Wednesday, March 7, 2012

MAKE YOUR BUSINESS MODEL CLEAR WITH VIVID THINKING. GUEST POST BY DAN ROAM


NOV 10, 2011
MAKE YOUR BUSINESS MODEL CLEAR WITH VIVID THINKING. GUEST POST BY DAN ROAM
ALEXANDER OSTERWALDER

Visual Thinking is central to designing, testing, and building business models. So I was really excited when Dan Roam accepted to write a guest post on the Business Model Alchemist. His brand new book “Blah Blah Blah: What to Do When Words Don’t Work.” is THE reference book to have better conversations and effective meetings.
At the heart of a business.
Dan Roam Blah Blah Blah Idea
At the heart of every business beat two essential elements: an idea and a plan. An idea without a plan is just a dream. A plan without an idea is just a list. For a business to grow and thrive, it must have both.
Dan Roam blah blah blah plan
Sometimes the idea comes first: “How about we make a computer screen you can touch?” Add a plan (design + manufacturing + marketing) and you’ve got the iPad. Sometimes the plan comes first:“What would happen if we sold something other than books the way Amazon sells books?” Add an idea (online shoes!) and you’ve got Zappos.
The first reason I think Alex Osterwalder’s “Business Model Canvas” is the greatest business modeling tool of the decade is because it gives us a place to quickly translate any business idea into a testable plan – and vice-versa.
Dan Roam blah blah blah Canvas
I’ve got a model. Now what?
But once we’ve developed and tested business model, there’s still one more critical step towards making a living business: we need to sell it to partners, investors, and customers. And that’s the second reason I love the “Business Model Canvas”: it provides us with the basis of the Vivid Story we’ll need to crystallize and communicate our idea. When I say “Vivid” I mean something very specific: a Visual-Verbal-Interdependentidea; an idea made absolutely clear because it is expressed with bothwords and pictures.
Let me show you. A word-only description of a complex idea is hard to “get” and equally remember. Because words always proceed in a single line, when they are finished we usually forget where they started. That’s a terrible way to describe a business.
Dan Roam blah blah blah words only
A “Vivid” idea weaves together both words and pictures to create a visual+verbal image we can see, understand, and remember. And that is a great way to describe a business.
Dan Roam blah blah blah Vivid
Dan Roam is the author of the international bestseller “The Back of the Napkin”, the most popular visual-thinking business book of all time, named by Fast Company, BusinessWeek, and The Times of London #1 creativity and innovation book of the year. For more insights on the power of power of Vivid Thinking look at Dan’s new book, “Blah Blah Blah: What to Do When Words Don’t Work.
More on Dan at www.danroam.com.
Dan Roam blah blah blah



Tuesday, February 14, 2012

2nd Global Agri-Business Incubation Conference NIABI 2012 highlights entrepreneurship for vibrant agricultural development

Credit: ICRISAT Happenings

Former President of India Dr APJ Abdul Kalam inaugurating the NIABI 2012 at IARI, New Delhi, while ICRISAT Director General William Dar and NAIP Director Dr Bangali Baboo look on.
Highlighting the crucial role of entrepreneurship as a catalyst for agricultural and economic development, the 2nd Global Agri-Business Incubation Conference of the Network of Indian Agri-Business Incubators (NIABI) 2012 concluded successfully in New Delhi on 8 February 2012.
Jointly organized by the National Agricultural Innovation Project (NAIP) of the Indian Council for Agricultural Research (ICAR) and ICRISAT, the three-day conference aimed to create global awareness, build competencies on agribusiness incubation among entrepreneurs, and establish partnerships among agribusiness sectors worldwide.
In his address as Chief Guest at the inaugural session, Dr APJ Abdul Kalam, former President of India, spoke on the need for a “vibrant agricultural development through innovations and inclusive growth” for India to become an economically developed nation by 2020. This, he added, is possible through product diversification, with focus on better technology, sound entrepreneurship, infrastructure development, and market understanding.
“Worldwide, business incubators are now gaining recognition as vital to agricultural and industrial agribusiness sectors, where technology serves as a precursor for improving the economic, social and environmental conditions especially of rural communities,” said ICRISAT Director General William Dar in his message during the conference.
“India should lead the rest of the world with its vast experience in commercializing farming technology. Networking with farmers and enterprises will be the core of this success,” he added. With NIABI as the model, several incubators across Africa will be set up through ICRISAT’s partnership with the Forum for Agricultural Research in Africa (FARA).
(Left) Dr Kalam lighting the lamp to kick start the NIABI 2012 at IARI. Also seen in the picture are DG Dar and Dr Akhilesh Gupta, Advisor, Department of Science & Technology, Govt. of India. (Right) Participants of the NIABI 2012.
In a special roundtable session chaired by Dr Dar on India’s recent initiatives on South-South collaboration through the Indo-African Summit on Agribusiness, a joint declaration was signed by NIABI and FARAUniBRAIN towards intensifying partnership in technology transfer and commercialization of agribased products between India and Africa.
In his remarks during the closing session, NAIP Director Dr Bangali Baboo said that the conference has opened up new avenues of opportunities for the scaling up of NIABI’s initiatives in commercializing technologies and supporting entrepreneurs.
The conference was attended by more than 200 agri-preneurs, scientists, agri-companies, policymakers, farmers and funding agencies from India, as well as representatives from Malaysia, Philippines and six African nations. A roadmap to revitalize agriculture and allied sectors through agribusiness was developed during the conference, serving as a platform to popularize new and better livelihood opportunities and to strengthen the global agribusiness incubator network.
Participants of the special session on South-South collaboration chaired by Dr Dar.
NIABI was set up in 2009 to harness the potential of agricultural entrepreneurship to improve the livelihood of millions that depend on India’s agriculture sector and to contribute to the nation’s overall economic growth. Today, it boasts of 10 Business Planning and Development (BPD) units coordinated by ICRISAT’s Agri-Business Incubation (ABI) program and 54 technologies that have been commercialized generating revenue worth USD10 million.
The next global NIABI conference will be held at the Central Institute of Fisheries Technology (CIFT), Cochin, Kerala in February 2013.
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Feeding the forgotten poor
Former President APJ Abdul Kalam launches DG Dar’s book

(L to R) Dr Bangali Baboo, Director, NAIP; Dr APJ Abdul Kalam; and Dr Dar during the book launch.
The world’s population will grow from almost 7 billion now to over 9 billion in 2050. The daunting question is – will there be enough food to go around?
In his book Feeding the Forgotten Poor, Director General William Dar raises the question of how the world is going to feed the poor, recounting the events of his own life and career that shaped his commitment to and vision of a hunger-free world.
The book was launched by former President of India Dr APJ Abdul Kalam at the inaugural session of the NIABI 2012 on 6 February where he was the Chief Guest.
In the book’s Foreword, Dr Kalam wrote: “The book reveals perspectives to grow and provide food to the people wherever they live on Earth, backed by Dr Dar’s own experiences in multiple countries. I am particularly impressed with the Chapter Innovate, Grow and Prosper where he deals with strategic science and dynamic development.”
The book, co-written by Arun Tiwari, is divided into four parts: (1) Soil and Roots, (2) Stems, Leaves and Fruits, (3) Skin of the Earth, and (4) Growth and Prosperity, corresponding to Dr Dar’s rise from national to regional and international agricultural research-for-development.
The book, which was also unveiled at ICRISAT Patancheru by the DG along with a showing of the video on 9 February, is published by Orient Black Swan and will soon be available at major bookstores in India.

The Need for Educated People to Take Up Farming

28 December 2011. allafrica.com. Joseph Nkandu, executive director of Nucafe (National Union of Coffee Agribusiness and Farm Enterprises), believes that for as long as farming is shunned by the well educated people, it will continue to be largely conceived as an occupation for the poor. He says there is a need for a new generation of farmers capable of blending scientific knowledge and entrepreneurial skills for farming to become a paying venture.

"Even in school, agriculture is regarded as a science subject," he says, "and indeed that's what it is. So it must be practiced by well educated people who look at farming with an entrepreneurial mind and are capable of broadening it beyond the farm; by taking the commodity value chain approach, mapping and judging at what level they can make more money."

Educated breed of farmer

Nkandu is a breed of agricultural scientists and social entrepreneurs with a Bachelor of Science in Agriculture degree from Makerere and a Masters of Business Administration Degree in Social Entrepreneurship and Management from the Catholic University of Milan, Italy, and despite the fairly prestigious qualifications he holds, he is continuing with coffee farming. He has 60 acres of land at Bunjakko village, Buwama Sub-county in Mpigi District most of which is now already under coffee. He says the market for any form of coffee is not our biggest challenge but rather Africa's entrepreneurship and institutional deficit.

"There is need to institutionalise entrepreneurship especially in the agricultural enterprises beginning with families so that generations after generations go on producing agricultural products, amassing experience and expertise, a practice that has not been here in Uganda and Africa as a whole," Nkandu further says. "The first institution should be the family and the business rotating around the family before expanding it to the community."

Ever since he got that land in Bunjakko, Nkandu and his wife Eva, who is a medical doctor, have been encouraging neighbouring farmers to grow coffee. "That's how the entire village has now become an island of coffee," he said proudly.

A well educated farmer is in a better position to practice scientific farming practices which is key to getting bigger yields. He is likely to keep book records and to search for better markets for his commodity. Governments in Africa must create an environment that fosters a culture of innovation and entrepreneurship among farmers.

Nkandu's advice for educated people in well paying jobs is that they should use their savings to acquire land and become farmers because, according to him, the economic future of our country lies in promoting agricultural innovation and entrepreneurship.

Africa: Where everyone wants to be an entrepreneur


Model wearing KikoRomeo dressThe KikoRomeo fashion company was set up in Kenya in 1996
·         People problems
·         Taste for business
·         Bikini fashion empire
·         Play your own tune
Alima Atta tells a story about recruiting staff when she was setting up her business in Nigeria's fledging communications and marketing sector.
She employed a young man - university-educated, articulate, presentable - seemingly an ideal choice. Alima asked him to draft a press release, and then left for a business meeting.
On her return to the office, the man was sitting in front of a laptop, eyes fixed to a blank screen. "What's wrong?" she asked. He admitted to never having used a computer.
Alima hadn't thought of checking that her new well-spoken, middle-class employee had basic computer skills.
She recalled the anecdote to illustrate some of the day-to-day frustrations that would-be entrepreneurs in emerging nations can face.
Things that business people in western economies might take for granted, must be checked, and double-checked.
But talk to start-up owners in Nigeria, or Kenya, or South Africa, and you get a sense of the huge opportunities available.
Many economies in sub-Saharan Africa are racing ahead, and an emerging middle class is developing a thirst for products and services that were previously out of reach.
Alima set up Sesema Public Relations in 2002. As with many entrepreneurs around the world, the motivation to go-it-alone was dissatisfaction with an existing job.
"Yes, it's been tough," she said. Any regrets? "Certainly not".
Her company now employs 12 people, and clients include British American Tobacco, Hewlett Packard, and Hennessy Cognac.
Alima has worked in the UK and US, and believes that starting a business outside of Nigeria would have been "faster and smoother".
Entrepreneurial culture
But she also says that she "would have struggled to get to the same level I'm at now (if in the UK) because there's so much more competition".
South Africa-based entrepreneur Nicholas Maweni believes the conditions point to a small business community ready for expansion. "There is a huge entrepreneurial culture. It is what is driving these countries."
He acknowledges that small enterprises are often created out of necessity, to put food on the table. "But that is a starting point. The challenge is to take it to the next level," he said.
Nicholas MaweniEntrepreneur Nicholas Maweni says complaints about red tape and corruption are overdone
The claim that Africa is full of entrepreneurial potential is frequently heard. "Everyone wants to own their own business; do their own thing," said Nawakaego Boyo, a former Nigerian actress who now runs a film and TV company, Temple Productions.
When she started her company in 1996 there was very little film infrastructure in Nigeria, and even less government help.
"I think that it is tougher running a business in Nigeria. In my particular industry there is not a lot of assistance.
"I've got friends in other countries who can apply for government grants and can go to the banks for finance.
"But I would say that things are getting better; definitely moving in the right direction," she said.
An important change that Nicholas Maweni has noticed in recent years is the number of large international companies prepared to help the small business sector to develop.
"It's almost become like corporate social responsibility," he said. "It is happening in countries that are going through a second wave of economic transformation. It's happening in Ghana, Kenya and Uganda for example."
'Exaggerated'
But it is governments that must provide the lead, he said, especially removing the bureaucracy in many government departments.

“Start Quote

There is little in the way of a business support network. People set up their own network of contacts.”
Alima AttaSesema PR
That said, Mr Maweni believes that common complaints about red tape, even corruption, are overplayed.
"They are exaggerated. There is unethical behaviour. But you find plenty of that in first world countries as well," he said.
Kenya-based Ann McCreath says that starting her business could not have been easier.
"I just registered the company, and started operating it out of my garage. I honestly can't remember it being difficult or bureaucratic," said the Scotland-born businesswoman.
That was in 1996. Ann had been working in the fashion industry in Barcelona, but decided to do charity work in Africa for Medecins Sans Frontieres.
However, a desire to get back to trade instead of aid led her to launch a fashion label, KikoRomeo.
"I wanted to get back into the fashion business to help create employment in Kenya.
"I love the colour and the textiles of the clothes in Kenya, but at the time what was coming out of the country wasn't cut well," she said.
KikoRomeo employs 13 people. There is a shop in Nairobi and an online sales operation, plus a corporate arm selling uniforms to Kenyan businesses, such as hotels.
The tax situation is relatively straightforward. Income tax and the corporate rate are both 30%, and VAT is 15%.
Alima AttaAlima Atta says it is hard to get finance for small businesses, but things are improving
Ann says, jokingly, that she should know more about the tax on profits - "but I'm afraid I am more of a break-even business".
She settled in Kenya as a foreigner, but a common assumption that people from overseas dominate the business sector is wrong.
"We (foreigners) are only a very small proportion. The vast majority of business people here are Kenyan.
"Most people in Kenya are, in fact, entrepreneurs, whether in the formal or informal sector," she said.
The challenges for all are the same, however. Getting finance, inflation, and interest rates are big hurdles, she said.
"These are reasons I am looking at exports. But, in this day and age, no company can just rely on their local market," she said.
Social media
The internet has opened a world of possibilities. She said: "We have finally got fibre optic internet here, and it makes doing local and international business online really seamless.
"Plus, we can transfer money by phone, which has transformed doing business in the country. And Facebook is enormous in Kenya; a very quick way of advertising to your clients."

“Start Quote

There are a lot of profits to be made in this continent”
Nicholas Maweni
Social media is increasingly important in countries where networks of business lobby groups and government advice centres are under-developed.
Sesema's Alima Atta said: "There is little in the way of a business support network (in Nigeria). People set up their own network of contacts."
Alima regards herself as lucky to have set up in a sector with low start-up costs. "I began in a room in my mother's home. There are still plenty of PRs here who just have a phone and a laptop."
There were big up-front costs, two year's rent and service charges in advance. She also bought an electricity generator because of Nigeria's unreliable power supplies.
Starting a business requiring a lot of capital would have been far more difficult, she said. "It's hard to get a loan for anything, although it's certainly easier than it was."
Nicholas Maweni says that anyone starting a business in Africa must weigh up four 'Ps'. Assessing Political stability is vital. "One must also be Patient, because Africa is not for the faint-hearted," he said.
And Perseverance is essential, because there are many hurdles.
Finally, there is the P that makes it all worthwhile. "There are lots of Profits to be made in this continent," he said.