Welcome to Orientation Session for Startup Cell …...TEQIP –III, Zone –Uttar Pradesh 26th &...
Transcript of Welcome to Orientation Session for Startup Cell …...TEQIP –III, Zone –Uttar Pradesh 26th &...
Welcome toOrientation Session for Startup Cell
CoordinatorsJointly Organized by NPIU and AICTE
TEQIP –III, Zone – Uttar Pradesh
26th & 27th Dec 2017
AKTU, Lucknow
Objectives
To sensitize and orient Start-up Cell Coordinators on Entrepreneurial Thinking and Start-up
Approaches and Practices
To Build the Vision to Act Entrepreneurially in Implementing a Result Oriented Micro Action Plan
for the Start-up Cell and
To Play an Active Role on Policy Advocacy and Policy Making Process.
Session Outline
1. Importance of Entrepreneurship and Innovation in Economic Development
2. Start-up Landscape at Global and National Level
3. Start-up Ecosystem Components and Development Models
4. Policy and Programs Provisions and Mandates to Build Start-up Ecosystem in Technical Institutions
5. Policy Logics and Vision Building for Start-up Cell: Problem Tree & Objective Tree and Key Performance Indicators
6. Development of Result Based M&E and Micro Action Plan for Start-up Cell
1. Role of government in promoting entrepreneurship?
2. Rationale for entrepreneurship policy?
3. Main instruments of entrepreneurship policy?
4. What is the impact of entrepreneurship policy and how should it be assessed?
Session Focus
Session Focus
1. Unleashing Entrepreneurship through Private Sector
Development
2. Constraints on the private sector in developing countries
3. Unleashing the potential of the private sector and Engaging
the private sector in development
Benefits for You
• Able to understand various key entrepreneurial concepts, approaches and practices at National and Global Level.
• Able to know Enterprising Ability and Potential of Start-up Cell Coordinators
• Get oriented about various components in building Start-up Ecosystem development and Frameworks in Formulating Entrepreneurship Policy at National and Institutional Level.
• Get to know about Start-up Policy Programs and Start-up Policy Mandates for Technical Institutions
• Able to Develop Vision Plan and a Result Oriented Micro Action Plan for Start-up Cell.
Introduction and Expectations
• Who are you?
• Your core skills?
• Your experience?
• One key expectation of workshop:
– “A question I would like answered is…”
– “I would like to know more about…”
– “My major interest is in…”
Ground Rules of the Pool…
Session Flow Management
Exit
Housekeeping:
• Schedule and Breaks
• Smoking
• Exits
• Restrooms
• Other?
Session-I: Entrepreneurship & Innovation
• Concepts & Theories
• Typology
• Characteristics
• Exercise/Activity
Entrepreneurship – Theories & Concepts
• The word entrepreneur itself derives from the Frenchverb entreprendre, meaning “to undertake”.
• In 1723, Irish–French economist Richard Contilloncoined the term Entrepreneur (self-employment andRisk takers)
• in 1890, Alfred Marshall & Frank Knight have addedLeadership and recognized the need ofentrepreneurship through organization, as a fourthfactor of production.
Goods & Services = f ( Land, labour, Capital, Entrepreneur)
Mainstreaming Entrepreneurship
• In 1934, Joseph Schumpeter’s modern definition of an entrepreneur; added Innovation; less on Risk Takers
“Entrepreneurs as innovators who implement entrepreneurial change within markets by identifying market opportunities
and using innovative approaches to exploit them”
• 5 manifestations of Entrepreneurial Changes– Introduction of a new (or improved) Good & Services
– Introduction of a new method of production
– Opening of a new market
– Exploitation of a new source of supply
– Re-engineering/organization of business management processes.
• In 1985, Peter Drucker refined the definition of entrepreneurship
“Not merely the creation of a new organization, also include any individual who starts a new business
venture is an entrepreneur; even those that fail to make a profit”
• Entrepreneurs Vs Businessmen
Mainstreaming Entrepreneurship
Specify components and functions associated with above figure on Economic Development and Factors of Production
Activity - I
Entrepreneurship - Terminology
• Entrepreneurs are those persons (business owners)who seek to generate value, through the creation orexpansion of economic activity, by identifying andexploiting new products, processes or markets.
• Entrepreneurial activity is the enterprising human actionin pursuit of the generation of value, through thecreation or expansion of economic activity, by identifyingand exploiting new products, processes or markets.
• Entrepreneurship is the phenomenon associated withentrepreneurial activity.
Typology
Gambler Entrepreneur
Bureaucrat Dreamer
Risk-taking
Risk-averse
Not Innovative
Innovative
Innovation and Risk
Source: J.Timmons, New Venture Creation
Entrepreneur( Marketing Innovation)
Inventor
ManagerAdministrator
Promoter
Creativityand
Innovation
General Management Skills, Know-How, Networks
High
LowHigh
Who is the Entrepreneur ?
Source: Wennekers and Thurik (1999)
Self-employed Employee
EntrepreneurialSchumpeterianentrepreneurs
Intrapreneurs
ManagerialManagerial
business owners
Executive managers
Types of Entrepreneurship
Formal Informal
Legal
Registered firm that is engaged
in legal activities
Unregistered firm that is engaged in
legal activities
Illegal
1. Formal vs. informal
2. Legal vs. illegal
3. Necessity vs. opportunity
4. Productive vs. unproductive
5. Innovative vs. replicative
Unregistered firm that is engaged in illegal activities
Registered firm that is engaged in illegal activities
Types of Entrepreneurship
Entrepreneurship as defined by World Bank
Entrepreneurial ActivityThe activities of an individual or a group of
individuals aimed at initiating economic activities in the formal sector under a legal form of
business.
Unit: BusinessAny economic unit of the formal sector
incorporated as a legal entity and registered in a public registry, which is capable, in its own right,
of incurring liabilities and of engaging in economic activities and transactions with other
entities.
Productive Vs Unproductive Entrepreneurship
- productive entrepreneurship refers to Schumpeter’s five types of innovation – introducing new products, new processes, new markets, new supplies and new organizations (William Baumol).
- Unproductive entrepreneurship refers to rent seeking activity such as lobbying government for favors, taking legal actions to harm competitors or conducting military activity
- Countries with cultures and institutions that reward unproductive entrepreneurship will channel more of their entrepreneurial efforts to rent-seeking activities, and consequently the economies will perform poorly
- How the entrepreneur acts at a given time and place depends heavily on the rules of the game or the reward structure in the economy
- Thus, the allocation of entrepreneurship between productive and unproductive activities can have a profound effect on the innovativeness and subsequent performance of the economy
Key Entrepreneurial Characteristics
• Motivation: The enterprising person is highly motivated, energetic, and has a capacity for hard work.
• Creative tendency: The enterprising person is restless with ideas, has an imaginative approach to solving problems, and tends to see life in a different way to others.
• Calculated risk-taking: The enterprising person is opportunistic and seeks information and expertise to evaluate if it is worth pursuing the opportunity which will usually involve some risk.
• Locus of control: The enterprising person has an internal rather than external locus of control which means that they believe they have control over their own destiny and make their own 'luck'.
Sally Caird and Mr Cliff Johnson, 1987
1. Opportunity obsession
2. Creativity
3. Commitment and determination
4. Motivation to excel
5. Self-reliance
6. Adaptability
7. Tolerance of risk, ambiguity, and uncertainty
8. Courage
9. Leadership
Source: Timmons and Spinelli (2006)
Nine Attributes of Successful Entrepreneurs
Activity -II
Explain whether each of the following is type of Production Functions: Labor, Capital, Natural Resource or Entrepreneur.
• An unemployed factory worker• A college professor• Shop Floor Manager• The library building on your campus• Design Lab Manager• The Kajiranga National Park• An untapped deposit of natural gas• The Parliament of India• The local power plant• Chief Executive Officer• Chief Product Designer• Shareholder of an Public Enterprise• In-charge of Incubation/ Start-up Cell
Activity-IIIGeneral measure of Enterprising Tendency
(GET) Test• The General measure of Enterprising Tendency (GET) test was first
developed in 1987-1988 by Sally Caird and Mr Cliff Johnson at DurhamUniversity Business School.
• The basic premise of the test is that the enterprising person sharesentrepreneurial characteristics, and that these characteristics may benurtured via educational and training, and assessed.
• The approach to developing the measure of enterprising tendency involvedidentifying key characteristics of entrepreneurial people which areassociated with entrepreneurial behaviour, and the entrepreneurial actitself.
• The GET2 test offers a self-assessment test that takes about ten minutes to complete and will give you an idea of your enterprising potential, defined as the tendency to start up and manage projects.
• The test was developed as a paper-based tool for researchand educational use in the classroom.
• This test does not assess personal strengths other thanenterprising characteristics. The test, however, is notdefinitive and should be used as an educational aid forstimulating personal reflection.
Score Card
High GET2 score 44-54
• Your GET2 score suggests that your enterprising tendency is high.• This means that you have a tendency to start up and manage projects;
this could be your own business venture, within your employing organisation or your community. You may recognise the following qualities in yourself:– You like to be in charge;– You will seek opportunities and use resources to achieve your
plans;– You believe that you possess or can gain the qualities to be
successful;– You are innovative and willing to take a calculated risk to achieve
your goals successfully.• The most enterprising people set up projects more frequently, set up
more innovative projects and are more growth-oriented which means that they are opportunistic and good at utilising resources, including human, technological, physical and organisational resources.
Medium GET2 score 27-43
You are likely to have strengths in some of the enterprising characteristics and may be
enterprising in some contexts. At this time you probably are unlikely to set up an
innovative growth-oriented global business, and may be able to express your enterprise
either within employment as an entrepreneur, or in your leisure time
through voluntary community projects.
Low GET2 score 0-26
• The GET2 results suggest that you are not highly enterprising in your present activities.
• This suggests that you would probably prefer to work in employment. Perhaps you prefer to support enterprise rather than take a lead.
• Enterprises need people to support and work on the implementation of plans so that goals
• Personal transformation is an open door! If you want to be enterprising you are half-way there!
• Entrepreneurship & Economic Development
• Entrepreneurship In Developing Country
• Private Sector Development
Session-II: Importance of Entrepreneurship
Entrepreneurship
Economic
Development
Global
Economy
Entrepreneurship and Economic Development
Factors of Production & Economic Growth (GDP)
Goods & Services = f ( Land, labour, Capital, Entrepreneur)
Differentiating Labour into “Human Rights” & “Human Spirits”. Combine Use of Knowledge*Technology
Example: Colonization Era & Now
Attitudes,
Skills,
Actions
Start-ups,
Entry into New Markets,
Innovations
Variety,
Competition,
Selection
Conceptual Framework Linking Entrepreneurship to Economic Growth
Source: Carree and Thurik (2002)
Individual Level
Firm Level
Macro Level
Psychological
Endowments
Competitiveness
Economic Growth
Level of
Analysis
Conditions for
Entrepreneurship
Crucial elements of
Entrepreneurship
Impact of
Entrepreneurship
Culture and
Institutions
Business
Environment
Macroeconomic
Conditions
Firm Performance
Self-realization
Personal Wealth
Role of Entrepreneur & Entrepreneurship in Economic Development
– Promotes Capital Formation:
– Creates Large-Scale Employment Opportunities:
– Promotes Balanced Regional Development:
– Reduces Concentration of Economic Power:
– Wealth Creation and Distribution:
– Increasing Gross National Product and Per Capita Income:
– Improvement in the Standard of Living:
– Promotes Country's Export Trade:
– Induces Backward and Forward Linkages:
– Facilitates Overall Development:
Types of Entrepreneurship and Economic Growth
• Not all types of entrepreneurship are good for economic development
• Small and micro firms are not necessarily synonymous with entrepreneurship: many of them do not focus innovation and contribute significantly to economic growth and development
• Low quality and informal entrepreneurship may have negative externalities
• The presence of growth-oriented entrepreneurs seems to be more important than general entrepreneurship
• Unleashing Productive Entrepreneurship: Private Sector Development is Necessary
• Development of Entrepreneurship is not always spontaneous.
• The entrepreneurship is motivated and affected by the following factors
– Economic environment
– Social environment
– Type of Skill and technical knowledge
– Family background
– Religious and cultural affiliation
– Financial condition
– Availability of supporting facilities
– Psychological
– Government policy and Political environment
• In most of the developed countries, the educational system is designed in such a way that it creates more jobs creators.
• Type of education prevailing in the country is also an important factor for entrepreneurship development.
Unleashing Entrepreneurship: Private Sector Development
Foundations for the Private Sector and Pillars of Entrepreneurship
Source: UNDP (2004)
Enterprise DevelopmentPrivate Sector Growth
Business Environment:
Fair rules, Fairly
Enforced
Access to Financing
and Resources
Access to Skills and
Knowledge
Rule of law
Physical and social infrastructure
Domestic and global macro environment
Pillars of Entrepreneurship
Foundations for the private sector
Constraints on the Private Sector in Developing Countries
1. Microenterprises and many small and medium enterprises operate informally
2. Weak foundation in the global and macro environments and the consistent rule of law for Ease of Doing Business.
3. Absences of requisite physical and social infrastructure
4. A lack of competitive pressure shield firms from market forces and the need to innovate and become more productive
5. Three pillars of entrepreneurship – too often missing
1) A level playing field – with Fair rules, Fairly Enforced2) Access to financing & Resources3) Access to skills and knowledge
Source: UNDP (2004)
Why Firms Do Not Formalize?
• The most important factor is the burden of state regulation, such as complex tax and administrative regimes, restrictive labor laws, and high social security burdens
• Many entrepreneurs decide to stay informal because the costs of entry, operation and exit associated with the formal sector are greater than the potential benefits
Policy Research Questions for you to find Answer !!
• Is informality a stepping stone to becoming formal or a low-productivity, poverty trap?
• Would productivity significantly increase if informal firms became formal?
• How to make work in the informal economy less attractive than work in the formal economy?
Session-III: Measurement of Entrepreneurship
• Global Entrepreneurship Monitor (GEM)
• Ease of Doing Business Indicators (DB)
• Entrepreneurship Indicators Project (EIP)
• Global Innovation Index (GII) and India
• Exercise/Activity
Measuring Entrepreneurship• In 1999, the Global Entrepreneurship Monitor (GEM), a global study
started by a consortium of universities to analyze the level ofentrepreneurship occurring in a wide basket of countries.
• In 2002, the Doing Business (DB) report of the World Bank Group firstpublished as “The Regulation of Entry” and later developed into the Ease ofDoing Business index.
• In September 2006, the OECD launched a new EntrepreneurshipIndicators Programme (EIP)
• In 2007, The Global Innovation Index (GII) ranks the innovationperformance of 143 countries and economies around the world, based on81 indicators. The GII is co-published by WIPO, Cornell University andINSEAD.
• In Feb 2017, The National Institution for Transforming India (NITI) Aayogand Confederation of Indian Industry (CII) jointly launched IndiaInnovation Index (III).
The GEM Conceptual Model
Source: Reynolds et al.(2002)
Social, Cultural
and Political
Context
General National Framework
Conditions
•Openness (external trade)
•Government (extent, role)
•Financial Markets (efficiency)
•Technology and R&D
(level, intensity)
•Infrastructure (physical)
•Management (skills)
•Labour Markets (flexible)
•Institutions (unbiased, rule of law)
Entrepreneurial Framework
Condition
•Financial
•Government Policies
•Government Programmes
•Education and Training
•R&D Transfer
•Commercial and Legal
Infrastructure
•Internal Market Openness
•Access to Physical Infrastructure
•Cultural and Social Norms
Entrepreneurial
Capacity
• Skills
• Motivation
Major Established
Firms
Micro, Small and
Medium Firms
Entrepreneurial
Opportunities
National
Economic
Growth
(GDP, Jobs)
Creation and
Closure of
Enterprises
Discontinuation of
Business
Owner-Manager of an
Established Business
(more than 3.5 years old)
Potential Entrepreneur:
Opportunities,
Knowledge and Skills
Total Early-Stage Entrepreneurial
Activity (TEA)
Conception Firm Birth Persistence
Nascent Entrepreneur:
Involved in Setting Up
a Business
Owner-Manager of a
new Business
(up to 3.5 years old)
The Entrepreneurship Process and GEM Operational Definitions
Total Early-Stage Entrepreneurial Activity Rates and Per Capita GDP 2010
Source: GEM
GDP Per Capita in Purchasing Power Parities ($), in Thousands
Per
cen
tag
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f 1
8-6
4 P
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Act
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25
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20
10
GH
UG
ZM
PE
15
10
5
30 4020
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6050
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30
35
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ECCO
BRCL
MEAR
TT
SA
KRIL
GT
CN
JM
CR
IR
UYLV
EG TN
BA ZA
MKTR
MY
RO RU
HR
HU
PTIT
SI
GRES
TW
IS
AUNL
IE US
SW
NO
BE
SE
DK
FR UK
Findings from GEM Report• The best available cross-country data from GEM shows that there
exists a U-shape relationship between entrepreneurship and economic development
• At low levels of development, self-employment is high due to lack of sufficient wage employment
• Most new businesses in low income countries are started out of necessity, in contrast to high income countries, where entrepreneurship is most often opportunity driven
• With economic development over time, the opportunity costs for self-employment will rise and the ratio of self-employed to wage-employed will decline, corresponding to the downward sloping part of the U-shaped curve.
• In developed countries, the growth of the service sector and adoption of new technologies will lead to a rise in self-employment, corresponding to the upward-sloping portion of the U-shaped curve.
World Bank Doing Business Index
❖ The World Bank Doing Business indicators measure the extent of regulations affecting business and the protection of property rights in TEN areas:
1. Starting a business
2. Dealing with construction permits
3. Getting Electricity
4. Registering property
5. Getting credit
6. Protecting Minority investors
7. Paying taxes
8. Trading across borders
9. Enforcing contracts
10. Resolving Insolvency/Closing a business
❖ Country rankings in the survey are used as an indicator of the business-friendliness of country environments
Ease of Doing Business Ranking
Source: Doing Business, 2017, World Bank
The Impact of the Business Environment on the Business Creation Process
• The World Bank Group Entrepreneurship Survey indicates a very strong and statistically significant relationship between entrepreneurship and a better business environment
• Good governance and political stability are the first prerequisites
• Greater ease in starting a business and red-tape reduction are associated with increased entrepreneurial activities
• After controlling for economic development, more efficient business registration procedures and business registry modernization has a positive impact on entrepreneurship
• Overall, the data show that a quick, efficient, and cost-effective business registration process is critical for fostering formal sector entrepreneurship
Entrepreneurship Indicators Programme (EIP) – OECD Findings
• Services have been an important driver of firm creation:
• Wage gaps in manufacturing are increasing in many countries
• Digital tools have provided new pathways and unlocked new markets for micro entrepreneurs: ‘Just Me’ entrepreneurs with no employees.
• The emergence of “gig workers”: Part time Entrepreneurs
Global Innovation Index
• The Global Innovation Index provides detailedmetrics about the innovation performance of 127countries and economies around the world.
• GII measures using 81 indicators explore a broadvision of innovation, including political environment,education, infrastructure and businesssophistication.
Activity - IV
• Cross Country Comparison and Group Presentation GEM and GII
• Start-up Ecosystem & Components
• Start-up Ecosystem at Institution Level
Session-IV: Start-up Ecosystem
Transition of Ecosystem
Composition of the Start-up ecosystem
Source: Start-up Commons
Key Start-up Development Phases
Key Start-up Support Phases
Business Model / Market FitProduct / Market FitVision / Founders FitProblem / Solution Fit
Minimum Viable Product
Validate / Iterate (or pivot)
Ideating
Entrepreneurial ambition and/or potential scalable product or service idea for a big enough target market. Initial idea on how it would create value. One person or a vague team; no confirmed commitment or no right balance of skills in the team structure yet.
Concepting
Defining mission and vision with initial strategy and key milestones for next few years on how to get there. Two or three entrepreneurial core co-founders with complementary skills and ownership plan. Maybe additional team members for specific roles also with ownership.
Committing
Committed, skills balanced co-founding team with shared vision, values and attitude. Able to develop the initial product or service version, with committed resources, or already have initial product or service in place. Co-founders shareholder agreement (SHA) signed, including milestones, with shareholders time & money commitments, for next three years with proper vesting terms.
Validating
Iterating and testing assumptions for validated solution to demonstrate initial user growth and/or revenue. Initial Key Performance Indicators (KPI’s) identified. Can start to attract additional resources (money or work equity) via investments or loans for equity, interest or revenue share from future revenues.
Scaling
Focus on KPI based measurable growth in users, customers and revenues and/or market traction & market share in a big or fast growing target market. Can and want to grow fast. Consider or have attracted significant funding or would be able to do so if wanted. Hiring, improving quality and implementing processes
Establishing
Achieved great growth, that can be expected to continue. Easily attract financial and people resources. Depending on vision, mission and commitments, will continue to grow and often tries to culturally continue “like a startup". Founders and/or investors make exit(s) or continue with the company.
VALIDATION
Lean Startup
Startup Development Phases - From Idea to Business and Team to Organization.
FORMATION
Mission > Vision > Strategy
GROWTH
Scale Up● Co-founder team formation● What, to whom? & Why and how?
Establish &Strengthen
-2 -1 30 21
Source - www.startupcommons.org
Start-up Development Phases: Key Requirement
Start-up Development Phases: Key Stakeholders
Start-up Cell/Pre-Incubator/Incubator
Start-up Development Phases: Key Services
Design Thinking: Identification of Problem to Alternative Solution Lean User experience (UX) design - Deliverables-based practiceAgile: Division of tasks into short phases of work and frequent reassessment and adaptation of plans.
Lean Start-up
• Entrepreneurship Policy Framework
• Policy Logic – Problem Tree & Objective Tree
• Key Performance Indicators
• Presentation by Mentor Institutions
Session-V: Policy Logic and Vision Building
UNCTAD’s Entrepreneurship Policy Framework
1. Formulating National Entrepreneurship Strategy
2. Optimizing the Regulatory Environment
3. Enhancing Entrepreneurship Education and Skills Development
4. Facilitating Technology Exchange and Innovation
5. Improving Access to Finance
6. Promoting Awareness and Networking
Source: UNCTAD
The Entrepreneurship Policy Framework
1. Entrepreneurship
Promotion
4. Start-up Financing
2. Entrepreneurship
Education
3. Reduction of
Barriers to Entry
6. Supporting Target
Groups
5. Business Start-up
Support
Source: Lunstrom and Stevenson (2010)
The Institutional Framework
• Entrepreneurship will only unlock economic development if a proper institutional setting is in place
• The most important policy for improving productive entrepreneurship is to get the institutional framework in a country right
• An appropriate institutional framework is one that ensures entrepreneurs can capture the profits or rewards of their activities
• This requires secure property rights, the rule of law, reasonable levels of taxes on profits, contract enforcement and financial stability, as well as the fostering of opportunities for new entrepreneurs through competition policy
Start-up Ecosystem Framework; Piloting a Micro Ecosystem at Institution Level
Technical and Management Institutions & Universities
Student Innovation
Student Start-up
Entrepreneurial Scientist/faculty +
Entrepreneurial Student Base
Coherent Policy Guidance & Resource Support; NPIU, AICTE, Central & State Govt.
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Sta
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S
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Regional and National Startup Eco-System
Ecosystem Enablers interconnected through an Integrated Web Platform
Causes
Sub-Problems
Effects
Inconsistent and Weak en the Process Pipeline of
Innovation & Entrepreneurship
Predominance of JobSeeking Attitude
•Lack of Awareness
•Lack of Motivation
•Lack of Experiential Learning Tracks
•Lack of relevant Skill
High Unemployment Rate Among Technical Graduates
Problem Tree – Start-up Ecosystem Development at Institution Level
Lack of Entrepreneurship Culture and Practices among Students and Faculties in Technical Institutions
Core Problem
Absence of Support Facilities and
Resource Access for the Potential and
Early Stage Innovators and Entrepreneurs
Lack of In-House Expert Capacity of
Institutions on Advisory Support
Services to Potential and Early Stage
Innovators & Entrepreneurs
Thinly connected and (or ) Absence of
Intra and Inter-Institutional linkage
with Ecosystem Enablers at
Regional, National Level
•Lack of Dedicated Infrastructure & Facilities
•Weak Delivery System & Access to Resources
•Absence Repository & Recognition Process
•Absence of In-house Trained Professionals for Advisory Services
•Lack of Incentives
•Lack of In-House Research in Entrepreneurship
•Weak Inter-Department linkages
•Weak Inter-institutional Linkages
•Absence of Referral Support System
Low Level Existenceof Critical Mass of
Motivated Students & Faculties with Entrepreneurial
Orientation and Skill Set
Very Low Self-Employable Rate
Prolong the Cognitive Phase to Choose Entrepreneurship as Career Alternative
Vision/ NationalDevelopment Goal
Outcomes/ Specific Objectives
Activities/ Actions
Output/ Deliverables
Building Innovation & Early Stage
Enterprises by supporting & enabling Access to Resource &Facilities at Institute
In-House Competency
Development to Serve Potential and
Early Stage Entrepreneurs
Strengthen the Intra and Inter-
Institutional linkage with Ecosystem
Enablers at Different Level
Developing a Critical Mass of Motivated
Students & Faculties with Entrepreneurial
Orientation & Skill
Objective Tree/Policy Logic – Start-up Ecosystem Development at Institution Level
Increase Employment Rate through Self Employment
Vibrant and Dynamic Startup Ecosystem in Technical Institutions Impact/Goal/ Long term Objective
Inputs/ Resources
•Aware and Motivated Student and faculties
•Deliver Education on Innovation and Entrepreneurship
•Dedicated Facilities and Infrastructures
•Enterprise Support
•Access to Resources
•In-house Trained Professionals
•Active Advisory Services
•Research & Advocacy
•Inter-Department linkages
•Inter-institutional Linkages
•Organize Workshops /Lectures/Seminars/e-Talk/BooTCamp etc
• Conduct Online and Class Room Education &Training & Mentoring
•Integration of Experiential Learning
•Establishment of Startup Cell
•Scout, Recognize Support Ideas, Innovation & Startups
•Innovation & Startup Repository Buildup
•Setup Advisory Service Expert Pool
•Training-FDPs, EDPs
•Incentives for Experts
•Research Studies & Advocacy Programs
•Mentor, Startup CellNetwork, Business & Referral Service
•Convergence and Leverage Govt. Schemes & Programs
•Organize National & Regional Events
Resource Allocation, Financial/Budget. Human Resource, Material, Equipments etc.
KPIs – Start-up Ecosystem Development at Institution LevelHierarchy of
ObjectivesKey Performance Indicators (KPIs) Means and
Verification
Vision •% Increase in Self-Employment Rate•No of Established Start-ups
•DIPP & NASSCOM•AICTE Index
Goal/Impact •Enabling Environment Established with multiple level of support for innovation & Entrepreneurship in Institute•No/% of Graduate students choose Entrepreneurship as career & # Increment/year•No/% of Student and Graduates Practicing Entrepreneurship & # Increment/year
• NPIU-AICTE Biannual Survey•NIRF Rankings
Outcomes •Nos/% of student & faculty mass with entrepreneurship Orientation, # Increment/year•Nos/% of Student & faculty motivated to start any entrepreneurial activity & #Increment•No of IPR/Innovations developed for commercialization & # Increment/year•No of Student/Early Stage Start-ups formed & # Increment/year•No/% of In-house Expert Capacity available for Advisory Services & # Increment/year•% of Satisfaction over Advisory services offered to Innovators & Early Stage Entrepreneurs•Network Established with connecting multiple stakeholders & Ecosystem Enablers
• NPIU- AICTE Biannual Survey•Quarterly News Letter of Start-up Cell
Outputs •No/% of Student & faculty mass exposed to awareness/orientation building programs & #•No/% of Students covered through entrepreneurship Education; MOOC, Class Room, Experiential Learning programs etc. & # Increment/year•No of beneficiaries are accessing the infrastructure & facilities per day, month & # Increment•No of innovators identified; No of awarded,/recognised; No of Supported, & # Increment•No of Entrepreneurs identified; No of awarded,/recognised; No of Supported, & # Increment•No of Student projects turns to (commercialize) Innovations •No of IPR based product/services generated and registration filed •No/% of in-house trained professional developed for advisory services & # Increment•No of Research Studies on Entrepreneurship published •No of Regional, National and International linkages established for the start-up & innovation•No/% Representatives of experts & entrepreneurial students across Dept & Disciplines. •No of Beneficiaries Referred to Incubators/investors for further support through Start-up Cell•No of Beneficiaries generated under various schemes and programs leveraged and converged at Start-up Cell
• NPIU- AICTE Biannual Survey•Monthly progress report of Start-up Cell
Activities No and types of Education/Skill certification program on Entrepreneurship, IIPR, Innovation etc.No of workshops, awareness, market out reach events, orientation, advocacy meetings etc.No of networking event (Intra and Inter-institutional, enablers, stakeholders) organizedNo of skill and competency development training programs/FDPs/EDPs organisedNo of research studies related to Entrepreneurship conducted No of convergence and leverage with schemes/programs offered by major enablersNo of national and regional award and campus Hackathon like events organisedIncentivising Entrepreneurship and Innovation; services and facilities; Start-up Manual, policies, tool kits etc.Amount of total budget/year spend against total institution revenue for start-upBudget allocation and Spend ratio for the start-up mandate in institute
• NPIU- AICTE Biannual Survey•Quarterly News Letter of Start-up Cell•Monthly progress report of Start-up Cell•Review Meetings
Sample Micro Action Plan Framework
Objectives Activities/ ActionsBenchmarking
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Target IndicatorsOutput & Outcome
Monitoring & Evaluation
Imp
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Developing a Critical Mass of Motivated
Students & Faculties with Entrepreneurial
Orientation & Skill
Building Innovation & Early Stage Enterprises
by supporting & enabling Access to
Resource & Facilities at Institute
Strengthen the Intra and Inter-Institutional linkage with Ecosystem
Enablers at Different Level Survey
In-House Competency Development to Serve
Potential and Early Stage Entrepreneurs
Indicative List of Activities1. Developing Critical Mass of Motivated Students & Faculties with Entrepreneurial Orientation & Skill
Activities Frequency
Promotion/ Awareness Generation Events: Workshops, Conference, Symposia , Assessment Camps etc.
Experiential Learning Programs: Boot-Camps, Hackathons, Makeathons (Hands on Activities); Problem Solving Efforts, Internship with Start-ups and Incubated Companies, Campus Companies, Games, Simulations, Learn by Doing exercises etc.
Competitions: Ideation, Innovation Contest, Prototype Contest, Business Idea Contest, Innovation Exhibition, Pitching Fest, Start-up Exhibition, Award Functions etc.
Motivation: Programs- e-Talks, TED Talks, Leader Talks, Alumni Entrepreneur in Campus etc.
Short Skill Development ( Certification) Training Programs : Innovation Design, Design Thinking, IPR, Prototyping, Creativity, Immersion Programs in Innovation, Business Modelling, B-Plan Preparatory Workshops/camps , Venture Development etc.
Entrepreneurship Education: e-Learning, MOOC, Elective & Major in Entrepreneurship, Diploma program etc.
Exposure Visit Program: To Incubators, Industries, Research Parks, Software Technology and Innovation Park, SME Clusters, SME Centres, Innovation Societies, Centres, Fab Labs, Hackers Space, Tinker Labs, Exhibitions, Market, Society etc.
Leadership Development Programs:
Incentivize the Innovation and Entrepreneurship Activities to promote more participation
Indicative List of Activities
2. Building Innovation and Early Stage Enterprises by Supporting and Enabling Access to Resources & Facilities at Institute
Activities Frequency
Establishment of Start-up Cell: Dedicated Space Allocation, IT and non-IT Infrastructure and Resources In place, Micro-Action plan ready with quarterly program calendar announced, Allocation of Fund, Start-up Cell Promotion events etc.
Knowledge Documents: Promotion and Communication Material on Start-up Cell and Facilities, Formulation of Service and Facility user Guidelines, Start-up Manual and Knowledge tools, IP process etc. for easy access of facilities.
Competitions: Demo Day, Ideation, Innovation Contest, Prototype Contest, Business Idea Contest, Innovation Exhibition, Pitching Fest, Start-up Exhibition, Award Functions etc.
Leadership Development : Formation of informal Student bodies – Idea Club; Innovation Club; Start-up Club; and e-Cell lead by Students and promoted by Start-up Cell.
Institutional Repository (MIS) Build-up and Track the process of Identify, Scout, Recognise, Promote and Support Student Ideas: Events & ProgramsIdentify, Scout, Recognise, Promote and Support Student Innovations: Events & ProgramsIdentify, Scout, Recognise, Promote and Support Student Start-ups: Events & Programs
IP Guidance and Patent Filing Support
Access to Digital Library and Research Repository
Indicative List of Activities
3. In-house Competency Development to Serve Potential and Early Stage Entrepreneurs
Activities Frequency
Setup an Expert Pool for Advisory Services on Innovation & Start-up : Identify, categorise and empanel the experts available in-house under different advisory/mentoring services.
Incentivise the Advisory Services for Quality Delivery: Formulation of manual and guidelines for advisory services, experts availability, time accessibility, credit benefits for mentor and mentee etc.
Advisory programs: Mentorship Rounds on Idea to Proof of Concept, Proof of Concept to Prototype, Prototype to Market Test, IP Protection, Filing, Commercialization plan development, Business Model and Plan development, Market Potential and Research Design, Early Venture Planning , Seed fund arrangement and Funding opportunities, MVP ( Minimum Viable Product) Development, Lean Start-up, Investment readiness, Govt. Schemes and Programs etc.
Build-up Date base and Track the progress and quality of services on regular basis
Competency Development of Experts, Facilitators, Coordinators, Club Student Leaders & Members: FDPs, EDPs, Knowledge and Experience Sharing Workshops, Exposures etc.
Research Studies and Advocacy Programs: Undertaking more research activities on Entrepreneurship and innovation. Publish finding periodically in journals, reports, blogs, and , share through advocacy programs.
Indicative List of Activities
4. Strengthen Intra and Inter – Institutional Linkage and Network with Ecosystem Enablers
Activities Frequency
Establish Networks: Network of Start-up Cell, Mentors Network, Network with Incubators and Research Parks, Venture capitals, Regional, State and National Angel Investors, TIE, NEN, Accelerators, Knowledge venture such as 91Springboard, Inc42 etc.
Organise Inter department Session and encourage student Start-up team and program coordination team with interdisciplinary, and representative from diverse departments
Organise , host and participate in Network events and Linkage programs; Regional, National and International events in partnership with other institutions and ecosystem enablers
Convergence and Leverage Govt. Schemes and Programs: Start-up cell will leverage the opportunities and channelize the entrepreneurship and innovation support schemes and programs available with various central and state govt. private and donor agencies through convergence . ( DST, NSTEDB, EDII, DBT, TIFAC, TDB, AICTE, NPIU, MSDE, MSME, MEITY, AIM, NITI AAYOG, NRDC, State Start-up Missions etc.)
Referral Support to Early Stage Start-ups and Innovators for further support and investment, funding, acceleration, Start-up Exchange, Incubators etc.
• Start-up Definition
• Global Start-up Landscape and India
• Indian Start-up Ecosystem Landscape
• Policies and Programs
Session-VI: Government Initiatives & Support System
Start-ups
• Start-ups: Intellectual property (IP backed technologyproduct/platform); ecommerce/aggregators using digitalplatform for customer engagements
Defining Start-up
Up to 7 years and for biotechnology start-ups up to 10 years from its date of incorporation / registration
Incorporated as either a Private Limited Company or a Registered Partnership Firm or a Limited Liability Partnership
Turnover for any fiscal year has not exceeded INR 25 crore
Entity should not have been formed by splitting up or reconstruction a business already in existence
Working towards innovation, development or improvement of products or processes or services, or if it is a scalable business model with a high potential of employment generation or wealth creation
Global Start-up Landscape
• India positioned 3rd and competing with Israel
Start-up Activity Index = f[Landscape (Total Start-ups, Start-ups Per Capita, Acquisitions), Unicorns Analysis, Investors Ecosystem & Funding, Advance d Tech Focus]
Govt. Focus & Country Specific Indices =f[Government Initiatives (Govt. Polices, Govt. Funding), Country Specific Indices (Global Innovation Index, Ease of Doing Business)]
Source: GEM 2016/17
India Start-up LandscapeQuick Facts
Start-up Base
5000-5200 total tech Start-ups in 20171000 No of New Start-up addition in 2017
Up by 7% YoY
Down by 29% YoY
Slow-down in new start-up addition as focus shift too quality
Start-up Hotspot
Bengaluru, Delhi NCR, Mumbai form 68% of the Overall start-ups
Up by 16% YoY
Tier 1 cities continue to form the lion share of 80% of the overall start-up base
Business Focus
B2B Start-ups form 40% of the overall start-ups
Up by 16%YoY
B2B Start-ups continue to gain prominence
VerticalFocus
Aggregator/e Commerce:$1.1 Bn funding
Fin Tech: $200 Mnfunding
Up by 22%
Up by 135%
Investors continue to remain bullish on Aggregator/e commerce and Fin-Tech verticals
Source: NASSCOM, 2017
Quick Facts
Advance Tech Focus
700 + Advanced Tech Start-ups
30% + addition since 2012
Key focus on Analytics,Artificial intelligence and Internet of Things
Start-up Solving Social Problems
325 Start-ups focused at solving core India problem
Up by 18% YoY
Rise of new breed ofstart-ups solving key India Problem.
MortalityAnalysis
20-25% Overall Mortality rateFurther reduction in share of B2B in failed start-ups from 36% in 2016 to 30% in 2017
B2B start-ups more likely to survive vis-a-vis B2C start-ups
Incubators/Accelerators
190+ Active Incubators/Accelerators
Up by36% YoY
Continued growth ofIncubators/ Accelerators
Source: NASSCOM, 2017
• 80% Start-ups are concentrate in tier 1 cities
• Chennai and Hyderabad with maximum proportion of B2B start-ups, led by the presence of Tech Institutions and R&D centres
National Start-up Landscape
Start-up Base
• Promising start-ups also emerging from tier 2/3 cities, which account for 20% of start-ups base( up from 16% in 2016)
Business Focus Across Verticals
Business Focus
• Health tech and Enterprise Product are emerged as other key funded verticals
Vertical Focus
Start-ups Solving Social Problems
• 325+ Start-ups Solving Social Problems
• Up by 16% YoY
• 75% Start-ups based out of Tier 1 cities
Start-up Mortality
• Majority of Start-ups dying within 1.6-1.9 years of Inceptions• 55% of failed start-ups have received funding• 20% failed start-ups graduated from Incubators/Accelerators
Start-up Mortality
• B2B start-ups show higher stability
• Delhi NCR top for B2C start-up failures ( 40% +)
• Bengaluru top for B2B Start-up failures (33%)
Start-up Mortality
• Funding Amount - Seed Stage < Rs. 5 crore; Early Stage = Rs. 5 to 25 Crore; Growth Stage = Rs. 25 to 100 crore; Expansion Stage > 100 crore
Government Initiatives for Start-up
(54 %)
(35 %)
(12 %)
Policy Focus Area
•$1.5 Bn corpus for over 4 years to aid start-up funding•Credit Guarantee trust to support flow o funds•No capita; gains Tax while income tax waived off over 3 years•Tax exemption on investments above market value
•Atal Innovation Mission to boost innovation and encourage youth•Focus on PPP model ot create 35 new incubators and 31 innovation centres•Setup 7 new Research Parks with $1.2 Mn investment into each•5 Bio Tech clusters to be established
•Self Certification to reduce regulatory liabilities•Easy registration through mobile app•Fast tracking patent examination and providing rebates•Legal support to start-ups•Simplifying public procurement rules and support faster exits
Government’s Start-Up India” initiatives
Govt. Initiatives Announced Since 2017
Start-up Benefits
SELF CERTIFICATIONand compliance under
9 environmental & labour laws
STARTUP PATENT APPLICATION
fast track & up to 80% rebate in filling patents
PUBLIC PROCUREMENTfast track under the criteria of "prior
experience/turnover" for start-ups in all Central Government ministries/departments
WINDING UP COMPANYin 90 days under
insolvency & Bankruptcy code 2016
INR 10,000 CRORE FUNDof funds for investment into start-ups through Alternate
Investment Funds
INR 2,000 CRORE CREDITguarantee fund for start-ups
through National Credit Guarantee Trust Company /
SIDBI over 4 years
TAX EXEMPTIONSon Income tax for 3
years
TAX EXEMPTIONSon capital gains & on Investments above Fair Market Value
State Start-up Policies
Knowledge Repository
• https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/1KBMh9EeDHNh5kr_Flv6ocauGaBXQzTSV?usp=sharing
• Start-up Knowledge Documents/Directories
• List with detail of 50+ Start-up Schemes By Indian Government For Start-up
• List with Detail of Top 200+ Start-up Incubators in India - Inc42 Media
• List with Detail of Top 60+ Active Start-up Accelerators In India - Inc42 Media
• List with detail of Ecosystem Enablers -Top Maker-spaces & Accelerators Driving Hardware And IoT Innovation - Inc42 Media
• Directory of DIPP Recognized Incubators/Accelerators/Research Parks – DIPP
• Directory of DIPP Recognized Facilitators for Trademark – DIPP
• Directory of DIPP Recognized Facilitators for Patent – DIPP
• Directory of SEBI Registered VCs – DIPP
• Directory of Central and State Clearance agencies for Start-up Registration, obtain No Objection Certificates (NOCs), licenses, clearance registrations and other mandatory approvals required for setting up of a business in States
• Micro Action Plan Presentation
Session-VII: Micro Action Plan Presentation
ThanksAICTE Start-up Policy Implementation Unit