Request and Exit Strategy: The Ask and the Return 55


Appendices: Making the Case in Greater Detail 56


Contents


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CONTENTS


Business Plan Suggestions 56 Presenting Your Business Plan 57 Business Plan and Venture Competitions 59


Honest Tea Business Plan 65


Chapter 3 Creating Business from Opportunity 92 Apple and the Personal Computer 93 Business Definition 94 What Sort of Organization Do You Want? 95


Your Company’s Core Values 95


Your Company’s Mission Is to Satisfy Customers 96


Your Company’s Vision Is the Broader Perspective 97


Your Company’s Culture Defines the Work Environment 97


The Decision Process 98


Your Competitive Advantage 99 Find Your Competitive Advantage by Determining What Consumers Need and Want 100


You Have Unique Knowledge of Your Market 100


The Six Factors of Competitive Advantage 101


Is Your Competitive Advantage Strong Enough? 101


Checking Out the Competition 102


The Most Chocolate Cake Company 103 Competitive Strategy: Business Definition and Competitive Advantage 105


Feasibility Revisited: The Economics of One Unit as a Litmus Test 106


Defining the Unit of Sale 107


Cost of Goods Sold and Gross Profit 107


Your Business and the Economics of One Unit 108


The Cost of Direct Labor in the EOU— An Example 110


Hiring Others to Make the Unit of Sale 110


Going for Volume 111


Determining the Value of a Business 113


Asset Valuation Method 113


Earnings Valuation Method 113


Cash Flow Valuation Method 114


Unit 1 Entrepreneurial Pathways: SPANX—Idea to Entrepreneurial Opportunity 123


UNIT 2 Integrated Marketing 127


Chapter 4 Exploring Your Market 128 Markets and Marketing Defined 130


A Business That Markets versus a Market-Driven Business 130


Research Prepares You for Success 130 Research Your Market Before You Open Your Business 130


Types and Methods of Research 131


Getting Information Directly from the Source: Primary Research 131


Getting Information Indirectly: Secondary Research 133


Research Helps You Know Your Customer 135


Customer Research 135


Industry Research: The 50,000-Foot Perspective 137


Make Research an Integral Part of Your Business 138


How Customers Decide to Buy 139 Owning a Perception in the Customer’s Mind 140


Features Create Benefits 140


Home Depot: Teaching Customers So They Will Return 141


Which Segment of the Market Will You Target? 141


Successful Segmenting: The Body Shop 142


Applying Market Segmentation Methods 142


The Product Life Cycle 144


Is Your Market Saturated? 146


Market Positioning: Drive Home Your Competitive Advantage 146 Developing a Marketing Plan 147


Chapter 5 Developing the Right Marketing Mix and Plan 156 The Four Marketing Factors 157 Product: What Are You Selling? 158


Create Your Total Product or Service Concept 158


Focus Your Brand 159


Ford’s Costly Failure: The Edsel 159


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CONTENTS


Chapter 6 Smart Selling and Effective Customer Service 196 Selling Skills Are Essential to Business Success 197


Selling Is a Great Source of Market Research 198


The Essence of Selling Is Teaching 198


The Principles of Selling 198


The Sales Call 200 Electronic Mail, Blogs, and Social Networks 200


Prequalify Your Sales Calls 201


Focus on the Customer 201


The Eight-Step Sales Call 202


Three Call Behaviors of Successful Salespeople 203


Analyze Your Sales Calls to Become a Star Salesperson 204


Turning Objections into Advantages 204


Use Technology to Sell 205


Successful Businesses Need Customers Who Return 206


Customer Service Is Keeping Customers Happy 206


The Costs of Losing a Customer 206


Customer Complaints Are Valuable 207


Customer Relationship Management Systems 208


Why Does CRM Matter? 209


Components of CRM for the Small Business 210


How Technology Supports CRM 211


Unit 2 Integrated Marketing: Kitchen Arts & Letters, Inc.—An Independent Bookstore Defies Industry Odds 219


UNIT 3 Show Me the Money: Finding, Securing, and Managing It 223


Chapter 7 Understanding and Managing Start-Up, Fixed, and Variable Costs 224 What Does It Cost to Operate a Business? 225 Start-Up Investment 226


Brainstorm to Avoid Start-Up Surprises 226


Keep a Reserve Equal to One-Half the Start-Up Investment 227


Predict the Payback Period 228


Estimate Value 229


Ford’s Focus on Success: The Mustang 160


How to Build Your Brand 160


Price: What It Says about Your Product 162


Strategies and Tactics for Effective Pricing 162


Place: Location, Location, Location! 164 Key Factors in Deciding on a Location 165


Promotion: Advertising + Publicity 165 Use Integrated Marketing Communications for Success 165


Reinforce the Company’s Unique Selling Proposition 166


Promotional Planning 167 Determine a Promotional Budget 167


The Advertising Advantage 169 Types of Advertising 170


Media Planning and Buying: Focus on Your Customer 170


Marketing Materials Should Reinforce Your Competitive Advantage 171


Sales-Promotion Solutions 172 When to Use Promotional Tools 172


Advertising Specialties 172


Trade Show Exhibits 172


Mall Carts or Kiosks 173


Alternative Marketing 174 Other Media Venues 175


E-Active Marketing 175 Publicity Potential 179


Generating Publicity 179


Telling the Story 179


Sample Press Release 180


Follow Up a Press Release 180


Public Relations 180


The Fifth P: Philanthropy 182 Cause-Related Marketing 182


Gaining Goodwill 183


Not-for-Profit Organizations 183


What Entrepreneurs Have Built 184


You Have Something to Contribute 184


Developing a Marketing Plan 184 Marketing Analysis 185


Marketing as a Fixed Cost 185 Calculate Your Breakeven Point 186


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CONTENTS


Rules to Keep Cash Flowing 289


Noncash Expenses Can Distort the Financial Picture 289


The Working Capital Cycle 289 The Cyclical and Seasonal Nature of Cash Flow 290


Reading a Cash Flow Statement 292


The Cash Flow Equation 292


Forecasting Cash Flow: The Cash Budget 292


Creating a Healthy Cash Flow 293


Managing Inventory to Manage Cash 295


Managing Receivables to Manage Cash 297


The Cash Effects of Accounts Receivable 297


The Life Cycle of Accounts Receivable 297


The Financing of Accounts Receivable 298


Managing Accounts Payable to Manage Cash 299


Negotiating Payment 299


Timing Payables 299


Capital Budgeting and Cash Flow 300 The Burn Rate 301


The Value of Money Changes Over Time 301


The Future Value of Money 301


The Present Value of Money 303


Taxes 304 Cash Flow and Taxes 304


Filing Tax Returns 304


Collecting Sales Tax 305


Tax Issues for Different Legal Structures 305


Make Tax Time Easier by Keeping Good Records 306


Chapter 10 Financing Strategy & Tactics 316 Going It Alone Versus Securing Financing 317


How Often Do Small Businesses Really Fail? 318


What Is the Best Type of Financing for You and Your Business? 318 Gifts and Grants 319 Debt Financing 320


Debt Financing: Pros and Cons 320


Equity Financing 322 Equity Financing: Pros and Cons 323


Fixed and Variable Costs: Essential Building Blocks 230 Calculating Critical Costs 230


Calculating Total Gross Profit (Contribution Margin) 231


Calculating EOU When You Sell Multiple Products 231


Fixed Operating Costs 233


Fixed Operating Costs Do Change Over Time 233


Allocate Fixed Operating Costs Where Possible 234


The Dangers of Fixed Costs 235


Using Accounting Records to Track Fixed and Variable Costs 235


Three Reasons to Keep Good Records Every Day 236


Cash versus Accrual Accounting Methods 238


Recognizing Categories of Costs 239


Chapter 8 Using Financial Statements to Guide a Business 250 Scorecards for the Entrepreneur: What Do Financial Statements Show? 251 Income Statements: Showing Profit and Loss Over Time 252


Parts of an Income Statement 252


A Basic Income Statement 253


The Double Bottom Line 253


An Income Statement for a More Complex Business 254


The Balance Sheet: A Snapshot of Assets, Liabilities, and Equity at a Point in Time 256


Short- and Long-Term Assets 257


Current and Long-Term Liabilities 258


The Balance Sheet Equation 258


The Balance Sheet Shows Assets and Liabilities Obtained through Financing 258


The Balance Sheet Shows How a Business Is Financed 259


Analyzing a Balance Sheet 260


Depreciation 262


Financial Ratio Analysis: What Is It and What Does It Mean to You? 262


Income Statement Ratios 262


Balance-Sheet Analysis 265


Chapter 9 Cash Flow and Taxes 286 Cash Flow: The Lifeblood of a Business 287


The Income Statement Does Not Show Available Cash 288


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xiii CONTENTS


The Uniform Commercial Code (UCC) 364 The Law of Agency 364 Bankruptcy 365 Protecting Intangible Assets: Intellectual Property 367


Trademarks and Service Marks 367


Copyright 369


Electronic Rights 369


Patents 370


Protecting Tangible Assets: Risk Management 371


Insurance Protects Your Business from Disaster 371


Basic Coverage for Small Business 371


How Insurance Companies Make Money 372


Protect Your Computer and Data 373


Disaster Recovery Plans 373


Licenses, Permits, and Certificates 374


Chapter 12 Operating for Success 384 Operations Permit Businesses to Deliver on Their Promises 386 The Production-Distribution Chain 386 Supply Chain Management 387


Finding Suppliers 388


Managing Inventory 388


Facilities, Location and Design 390 Key Factors in Deciding on a Location 391


Facilities Design and Layout 394


Special Considerations for Home-Based Businesses 398


Special Considerations for Web-Based Businesses 398


Defining Quality: It Is a Matter of Market Positioning 399


Profits Follow Quality 399


Organization-Wide Quality Initiatives 400 Benchmarking 400


ISO 9000 401


Six Sigma 402


Total Quality Management 402


Malcolm Baldrige Award 402


Using Technology to Your Advantage 403 Computer Access Is Essential 403


Capture the Potential of the Telephone 404


Identify Market-Specific Software and Technology 404


Electronic Storefront (Web Site) 405


Where and How to Find Capital That Works for You 324


Having an Excellent Business Plan Goes a Long Way 324


How Capital Sources Read Your Business Plan 324


Family and Friends 324


Financial Institutions and Dimensions of Credit 324


Community Development Financial Institutions (CDFIs) 328


Venture Capitalists 329


Angels 330


Insurance Companies 331


Vendor Financing 331


Federally Supported Investment Companies 331


Financing for Rural/Agricultural Businesses 332


Self-Funding: Bootstrap Financing 332


Accessing Sources Through Online Networking 332 Investors Want Their Money to Grow: Can You Make It Happen? 333


How Stocks Work 334


How Bonds Work 335


Unit 3 Show Me the Money: Finding, Securing, and Managing It— Lee’s Ice Cream 346


UNIT 4 Operating a Small Business Effectively 351


Chapter 11 Addressing Legal Issues and Managing Risk 352 Business Legal Structures 353


Sole Proprietorship 353


Partnership 355


Corporation 356


Tips for Entrepreneurs Who Want to Start a Nonprofit Organization 358


Contracts: The Building Blocks of Business 361


Working with an Attorney 361


Drafting a Contract 362


Letter of Agreement 363


Breach of Contract 363


Small Claims Court 363


Arbitration 363


A Contract Is No Substitute for Trust 363


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CONTENTS


UNIT 5 Cashing in the Brand 457


Chapter 14 Franchising, Licensing, and Harvesting: Cashing in Your Brand 458 What Do You Want from Your Business? 459


Continuing the Business for the Family 460


Growth through Diversification 460


Growth through Licensing and Franchising 461


Focus Your Brand 461


When Licensing Can Be Effective 461


Franchising Revisited from the Franchisor Perspective 462


How a McDonald’s Franchise Works 462


Do Your Research before You Franchise 463


Harvesting and Exiting Options 463 When to Harvest Your Business 463


How to Value a Business 464


The Science of Valuation 465


Creating Wealth by Selling a Profitable Business 465


Harvesting Options 466


Exit Strategy Options 468 Investors Will Care about Your Exit Strategy 469


Unit 5 Cashing in the Brand: Honest Tea— From Start-Up to Harvest 477


Appendix 1 Sample Student Business Plan 483 Appendix 2 BizBuilder Business Plan 511 Appendix 3 Resources for Entrepreneurs 519 Appendix 4 Useful Formulas and Equations 525


Glossary 527 Index 533


Chapter 13 Management, Leadership, & Ethical Practices 416 The Entrepreneur as Leader 417


Leadership Styles That Work 417


How Entrepreneurs Pay Themselves 418


Manage Your Time Wisely 419


Business Management: Building a Team 420


What Do Managers Do? 421


Adding Employees to Your Business 421 Growing Your Team 427


Creating and Managing Organizational Culture 428


Determining Organizational Structure 428


Getting the Best Out of Your Employees 430


Human Resources Fundamentals 430 Performance Management 432


Firing and Laying Off Employees 434


Ethical Leadership and Ethical Organizations 434


An Ethical Perspective 435


Establishing Ethical Standards 435


Corporate Ethical Scandals 436


Doing the Right Thing in Addition to Doing Things Right 438


Balancing the Needs of Owners, Customers, and Employees 438


Social Responsibility and Ethics 438 Leading with Integrity and Examples 439


Encourage Your Employees to Be Socially Responsible 439


Unit 4 Operating a Small Business Effectively: ONLC Training Centers—Virtual IT Training in a Classroom 453


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Entrepreneurship: Starting and Operating a Small Business (ESOSB), Fourth Edition, is the newest edition in a line of entrepreneurship textbooks written by Steve Mariotti, founder of the Network for Teaching Entrepreneurship (NFTE). Once again, it is written with professor and entrepreneur Caroline Glackin, and it promotes entrepreneurship as a career option for college students.


Business students, as well as those from other disciplines, can benefit from ESOSB. For business students, it recasts their prior learning from a typical corporate context and focuses it on small and entrepreneurial enterprises. For students in such fields as hospitality, the arts, engineer- ing, and fashion merchandising, the text introduces key business con- cepts and provides examples from a broad range of careers. Cases from hospitality, technology, retail, manufacturing, distribution, real estate, finance, and not-for-profit organizations bring a wealth of learning oppor- tunities. Most importantly, ESOSB 4e is a balanced mix of the academic and applied components of entrepreneurship education. Students are introduced to the theories, methods, and knowledge and skills required of entrepreneurs and are immediately given practical examples and discus- sion opportunities. Using the Application Exercises and Exploring Online features at the end of each chapter, they are encouraged to take this new knowledge and apply it in their own lives, so that the course materials are reinforced and internalized.


Highlights of New Content and Changes Entrepreneurship: Starting and Operating a Small Business, Fourth Edition, contains new content and some changes, including the following:


■ Three new Chapter Openers include Mercedes, University Parent, and inDinero.


■ Nine new short End-of-Chapter Case Studies: Urban Decay, Gat Creek Furniture, Gentle Rest Slumber, Dr. Farrah Gray, Happy Belly Curbside Kitchen, BNI, Gelato Fiasco, The Bun Company, and Anago Cleaning Systems.


■ Seven new longer End-of-Chapter Case Studies: Foursquare, Empact, Amazon.com, Damon White Party Promotions, Airbnb, AYZH, and iContact.


■ All new Unit Cases. These are more interesting and relatable for students and include: Spanx, Kitchen Arts & Letters, Inc., Lee’s Ice Cream, ONLC Training Centers, and Honest Tea.


■ Step into the Shoes, Entrepreneurial Wisdom, BizFacts, and Global Impact Features. These have been updated and expanded with 16 new featured items, including 12 Step into the Shoes and 4 Global Impact Features. Among the newly featured people and organiza- tions are: Indeed.com, In-N-Out Burgers, Sweet dis(Solve), Twitter, ContextMedia, Mental Floss, Zhang Xin, P’Kolino, Jack Threads,


Preface


Helping Students Own Their Future


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PREFACE


Rent the Runway, Tom’s, Vostu, American Public University, and TechWorld These features connect chapter content to business facts and examples to reinforce learning.


■ Honest Tea Featured Business Plan. From its early stage funding search, this example provides students with an interesting start-up plan for a company that is also featured in the Unit 5 case. This bookends the contents of the text.


■ Business Model Canvas. The Osterwalder and Pigneur Business Model Canvas is introduced in Chapter 2 with the example of the University Parent Business Plan that is included in Appendix 1. Students are encouraged to develop a business model and to explore the Lean Startup process.


■ BizBuilder Business Plan Questions. These have been modified to clarify the work and connect the content to student work using the business plan templates.


■ Chapter Learning Objectives. The objectives have been revised to conform more fully to the categories of knowledge acquisition, comprehension, application, analysis, synthesis, and evaluation commonly assessed in higher education.


Combining Street Smarts and Academic Smarts Entrepreneurship: Starting and Operating a Small Business, Fourth Edition, is an extension of the academic programs developed by Steve Mariotti under the auspices of NFTE. Since 1987, NFTE has reached over 500,000 graduates and trained more than 5,000 teachers in 15 countries to impart its innovative entrepreneurship curriculum through its 17 U.S. sites and 8 international program partners. NFTE is widely viewed as a world leader in promoting entrepreneurial literacy and has a proven track record of helping young people start a great variety of successful ventures.


This textbook unites Steve Mariotti’s experience with relevant aca- demic theory and practice, supported by a rich variety of examples and stories. Caroline Glackin brings years of experience in the university class- room, as a lender to small and microbusinesses, and as an entrepreneur and small business owner. Together, these two authors have produced a text that is practical, useful, and academically strong.


Organization Entrepreneurship: Starting and Operating a Small Business, Fourth Edition, is organized to follow the life cycle of an entrepreneurial venture from con- cept through implementation into harvesting or replication. It is a compre- hensive text written in light of the reality that college students often take only one course in entrepreneurship and the topic is covered in a multitude of ways. For instructors who will teach the course as a “business plan,” ESOSB 4e offers step-by-step content to build a plan over a semester or a quarter. For those who focus on the management of small and entrepre- neurial ventures, there is an abundance of high-quality material on the critical topics of management, human resources, marketing, and opera- tions for such ventures. For those charged with teaching a comprehensive introductory course, all of the components are provided.


A01_MARI4458_04_SE_FM.indd 16 12/11/14 10:55 AM


# 153756 Cust: Pearson Au: Mariotti Pg. No. xvii Title: Entrepreneurship: Starting and Operating a Small Business, 4e


C/M/Y/K Short / Normal / Long


DESIGN SERVICES OF


S4CARLISLE Publishing Services


Chapter Learning System Chapter Openers Set the Stage


Each chapter starts with an inspirational quote, an introduction, and Learning Objectives that provide a “road map” so readers know where they are headed. Readers connect with a story of a real business in the opening vignette that sets the stage for upcoming material.


Entrepreneurs Recognize Opportunities


CH AP


TE R


1 Learning Objectives 1. Summarize what entrepre-


neurs do.


2. Examine how free-enterprise economies work and how entrepreneurs fit into them.


3. Identify and evaluate opportunities to start your own business.


4. Explain how profit works as a signal to the entrepreneur.


T om Szaky was a 20-year-old college student in need of inspiration for a business plan competition, when he happened to visit friends who were using red worms to compost waste that they then used as plant fertilizer. The idea captured his imagina- tion, and he created a business plan for an environmentally friendly company that would convert trash into fertilizer. Although he finished in fifth place in the competi- tion, Szaky moved ahead to make the company a viable venture. 1


TerraCycle Inc. has expanded its product lines to encompass a wide range of recycling and upcycling, including branded products for Target and Kraft Foods. The company is the producer of the world’s first product made from and packed in recy- cled waste: fertilizer generated from waste. Szaky sells to some of the world’s largest retailers, including Wal-Mart, Target, and Home Depot, and oversees programs that involve entire communities in recycling projects. Sales exceed $20 million per year, and the company has collected literally billions of discarded items. TerraCycle plant food was twice named the most eco-friendly product in Home Depot. Tom Szaky and TerraCycle have turned waste into treasure.


Entrepreneurship Have you ever eaten a Subway sandwich? Used an Apple device? Listened to music with Skullcandy headphones? The entrepreneurs that founded these companies brought these products into your world. Entrepreneur- ship is all around us.


What Is an Entrepreneur? Most Americans earn money by working in business . They are somehow engaged in the buying and selling of products or services in order to earn money.


• A product is something that exists in nature or is made by human beings. It is tangible , meaning that it can be physically touched.


• A service is labor or expertise exchanged for money. It is intangible . It cannot physically be touched.


Someone who earns a living by working directly for someone else’s business is an employee of that business. There are many roles for employees. At Ford Motor Company, for instance, some employees build the cars, some sell the cars, and some manage the company. But most employees have one thing in common—they do not own the business; they work for others who do. They know how much money they can earn, and that amount is limited to salary or wages, plus bonuses and any stock options they may receive.


People who have their own businesses work for themselves and are called small business owners, or entrepreneurs . Entrepreneurs are often both owners and employees. For an entrepreneur, the sky is the limit as far as earnings are concerned. Unlike an employee, an entrepreneur owns


“Everyone lives by selling something.” —Robert Louis Stevenson, Scottish author


1 TerraCycle Inc., accessed March 9, 2014, http://www.terracycle.net .


product something tangible that exists in nature or is made by people.


service intangible work that provides time, skills, or expertise in exchange for money.


entrepreneur a person who recognizes an oppor- tunity and organizes and manages a business, assuming the risk for the sake of potential return.


Tom Szaky, Terracycle ( Paul Zimmerman/ Getty Images)


3


“Step into the Shoes” of the Experts


Step into the Shoes features appear in each chapter and offer insight into the business practices of entrepreneurs and an opportunity to discuss the brief example. It brings the content to life with real-world application. 19 CHAPTER 1: Entrepreneurs Recognize Opportunities


the form of the resolution of a problem, such as creating a viable product from scrap material, or the potential for a new product line.

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