Feasibility Testing: A Lost Art?

Entrepreneur testing his business idea

I know, you’ve got a great business idea. Everybody says it’s a winner, even your business friends. It’s amazing no one else has thought of it before. You’re feeling you should jump on it right away before someone else gets there first. But you realize you need to do some research before taking the plunge, so you’re game for that, as long it’s not too time-consuming or expensive.

So it’s time to gather some data to show it’s a good idea, right?

Not exactly. All too often, this research begins with the presumption that you have the right business idea. I call that the confirmation bias trap, and it’s so common that most businesses fall into it. Truth is, many business startups make big mistakes in their first year, and many of those mistakes could have been avoided by doing some basic feasibility research, rather than just looking for confirming data. Successful business leaders will often tell you that it was not their first idea that worked out, but an offshoot of it.

So use your research into customers, competitors, pricing, business models, and so on to refine your idea, or even radically change it. Doing some feasibility testing can’t guarantee you’ll get it right the first time, but it sure can reduce the number and severity of those painful first year mistakes. Or even demonstrate that your great idea is not so great after all.

Our next blog will offer strategies and steps for doing feasibility testing.

Structure is irrelevant

An enterprise trying to map out its structure

Not all social enterprises look alike. While many people immediately think of nonprofits (or nongovernmental organizations, NGOs), in practice any type of business can be a social enterprise. As long as you “harness the power of the marketplace to solve critical social or environmental problem,” which to me means you sell stuff to customers as you pursue your larger social purpose, you’re in.

Regardless of whether you’re set up as a nonprofit, a for-profit, a hybrid like the new L3C in the US, or just an individual with an idea to change the world, funded — at least in part — by selling products or services, you’re a member of this special club.

Social enterprise is not just about finding the right business-like strategies, which, if applied correctly, will help create social impact. It’s also a movement, of tens of thousands of people and organizations around the world working on their own and working together to change the world, combining the best of the commercial and non-commercial sectors.

What makes this a movement is the shared vision for social change — how the world will be better if we succeed at our work; and the business models — how that work gets paid for, at least a big share of it, from entrepreneurial strategies.

Now, speaking of share, there’s no formula on what percentage of your income needs to be “earned” (as opposed to granted or donated) to be a social enterprise. But I tend to think the earned portion needs to be at least 25% to make some claim to the “enterprise” portion of the term. And while profitability is a good thing, and for for-profit social enterprises ultimately an essential thing, it’s not a requirement to qualify as a social enterprise.

So, for example, if you have a sustainable business model that relies on half of its revenue from earned income, and half from grants, I call that a successful social enterprise.

So regardless of your organization’s legal structure, or lack thereof, join us to talk about not just why we do this work, but how. It’s the how that will be the primary focus of this blog, but we won’t shy away from the why as well.

What are the challenges you’re facing with your social enterprise work?

Measure Twice, Cut Once

Businessman looking out through his office window

Successful entrepreneurs tend to be frugal. They have to be. They know that money and time is scarce. Too many things to do, too little time. So they focus, prioritize, cut to the bone, do what only needs to be done to get from point A to point E (skipping point B, C and D if possible). If you ask them how much planning they do, they’ll tell you they don’t have much time for that. But probe a bit deeper, as I have in hundreds of discussions with small business owners and entrepreneurial nonprofit leaders across the country (and some overseas), and you’ll find that generally they’re pretty good planners, even if they roll their eyes when you use that word.

Unlike the Hollywood version, most real life entrepreneurs do not carelessly take risks in hopes of making it big. Instead, before they dive into something, they often gather information from customers, competitors, colleagues, sales people, suppliers, industry sources, wherever they can get it – then add their own knowledge and intuition into the mix. From that effort the idea for their new business or new product or new market emerges. Why don’t they “just do it” the Nike way? Because they know it’s almost always cheaper to get it right the first time. They know to “measure twice, cut once.” That’s what business planning is all about. Sure, some things you can’t measure; but for everything else, there’s business planning.

As we continue with this blog, we’ll discuss specific strategies for measuring, once, twice, but not three times, by doing “just enough” business planning. Then just do it.

How do you do your business planning? Where do you need help?

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For more resources, see our Library topic Business Planning.

Social Enterprise: The Final Frontier

Social Enterprise: A cart and a laptop

Social enterprise is not for the faint of heart. It’s hard enough to make a difference in the world, or to succeed at running a business, but do both at the same time? Yikes, beam me up, Scotty. This is not easy to do, and many organizations have failed at it. But the good news is that there are tens of thousands of organizations who have succeeded at pursuing their social mission supported, in part or in whole, by selling goods and services. And, in most cases, they’re willing to share what they’ve learned.

Welcome to the first edition of the Social Enterprise Blog of the Free Management Library. I’m Rolfe Larson, your guide in this quadrant of the blogosphere. Our goal is to help you succeed at starting, expanding, or just surviving your social enterprise.

What is a social enterprise? There are many definitions, so here’s one to get things started. The Social Enterprise Alliance defines it as any organization that “harnesses the power of the marketplace to solve critical social or environmental problems.”

Here are some of the topics we’ll be discussing here:

  • What organizational form makes best sense for your group?
  • Are you ready to do social enterprise? Is it right for you?
  • What are the risks and limitations? Other options?
  • How do you find good opportunities to start or grow our ventures?
  • Where do you find the resources to get it started?
  • When does it make sense to hire someone to help you with this?

So I hope you will, well, boldly join us for this voyage. Or at least drop in from cyberspace now and again to “make it so.” I guarantee it: we’ll keep this useful and interesting. Engage!

“What’s your business plan?”

Person sketching a business plan on her note

If you’re running a business, you get asked this question often. It could come from your banker, your accountant, your business-savvy aunt, or your teenager taking that first business class. They want to know: what’s your business plan? And they all want different things. Some just want a sentence or two about customers, competitors and business models. Others want detailed financials. Still others wonder if you’ve done a thorough market and competitor analysis.

Welcome to the first edition of the Business Planning Blog of the Free Management Library. I’m Rolfe Larson, your guide in this quadrant of the blogosphere. Our goal is to help you figure out how to answer that persistent question. In a way that helps you succeed with your business.

Here are some of the other questions we’ll be addressing here:

  • Do you really need a business plan?
  • How much business planning do you need to do?
  • Where to go to get business planning help?
  • When to hire someone to do market research
  • When to hire someone to write your plan
  • What about all those unknowns every business faces?
  • Will a business plan help you raise money?
  • When should you revise your plan?

So I hope you can join us for the ride. Send in your reactions, comments, suggestions, and let’s make this fun. And we’ll help you answer that persistent question: what’s your business plan?

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For more resources, see our Library topic Business Planning.

Welcome to the Social Enterprise blog!

Welcome with a handshake.

I’m Rolfe Larson and I’m the host of this blog. You can read more about me next to my picture in the sidebar. This blog will be about various aspects of social enterprise, will focus especially on practical tips and tools, and will include posts from guest writers. You can learn more about this blog by clicking on the About link just under the header.

  • Before using the blog, please take a few minutes now to read about the policies. Go to Policies under the header.
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Welcome!

Welcome to the Business Planning Blog!

A business planning note

I’m Rolfe Larson and I’m the host of this blog. You can read more about me next to my picture in the sidebar. This blog will be about various aspects of business planning, will focus especially on practical tips and tools, and will include posts from guest writers. You can learn more about this blog by clicking on the About link just under the header.

  • Before using the blog, please take a few minutes now to read about the policies. Go to Policies under the header.
  • Feel free to share a comment about a post. Just click on the link “Leave a response” under the post in the body of the blog.
  • You can use RSS or email to get copied on any new posts in the blog. Go to To Subscribe under the header to select RSS subscription or email subscription to get updates.
  • You can also use email to get notified when there are new comments to a post. When you click on “Leave a response” under the post, check the box to be notified of any follow-up comments.
  • You can get a lot of visibility to your work by being a guest writer. Many of the Library’s topics consistently rank in the top 10 of Google search results. Go to Guest Writer Submissions under the header.
  • See the many Related Library Topics listed on the sidebar. They contain 100s of free online, articles related to the topic of this blog.
  • Read the many other useful blogs in the Library. Go to Library’s Blogs in the sidebar.
  • Search for any topics you’re interested in. Use the Search box at the top of the header.
  • If larger text would be easier for you to read, just click on the 3 “A”s above the header until the text is large enough for you to easily read.

If you have any questions, just use the Contact Us form at the bottom of each page.

Welcome!

——————

For more resources, see our Library topic Business Planning.