Difference between revisions of "Organization:Business Model Competition"
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Revision as of 05:19, 4 October 2013
Contents
Overview
Business Model Competition(BMC), or International Business Model Competition(IBMC), is a unique business development competition that differentiates itself from other business plan competitions by stressing the value of validation with real customers.
By recognizing over 85 percent of new business fall within a few years, often because they try to plan their way to success, The IBMC represents a radical departure from the past and the crest of a new paradigm in entrepreneurship. The IBMC is not a business plan competition. It doesn't reward the student for doing lots of library research, drawing fancy graphs, or crafting the perfect sales pitch to venture capitalists. Instead the IBMC want the students to[1]:
- breaking down their idea into the key business model assumptions.
- getting outside the building and testing their assumptions with customers.
- applying Customer Development/Lean Startup principles to make sure they nail the pain and solution, and,
- learning to pivot(change) until they have arrived at a customer-validated business model.
Ultimately IBMC believes this will dramatically improve the success rate of new ventures.
Business Model Canvas
IBMC Sponsors & Founders
The IBMC is sponsored by the Kevin and Debra Rollins Center for Entrepreneurship & Technology in the Marriot School of Management at Brigham Young University.
The competition was founded by:
- Nathan Furr (Ph.D., Stanford; Entrepreneurship Professor, BYU)
- Steve Blank (Entrepreneurship Professor, UC Berkley; Lecturer, Stanford)
- John Richards (Entrepreneurship Professor, BYU)
- Scott Petersen (Director, Center for Entrepreneurship & Technology, BYU)
IBMC 2013 Winner: Team Owlet
Purpose
Distinct Differences From Other Offerings
Unlike other offerings, the IBMC emphasizes these three key steps:
- Identify the assumptions
- Test the assumptions with real customers
- Pivot and tell the story
Impact Achieved For Students and Campus
IBMC is currently co-hosted by Brigham Young University, Harvard University, and Stanford University.
Steps Required To Bring Resource to Campus
There are two ways of getting involved with the IBMC:
- Become a participating university Advertise the competition and encourage the students to apply through general application process.
- Become a qualifier competitions host Apply to be a qualifier competitions hosting university. Building the competition, organizing the competition, and running the competition.
General Application
Business Model Competition, unlike other students based competitions, is open to anyone who want to participate while meeting the Eligibility Criteria. Thus, bringing this competition to campus doesn't need to submit any application to BMC or establish local chapter on campus. And at the same time, BMC also enforces a set of rules that ensure the strong representation of students in the competing team, which makes it very attractive to new students entrepreneurs.
How to Apply
To apply to the IBMC, the team needs to fill out and submit the application form at the beginning of January. Before doing that, they also need to do the following:
- Create a video presentation describing the up-to-date validation and customer discovery with the idea and business model.
- Upload the video to YouTube
- Fill out and sign the Certifications and Agreements, which needs to be scanned and uploaded in the application form.
Host Qualifier Competitions
IBMC also encourages the development of qualifier competitions at other colleges and universities. The winners of these competitions will receive an automatic advancement in the International Competition, while other contenders may still apply through the General Application. Any college or university interested in hosting a local competition is encouraged to contact businessmodelcompetition@gmail.com
Creating a University Competition
IBMC made a strategic guideline to help universities to start the BMC qualifier competition on their campus. The detailed documentation can be downloaded here: Download Guideline.
In summary, the guideline discussed three topics:
- Building the Competition
- Organizing the Competition
- Running the Competition
Creating a university competition requires a group of leaders that includes at least one faculty adviser and one student director. The next primary objective is securing funding for the event and building the rest of the student team. To assist qualifier competitions, the IBMC also has several resources available through Dropbox. The school representative need to contact the IBMC or one of its administrators to request access to the files. To ask for any additional resource can contact businessmodelcompetition@gmail.com.
