Showing posts with label #startupindia #nasscomstartup. Show all posts
Showing posts with label #startupindia #nasscomstartup. Show all posts

Wednesday, September 25, 2019

FINANCIAL MISTAKES BY START-UPS by Anil Lamba

For every startup that succeeds, there are many hundreds and thousands that fail despite being highly innovative and well-funded. The reasons are many, but most are related to financial mismanagement.
If budding entrepreneurs paid half as much attention to the financial aspect of their business idea, as that given to the technological, marketing, valuation and fund-raising aspects, the chances of survival and success would be far greater.
Here is a short list of what an entrepreneur should do to run a sustainable business?
Be clear about the revenue model
Much thought goes into the ‘idea’ that has captured the entrepreneur’s imagination and not enough attention is paid to the financials and the revenue modeling. Without a clear idea of how and from where the revenues are going to be generated, the venture would be a non-starter.
Businesses cannot be run for long on investors’ money alone. It is okay during the gestation period, but soon the business must generate enough revenues to at least meet the operational costs.
Generate Profits and not Sales
In those cases where there is an understanding of the revenues, the entire focus is on increasing top lines. Entrepreneurs must never forget that the business of running a business is not to generate sales but to make a profit. Selling is a means towards achieving an end, and the end is to make a decent, a healthy profit.
If your role-models are the Flipkarts and the Ubers of this world, with all energies concentrated on generating volumes while making cash losses per order/ride, you must also understand that you need to have very very deep pockets to continue doing that for any length of time. Chances are pretty strong that the business will go belly up well before a white knight investor comes along to invest his millions impressed by the sales volume.
While drawing up the business plan, there should be complete clarity on how the business is going to make profits.
Pay attention to the cash flows
One of the first lessons that an entrepreneur learns is that there is no connection between the profit that a business earns and the bank balance that it has. In fact, if there is a connection, it is inverse. The higher the profit, the lower the bank balance. (This article is too short for me to elaborate further, but take my word for it right now).
‘Where is the money?’ is a question that perpetually haunts an entrepreneur. Accountants tell you that the business is making impressive sales and profits, but where is the money! Why can’t you see it in the bank?
Well, you are making profit precisely because you money has been deployed. If you started hoarding it in the bank it would be a matter of time before you would stop making profit too.
There is no pleasure in making profit if at the end of the month you don’t have the money to pay salaries.
Always remember that successful businesses stand on two pillars:
 1) the ability to generate profit, and
2) the ability to effectively manage cash flow.
Working capital is very essential 
While evaluating the funds that a start-up needs, it is relatively easy to understand the amount of fixed capital required. But often the working capital requirement is not clearly understood. Consequently, many such ventures are starved of the working capital for sustaining the operations on a day-to-day basis.
Among those businesses that close down due to shortage of funds, a large percentage do so due to a shortage of working capital.
Working capital is required:
1. for purchasing materials and maintaining inventories (in case of organizations engaged in manufacturing/trading).
2. to meet day-to-day operational expenses.
3. And where goods and services are sold on credit, working capital is required to invest in your customers too.
It is suicidal to use short-term funds for long-term purposes
Start-ups must take great pains to ensure that only long-term funds are used for long-term purposes and short-term funds are used for short-term purposes.
Never ever use short-term funds for long-term purposes. It would be suicidal to do so.
If start-ups pay heed to the finance management aspect of their business it will go a long way towards sustaining their venture and making it a success.





Tuesday, August 13, 2019

What are some examples of dirty marketing tricks?

Let me present you with one of the best marketing hacks being used extensively using the ANONYMITY…!!
  1. Oppo
Oppo is becoming widely popular among youths these days. And they market with a tag “Oppo: The Camera Phone”.
2. Vivo
Vivo is running on the same grounds as Oppo, increasing its charm among the youths. And it markets its products with a tag “ Vivo: Camera & Music”.
Both of these brands are astronomically investing in sponsorship, naming a few,
  • Oppo won Indian Team sponsorship till 2022.
  • Vivo IPL is a very common sponsorship name these days.
  • After IPL, Vivo is also planning to sponsor FIFA WC 2022 in Qatar.
These are very few of the high scale sponsorships mentioned.
They have created such a ruckus that customers are often confused among these two brands now a days and “Oppo F1s vs Vivo V3” is among the most google searched items in the country.
They have also taken Youth-Oriented Bollywood celebrities as brand ambassadors, like:
Ranveer Singh with charming advertisement for Vivo
Hrithik Roshan and Deepika Padukone for Oppo
Now, going a bit high, I would introduce you with beloved of all:
3OnePlus
OnePlus is famous for making high-end smartphones with some of the best features available in any smartphone ever.
Also, using “invites” to sell your products makes it a “Forbidden Fruit” which everyone wants.
For this, they have taken a serious personality rather than some attractive dude!!
Amitabh Bachchan…!! Calling him the first ever “OnePlus Star”
Because you cannot sell a high end, Rs. 38000 smartphone with some cheeky advertisement.
Now, Let me introduce you to:
  • BBK ELECTRONICS
A very small fraction of people know about this company and what it does..!!!
It is not a simple Chinese company.
It is a smartphone manufacturer and markets them under the three brands mentioned above. It has never been shown or presented anywhere that the above three brands are related by any means and this “anonymity” gives BBK Electronics the power to sell, pitting their own brands against each other. Obviously, you always win when you own both the parties.
EDIT 1: Many people are finding it hard to accept it as dirty!! That may be called as opportunistic from business point of view. Now let me show you how dirtier, I would rather say trickier it gets.
Oppo CEO flashes an image of an upcoming phone and says “It exists” and next day this thing gets published as “OnePlus 5 features leaked”. Customers start speculating and once again the “THE FORBIDDEN FRUIT” concept comes into the play. It is all planned.
And obviously there is no such thing as “dirty marketing” in business, if it brings loads of money with it.
External Links:
  1. OPPO wins Indian team sponsorship rights till 2022
  2. After Indian Premier League, Vivo to sponsor FIFA for 2022 football World Cup
  3. Oppo F3 to vivo V5 Plus: The best selfie smartphones to consider
  4. Oppo, Vivo Founder Reveals How He Toppled Apple in China
  5. OnePlus signs Amitabh Bachchan as brand ambassador