Friday, March 22, 2013

The last day of being a technopreneur


The last topic that we have discussed is all about the relationship behind the company. the business model.





Customer Segments as an organization serves one or several customer segments.
  1. Value Propositions it seeks to solve customer problems and satisfy customer needs with value propositions.
  2. Channels value propositions are delivered to customers through communication, distribution and sales channels.
  3. Customer Relationships are established and maintained with each customer segment.
  4. Revenue Streams is the result from value propositions successfully offered to customers.
  5. Key Resources are the assets required to offer and deliver the previously described elements.
  6. Key Activities by performing a key number of key activities.
  7. Key Partnership some activities are out secured and same resources are acquired outside the enterprise.
  8. Cost Structure the business model elements result in the cost structure

Silicon Valley

after knowing the successful pilipinos through technopreneurship. lets move on the foreign country. a succesful technopreneurship by other country. who manage to change the world.



                  The film opens with the creation of the 1984 commercial for Apple Computer, which introduced the first Macintosh. Steve Jobs (Noah Wyle) is speaking with director Ridley Scott (J. G. Hertzler), trying to convey his idea that "We're creating a completely new consciousness." Scott, however, is more concerned at the moment with the technical aspects of the commercial.
The film then flashes forward to 1997 as Jobs, who has returned to Apple, is announcing a new deal with Microsoft at the 1997 Macworld Expo. His partner, Steve Wozniak (Joey Slotnick), is introduced as one of the two central narrators of the story. Wozniak notes to the audience the resemblance between "Big Brother" and the image of Bill Gates (Anthony Hall) on the screen behind Jobs during this announcement. Asking how they "got from there to here," the film turns to flashbacks of his youth with Jobs, prior to the forming of Apple.
The first flashback of the film takes place on the U.C. Berkeley campus during the period of the early 1970s student movements. Jobs and Wozniak are shown caught on the campus during a riot between students and police. They flee and after finding safety, Jobs states to Wozniak, "Those guys think they're revolutionaries. They're not revolutionaries, we are." Wozniak then comments that "Steve was never like you or me. He always saw things differently. Even when I was in Berkeley, I would see something and just see kilobytes or circuit boards while he'd see karma or the meaning of the universe."
Using a similar structure, the film next turns to a young Bill Gates at Harvard University, in the early 1970s, with classmate Steve Ballmer (John DiMaggio), and Gates’ high school friend Paul Allen (Josh Hopkins). As with Wozniak in the earlier segment, Ballmer narrates Gates' story, particularly the moment when Gates discovers the existence of Ed Roberts' (Gailard Sartain) MITS Altair (causing him to drop out of Harvard). Gates' and Allen's early work with MITS is juxtaposed against the involvement of Jobs and Wozniak with the Homebrew Computer Club, eventually leading to the development of the Apple I in 1976 with the help of angel investor Mike Markkula (Jeffrey Nordling). The story follows the protagonists as they develop their technology and their businesses. At a San Francisco computer fair where the Apple II computer is introduced, Gates (the then-unknown Microsoft CEO), attempts to introduce himself to Jobs, who snubs him. This is followed by the development of the IBM-PC with the help of Gates and Microsoft in 1981.
It also follows Jobs' relationship with his high school girlfriend (Gema Zamprogna) and the difficulties he had acknowledging the birth and existence of their daughter, Lisa. Around the time his daughter was born, Jobs unveiled his next computer, which he named, The Lisa. The Lisa was then followed in 1984 by the Macintosh, a computer inspired by the Xerox Alto. The main body of the film finally concludes with a birthday toast in 1985 to Steve Jobs shortly before he was fired by CEO John Sculley (Allan Royal) from Apple Computer.
It also includes a brief epilogue, noting what happened afterward in the lives of Steve Jobs and Steve Wozniak. The movie ends with Steve Jobs returning to Apple after its acquisition of NeXT Computer, and Bill Gates appearing live via satellite at a MacWorld Expo in 1997, during Jobs' first Stevenote keynote address, to announce an alliance between Apple and Microsoft.

Technoprenuership Ecosystem





The harmony of living things living in an area.

The technoprenuership Ecosystem is made up of HELF

H - Human Resource

E - Environment

L - Laws and policies

F - Financial Resource

1. Human Resource Components

This consists of :

a. Researchers. This involves the thinker, the idea generator and the innovator

b. Development/ Developers. This  involves implementors and technical people.

c. Marketing. Advertising and selling

d. Financers

2. The Environment Component

This consist of :

a. Science parts {the initial presentation of a product and viewing of the products}

b. Incubation Centres

c. Academic institutions

d. Research and development centers

e. Internet Access

f.Communication and other support service

g.Geographic accessibility {location}

3. Laws and policies
1. Intellectual property rights
2. Technology licensing office
3. Legal services

4.  Financial Resource Component
1. Investors
2. Business sectors
3. Funding Agencies
4. Financial Services

Technopreneurs


for us to appreciate the importance of technopreneurship, we must first see the persons behind it. the succesful technopreneur.

lets talk about the two pilipinos who become successful in the field of business and technology.




                 Diosdado P. Banatao was  born May 23, 1946  a filipino entrepreneur and engineer working in the high-tech industry. He was born in a small barrio of Malabbac in the town of Iguig, Cagayan, Philippines. A three-time start-up veteran, he co-founded Mostron,Chips and Technologies, and S3 Graphics.

 After finishing his master's degree, Banatao worked with different technology companies such as the National Semiconductor, Intersil, and Commodore International where he designed the first single first single chip, 16-bit microprocessor-based calculator. In 1981, he discovered and invented the first 10-Mbit Ethernet CMOS with silicon coupler data-link control and transreceiver chip while working in SEEQ Technology. He was also credited for the first system logic chip set for IBM's PC-XT and the PC-AT; the local bus concept and the first Windows Graphics accelerator chip for personal computers.







             Winston Damarillo is the CEO and co-founder of Morphlabs, the world's leading provider of converged dynamic infrastructure forcloud computing he holds a B.S. in Industrial and Mechanical Engineering from the De La Salle University.
            His past endeavors include several companies which were subsequently sold to major IT companies: Gluecode Software, an open source application infrastructure company which was acquired by IBM in 2005Logicblaze, acquired by Iona Technologies in 2007 and Webtide, acquired by Intalio in 2009
            Winston is also the co-founder and chairman of the board of directors for Exist an enterprise software development company, and MaestroDev, a collaborative software development automation company.
In 2011, Winston was selected as a Commissioner in the TechAmerica Foundation State & Local Government Cloud Commission (SLG-CC).




Saturday, March 9, 2013

BUSINESS PLAN COMPONENTS


BUSINESS PLAN COMPONENTS

a. Executive Summary
-write this in the last of the page or in the presentation.

b. Company Description
- discuss the documents such us buildings and competitors all about things pertaining the company.

c. Product or services
- describe what are the company's selling or their services.

d. Market Analysis
- describe the customer needs and where you can find them.

DONT's OF BUSINESS PLAN


DONT's OF BUSINESS PLAN

1. show how much you know about the business

2. nobody read a long wided businesss plan.

3. important graphics

a. cash flow

b. sales for cost with breakdown information

c. profits and last statement

d.projected balance

APPLICATION OF BUSINESS PLAN


APPLICATION OF BUSINESS PLAN

1. Define and fix objectives

2. Create regular review and course correction

3. To support loan application

4. To define agreements between partners

5. To set a value on a business for sale for legal purposes

6. To evaluate on a new product line promotion or expansion

7. To define a new business.