business case for 2.009: introductory...

24
Business Case for 2.009: Introductory Pro-Forma Victor Tang Massachusetts Institute of Technology [email protected]

Upload: others

Post on 29-Sep-2020

2 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Business Case for 2.009: Introductory Pro-Formaweb.mit.edu/2.009/www///lectures/29_BusinessCase101.pdfNEAT: net profit after taxes Fabricated Metal SIC 3499 009 cost exp. SG&A profit

Business Case for 2.009:Introductory Pro-Forma

Victor Tang

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

[email protected]

Page 2: Business Case for 2.009: Introductory Pro-Formaweb.mit.edu/2.009/www///lectures/29_BusinessCase101.pdfNEAT: net profit after taxes Fabricated Metal SIC 3499 009 cost exp. SG&A profit

Business Case 2.009 vtang 2

Why You Need a Business Case

Goal Convince investors that you have a credible business proposal

Proof Points Product is not “me-too” Clear target market Know why customers will buy Know why customers will not buy – product, competition Will make money Confidence and enthusiasm

Page 3: Business Case for 2.009: Introductory Pro-Formaweb.mit.edu/2.009/www///lectures/29_BusinessCase101.pdfNEAT: net profit after taxes Fabricated Metal SIC 3499 009 cost exp. SG&A profit

Business Case 2.009 vtang 3

Key Points of an Executive Summary

Market Opportunity Exists [market size $, and 3-year CGR %]

Product is Competitive [what makes the product different]

[what are its unique benefits]

Financials are Attractive IRR xx% with initial investment of $ xx M Break-even at units in xx months Reach steady state in yy months

Page 4: Business Case for 2.009: Introductory Pro-Formaweb.mit.edu/2.009/www///lectures/29_BusinessCase101.pdfNEAT: net profit after taxes Fabricated Metal SIC 3499 009 cost exp. SG&A profit

Business Case 2.009 vtang 4

Describe the Market Opportunity

Target Market[25 words or less what is your product and who will buy]

Market Characteristics[where and how they are going to buy: store, sales rep, etc? why is

your price attractive? how will they find out about your product, its features, and benefits? what other choices do customers have?]

$xx

$yy

$zz

m%

n%

Year 1

abc

def$xxrpq

$xx

$xx

$xx

The Market Top 3competitors

Year 2 Year 3

Page 5: Business Case for 2.009: Introductory Pro-Formaweb.mit.edu/2.009/www///lectures/29_BusinessCase101.pdfNEAT: net profit after taxes Fabricated Metal SIC 3499 009 cost exp. SG&A profit

Business Case 2.009 vtang 5

Differentiate Against the Competition

abc def lmn 009

attribute k-1attribute k

attribute 4attribute 3attribute 2attribute 1

Killer attributes [attribute k] [attribute r] [attribute q] [attribute m]

• Competition can be another product ... or simply old way of doing things.

Page 6: Business Case for 2.009: Introductory Pro-Formaweb.mit.edu/2.009/www///lectures/29_BusinessCase101.pdfNEAT: net profit after taxes Fabricated Metal SIC 3499 009 cost exp. SG&A profit

Business Case 2.009 vtang 6

What is a P&L? (simplified profit & loss statement)

manufacturing costmaterials cost

gross profit

sales expense

gen admin exp

NEBTinterest exptaxesNEAT

sales revenues

T1 $ T2 $ … Tk $

R&D

Should bemonotoneincreasing

better bemonotoneincreasing

… price*quantity$ paid for parts$ paid for laborsales rev.-material cost- manuf. cost $ paid for engineers andequipment & stuff $ paid for salespeople,cust. lunches, travel ... $ paid for office, copier ...gross profit - Σexpenses

use 4-year time horizon

Page 7: Business Case for 2.009: Introductory Pro-Formaweb.mit.edu/2.009/www///lectures/29_BusinessCase101.pdfNEAT: net profit after taxes Fabricated Metal SIC 3499 009 cost exp. SG&A profit

Business Case 2.009 vtang 7

Volumes Forecasting Example: Easy Way

Y1

160K

180K

140K120K

100K

80K

60K

40K

20K

Assume volumes(units quantity), Qmax009=180K

4 years to reach asymptote .... and

Y3Y2 Y4

Page 8: Business Case for 2.009: Introductory Pro-Formaweb.mit.edu/2.009/www///lectures/29_BusinessCase101.pdfNEAT: net profit after taxes Fabricated Metal SIC 3499 009 cost exp. SG&A profit

Business Case 2.009 vtang 8

Volumes Forecasting Example: step 2

Y1

160K

180K

140K120K

100K

80K

60K

40K

20K

Assume volumes(units quantity), Qmax009=180K

4 years to reach asymptote, adjust intermediate points

Y3Y2 Y4

Page 9: Business Case for 2.009: Introductory Pro-Formaweb.mit.edu/2.009/www///lectures/29_BusinessCase101.pdfNEAT: net profit after taxes Fabricated Metal SIC 3499 009 cost exp. SG&A profit

Business Case 2.009 vtang 9

Develop a Pricing Strategy

5X

3X

$

Time

cost

price

Show price/cost relationship as a function of time Ideally, cost and price both decline, and margin increases ... hard to do well and consistently

Page 10: Business Case for 2.009: Introductory Pro-Formaweb.mit.edu/2.009/www///lectures/29_BusinessCase101.pdfNEAT: net profit after taxes Fabricated Metal SIC 3499 009 cost exp. SG&A profit

Business Case 2.009 vtang 10

Working Definitions and an Example of Costs

Income Structure[normalized to 100% of revenue]Cost

materials, labor, overhead

SG&A (expenses)salesgeneral and administrative

ExpensesR&D, interest, taxes

ProfitNEBT: net profit before taxesNEAT: net profit after taxes

Fabricated MetalSIC 3499 009

cost

exp.

SG&A

profit

69.7%

24.3%

2.4%3.6%

profit=earnings

Page 11: Business Case for 2.009: Introductory Pro-Formaweb.mit.edu/2.009/www///lectures/29_BusinessCase101.pdfNEAT: net profit after taxes Fabricated Metal SIC 3499 009 cost exp. SG&A profit

Business Case 2.009 vtang 11

Find Cost Drivers to Develop a Cost Advantage

Build cost structure table. What are the parts? Identify cost drivers Determine cost curve and Δcost/Δvolume trend line

cost elements

cost element q

TOTAL

% cost decline

cost element q-1

cost element 1

….….

….

$ $ $ $

Q=1K Q=100KQ=10K Q=1M

% % % %

100% 100% 100% 100%

costdriver

20% 20% 30%

cost %

decline

r %

0%

s %

t %

Page 12: Business Case for 2.009: Introductory Pro-Formaweb.mit.edu/2.009/www///lectures/29_BusinessCase101.pdfNEAT: net profit after taxes Fabricated Metal SIC 3499 009 cost exp. SG&A profit

Business Case 2.009 vtang 12

Estimate Profit and Loss (P&L)

units sold

manuf. costmaterials cost

gross profit

returns, etc

sales expensegen admin expNEBTinterest exptaxesNEAT

100%sales revenues<2%

≈20%≈ 5%

≈10%≈ 5%

xxxT1 $T0 %

≈60%

≈20%

≈ 5%

depreciation ≈ 5%

… … Tk-1 $ Tk $

R&D ≈10%

≈17%≈17%

References slide tells you where to get these ratios

f

a

e

cb

d

ghijklm

f=a-(b+c+d+e)

j=f-(g+h+i)

m=j-(k+l)

Page 13: Business Case for 2.009: Introductory Pro-Formaweb.mit.edu/2.009/www///lectures/29_BusinessCase101.pdfNEAT: net profit after taxes Fabricated Metal SIC 3499 009 cost exp. SG&A profit

Business Case 2.009 vtang 13

IBM’s Profit and Loss (P&L) Statement*

manuf. costmaterials cost

gross profit

returns, etc

SG&A

NEBT

f

NEAT

100%sales revenues<2%

≈20%

≈ 3%

19981998 %

≈38%

≈11%

≈ 7%

depreciation ≈1.5%

… … Tk-1 $ Tk $

R&D ≈ 6%

≈29%≈29%

Slide #13.1

81.7$ B

30.85.0

16.7

1.2

1.6*24.1*24.0*

9.0other 0.1*

6.32.7*

*imputed from financial statements

a

e

cb

d

ghijkl

taxes

f=a-(b+c+d+e)

j=f-(g+h+i)

l=j-k

Page 14: Business Case for 2.009: Introductory Pro-Formaweb.mit.edu/2.009/www///lectures/29_BusinessCase101.pdfNEAT: net profit after taxes Fabricated Metal SIC 3499 009 cost exp. SG&A profit

Business Case 2.009 vtang 14

Cost Profile Example

revenues

total costs

investments

hardware

software

financing

cost

services

1996 1999$B

43.6

22.9

16.3

2.9

1.5

1.8

$81.7

gross profit

% cost

100

4.0

3.4

6.7

37.4

52.5

% rev

2.2

1.8

3.6

19.9

28.3

55.6

27.1

23.3

2.2

1.5

1.6

$87.6

% cost

100

2.9

2.8

4.1

43.1

50.1

% rev

1.8

1.7

2.5

26.6

30.9

32.038.1

96-99

ã

ã

ã

ä

53.4 61.8

ä

source: IBM Annual Reports

%cost %rev

ã

ã

ã

ã ãã ä

46.6 38.4

“earnings” 41.8 51.2 52.3 59.7

Page 15: Business Case for 2.009: Introductory Pro-Formaweb.mit.edu/2.009/www///lectures/29_BusinessCase101.pdfNEAT: net profit after taxes Fabricated Metal SIC 3499 009 cost exp. SG&A profit

Business Case 2.009 vtang 15

Concept 1: Time Value of Money

• A dollar now is worth more than in the future.• Why? Because you can invest it. Say at r=10%. (Up arrows denote a positive cash flow)

t0 21 n

. . . . $1. $1.1 $1.21

$(1+r)n

• Future value of $1. in n years at r% p.a. = (1+r)n

Page 16: Business Case for 2.009: Introductory Pro-Formaweb.mit.edu/2.009/www///lectures/29_BusinessCase101.pdfNEAT: net profit after taxes Fabricated Metal SIC 3499 009 cost exp. SG&A profit

Business Case 2.009 vtang 16

Concept 2: Internal Rate of Return (IRR)

• If you invest $10.00 now and your cash flow is $1. p.a., in 5 years at what interest rate do you break even?

t21 5

. . . .

$10.

(1+r)(1+r)2 (1+r)5

$10.00 = Σi=1

5 1

(1+r)ir is your IRR

Page 17: Business Case for 2.009: Introductory Pro-Formaweb.mit.edu/2.009/www///lectures/29_BusinessCase101.pdfNEAT: net profit after taxes Fabricated Metal SIC 3499 009 cost exp. SG&A profit

Business Case 2.009 vtang 17

Establish a base-line for required investments

SG&A COGS

expenses

Cost+Expenses

T1$

Tk-1TbT2$ $ $ $

Tk

Total

……

……

$CE0

…$CE1

$CEb

Target an initial break-even time, Tb

Let I0= [$CE1]+[$CE2]+…+[$Ceb]

Use I0 as initial estimate of required investment

COGS: cost of goods sold, i.e., the cost of parts+labor+warranty

Page 18: Business Case for 2.009: Introductory Pro-Formaweb.mit.edu/2.009/www///lectures/29_BusinessCase101.pdfNEAT: net profit after taxes Fabricated Metal SIC 3499 009 cost exp. SG&A profit

Business Case 2.009 vtang 18

Iterate to determine Internal Rate of Return

SG&ACosts

expenses

RevenuesT0 $ Tk-1 $Tb $T1 $ Tk$

Depreciation*(0.5)Cash Flow

… …

$CF0 …$CF1 $CFb

Solve for R;

R=internal rate of return (IRR) Is IRR acceptable? Yes, you are done. Too high, decrease I0 and repeat process. Too low, adjust time horizon, cost, or expense structure & repeat process.

$CF1

(1+R)1 (1+R)2 (1+R)k

$CF2 $CFk+++ … I0 = 0

$CFk-1 $CFk

assume tax rate=50%

Page 19: Business Case for 2.009: Introductory Pro-Formaweb.mit.edu/2.009/www///lectures/29_BusinessCase101.pdfNEAT: net profit after taxes Fabricated Metal SIC 3499 009 cost exp. SG&A profit

Business Case 2.009 vtang 19

Heuristics

IRR 30+% for risky new ventures 20 % for new products 15 % for extensions/improvements to existing product line 10 % for cost improvement to existing product line

Risk-Free Rate-of-Return ~ 6% for Short Term Government Bonds

Materials cost = manufacturing cost

Tax Rate = 50%

Page 20: Business Case for 2.009: Introductory Pro-Formaweb.mit.edu/2.009/www///lectures/29_BusinessCase101.pdfNEAT: net profit after taxes Fabricated Metal SIC 3499 009 cost exp. SG&A profit

Business Case 2.009 vtang 20

Anticipate Questions about Risks

Identify and Address Key Risks, 3<n<7 What are they and what is your strategy to handle

Market Risks [risk 1]

[risk 2]

[risk 3]

Technical Risks [risk 4]

[risk 5]

[risk 6]

Page 21: Business Case for 2.009: Introductory Pro-Formaweb.mit.edu/2.009/www///lectures/29_BusinessCase101.pdfNEAT: net profit after taxes Fabricated Metal SIC 3499 009 cost exp. SG&A profit

Business Case 2.009 vtang 21

Take Away Points for your investors

We have an attractive market [market size $, and 3-year CGR %] [profitability and other killer descriptors]

We have a competitive product [what makes the product different]

[what are its unique benefits]

We have a viable business IRR xx% with initial investment of $ xx M Break-even at units in xx months Reach steady state in yy months

Page 22: Business Case for 2.009: Introductory Pro-Formaweb.mit.edu/2.009/www///lectures/29_BusinessCase101.pdfNEAT: net profit after taxes Fabricated Metal SIC 3499 009 cost exp. SG&A profit

Business Case 2.009 vtang 22

References

http://www.ibm.com/investor/financial guide/ Tutorial on how to read financial statements.

Industry Norms & Key Business Ratios, D & B 2000. Excellent source of information, down to the four digit SIC code. In Dewey Reference Library. HF 5681, .R25, .I53 1999/2000.

Troy, L., Almanac of Business and Financial Ratios, Prentice Hall, 2000. Alternative to D&B above, also very useful. In Dewey Reference Library. HF 5681, .R25, .T8644.

Annual Statement Studies, 2000-2001. rma publishing. More business ratios by 4 digit Sic code. In Dewey Reference Library. HF 5681, .B2, .R642 2000/2001.

Kahrs, K. (Editor), Business Plans Handbook. Thomson Publishing Co. 1994. Seven volumes of business plans of all types. In Dewey Reference Library. HD 62.7, .B865, 1994

Page 23: Business Case for 2.009: Introductory Pro-Formaweb.mit.edu/2.009/www///lectures/29_BusinessCase101.pdfNEAT: net profit after taxes Fabricated Metal SIC 3499 009 cost exp. SG&A profit

Business Case 2.009 vtang 23

Anticipate Questions about the Value Chain

suppliers

Generic elements of Value Chain, a.k.a. “Food Chain”

customerdistributorretailerwholesalermanufacturer

profit

quantityi

priceiquantityo

priceo

cost & expense

Key considerations

Know which elements you will outsource and why

Slide #17

Page 24: Business Case for 2.009: Introductory Pro-Formaweb.mit.edu/2.009/www///lectures/29_BusinessCase101.pdfNEAT: net profit after taxes Fabricated Metal SIC 3499 009 cost exp. SG&A profit

Business Case 2.009 vtang 24

Caveats & Important Note

This pro-forma is abbreviated; nevertheless, it covers the keytopics and principles needed to defend your business case

A pro-forma is not a series of forms or formulae to fill-in mindlessly

Apply your judgment and compare your results against yourcompetitors and benchmarks

Slide #2