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Be an Entrepren eur Chap 07
47
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Page 1: Lesson plan chapter 07 operating

Be an Entrepreneur

Chap 07

Page 2: Lesson plan chapter 07 operating

The Entrepreneur

The Business Plan

The Enterprise•Epilogue

Be an Entrepreneur

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CHAPTER 07

The Operating Plan

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Chapter 7 overview

The product or service that you offer to the public through your marketing plan is just the tip of the iceberg.

Unseen to the customer is a host of activities that create the product or make the service available.

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Chapter 7 overview

The term “operations” covers these behind-the-scene activities.

You may say that marketing is the face your business presents to the outside world.

Its inner workings fall under operations.

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Chapter 7 overview

How you set up and run your operations is the subject of the operating section of the business plan.

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Chapter 7 overview

Your main goal in writing the operating plan is to demonstrate to the investor that you know how to produce or deliver your good or service.

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Coverage of the Chapter

• Components of the Operating Plan:• Production activities• Support Activities• Capacity Planning• Estimating Costs

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Activities

Icebreaker Glossary. Video.

Convert inputs into outputs.

Story: Grocery Gateway

Support Activities

Production Activities

DiscussionCase study: ZARA

Summary

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Learning Objectives

• State the subject and goal of an operating plan

• Explain why marketing dictates operations (and not the other way around)

• Define and distinguish production activities from support activities

• Illustrate a simple production process as a process flow or a flowchart

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Learning Objectives

• State the goal of capacity planning and the sources of inefficiency

• Cite situations where demand may still be different from capacity despite planning

• Distinguish start-up costs from running costs

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Central Idea

Operations Plan

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Story from Real Life

Mystic Masala is a small business in Canada. It offers handmade aromatherapy soy candles and body and shampoo bars made with spice, herb, and flower oils.

Importing is vital to its operations.

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Story from Real Life

Based on her experience, the owner has several suggestions when importing:

Do your homework before you begin. Know the product codes and laws that apply to the goods you want to import.

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Story from Real Life

Customs brokerage fees vary depending on the agent. Shop around for a cost-effective and reliable

option. If you’re good with paperwork, doing them

yourself could save several hundred dollars a shipment.

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Story from Real Life

It can be more difficult to guarantee quality when shipping merchandise.

“Originally, I had my soaps shipped via boat but after coming all the way from Nepal in the heat and through the monsoon season, they didn’t always arrive in the best shape.

“Now I have them sent by air cargo.”

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Glossary

Operations: The set of activities that convert inputs

into outputs. Inputs are the resources used by your

business such as materials, labor, and machines.

Outputs are the goods you produce or the services you provide.

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Glossary

Production activities: Business activities that relate directly to

making goods or providing services.

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Glossary

Process flow: A visual representation of the steps and

sequence required to make a product. The steps are normally limited to production activities.

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Glossary

Flowchart: The activities and sequence of a

process represented in symbols. Each step in the process is shown as a symbol with a short description of the step. The symbols are linked together with arrows to show the proper sequence of the activities.

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Glossary

Support activities: Activities that help production activities

to function as intended though they do not produce the goods themselves.

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Glossary

Capacity planning: The process of deciding the production

capacity to meet the demand for the products of a business.

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Glossary

Start-up costs: Costs associated with putting up the

production capacity of a business. These costs enable your business to begin operations though you have not done so yet.

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Glossary

Running costs: Recurring costs associated with inputs

to continuing operations.

Unit Cost: The total cost to produce one unit of a

product or service.

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Points to Remember

• Your operating plan lays down the roadmap that will show how you will convert inputs into products in a cost-effective manner.

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Points to Remember

The operating plan consists of the following sections:

• Production activities• Support activities• Capacity planning – start-up costs• Estimating Costs – now includes running

costs

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Points to Remember

• The marketing plan should determine the operations plan.

• By having marketing as the driver of the enterprise, you ensure that your product and the activities that create it are aligned with the needs of the customer.

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Ask Yourself

What demand should you plan to meet? • Should you play it safe, and plan production

to meet only the low demand estimate? • Should you plan for the high season or peak

demand? • Should you plan for something in between?

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Points to Remember

• Production activities are the business activities that are directly related to making goods or providing services.

• A process flow is a visual representation of the steps and sequence required to make a product.

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Points to Remember

• A flow chart: is the activities and sequence of a process, represented in symbols.

• Support activities: are there to aid production. They add value to the production process.

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Points to Remember

• Capacity planning: means to schedule over time, the investments and resources you business will need to produce at a desired level.

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Points to Remember

• When capacity is different from demand, production results in inefficiency.

• Too much capacity and your machines or people lie idle even as you pay for them.

• Too little and you will lose sales and maybe even customers.

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Points to Remember

• Start-up costs are costs associated with setting up the production capacity of a business.

• To run operations, your business will require inputs like raw materials, supplies, rent, labor and electricity. These are the running costs.

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Costs: one-time versus recurring

Start-up Costs Running Costs

Nature Largely a fixed amount

Amount varies directly with level of production

Frequency and timing

One-time, usually at beginning

Recurring or happens often

Recovery rate

Recovered through profits over time

Recovered as products are sold

Funding need Fund entire amount Fund only the level that stays in the business at a point in time

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Ask Yourself

• Should my small business hire an accountant? Should I just hire a part-time accountant?

• Should I just buy a software package that will do the accounting for me?

• Should I just hire a company to send a worker everyday, to do the accounting for me?

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Field work. Homework.

1. Visit a factory, or a shop, or a store. Afterwards, draw their production activities (or service activities) as a process flow.

2. Go to a website on production planning. Prepare a report on the different shapes in a flowchart.

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Review Questions

What is the goal of an operating plan? What are the sections ofan operating

plan? Should marketing determine

operations or the other way around? Why?

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Review Questions

What is a production activity?What is a process flow?What is a flow chart?

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Review Questions

What happens when support activities are neglected?

What is the output of capacity planning?

What happens when there is too much (or too little) capacity compared to demand?

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Review Questions

Why can demand still be different from capacity despite careful planning?

How are start-up costs different from running costs?

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Case Study questions

• Would you say that ZARA is very successful? What facts in the case tell you this?

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Case Study questions

• Many other successful fashion retailers outsource production to countries where labor cost is low rather than producing the items themselves.

• ZARA produces 50% of its sales with its own facilities.

• Why did ZARA do this? What are the pros and cons of this strategy?

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Case Study questions

• What is your own view of using operations as the main means to compete in an industry like fashion retailing?

• Will you buy clothes just because the company that sells them is efficient?

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NEXT CHAPTER: 8

Chapter 8: The Financial Plan

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Chapter 8 overview

In Chapters 5 , 6, and 7, we discussed the parts of a business plan.

We now integrate all of these parts and express them in money terms in the financial plan.

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Chapter 8 overview

In chapter 8, we take a close look at financial risks, how to measure them, and express them.

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Chapter 8 overview

We relate risk to the rewards of a business.

We find ways to evaluate if the business is “worth the risk” or “worth the trouble.”