Victor Cheng Flashcards
Victor Cheng: Items to dive into on revenues
- unit revenue
- # units sold (note that a decline in units sold is a trigger to compare to competitors)
- look into:
- product types
- distribution channels
- regions
- customer type
- industries
drill numerically until you find a problem, then approach qualitatively to explain
Victor Cheng:
Items to dive into on costs
- fixed and variable
- # of units
Dig into costs by:
- component
- value chain (raw input, labor, distribution)
Drill numerically until you find a problem, then qualitatively explain
Victor Cheng:
Business situation framework
4 buckets
(1) customer
(2) nature of the product
(3) company
(4) competition
Victor Cheng business situation framework:
Customer
- who is the customer: segments & numbers, %, growth
- what do they want?
- what is their price sensitivity
- what are distribution channel preferences for each?
- customer concentration and power
Victor Cheng business situation framework:
Product
- Nature of the product (talk out loud - what are benefits? Why do people buy it?)
- commodity good or differentiated?
- identify complimentary goods (can we piggy back off their growth?)
- identify substitutes (vulnerability)
- product lifecycle (new vs almost obsolete)
- packaging & bundling (optional)
Victor Cheng business situation framework:
Company
- capabilities and expertise
- distribution channels
- cost structure (high fixed or high variable)
- intangibles
- financial situation
- org structure (e.g., think of a Fortune 500 company that would rather work with one sales person with broad knowledge than 5 with segmented knowledge)
Victor Cheng business situation framework:
Competition
- competitor concentration & structure
- competitor behavior (target segments, pricing, brand loyalty)
- barriers to entry
- supplier concentration (optional)
- life cycle of industry
- regulatory environment
Victor Cheng:
Profitability framework
Profitability =
Revenue: divided into (1) units sold and (2) revenue per unit) - note that you want to isolate by product type, distribution channel, region, customer type, etc. as possible. Identify wherever cost or volume is moving and in which segments
Cost: break into fixed and variable costs per unit and number of units sold. Like revenue, understand which lever is moving (cost or units) and for which pieces (e.g., component, value chain)
Victor Cheng: should we enter a new product market?
(1) customer
(2) competition
(3) company
(4) return on investment
If hypothesis is should enter:
(1) customer: future size of market is large
(2) competition: no competitor exists
(3) company - we have a unique advantage in this space
(4) return on investment: the potential sales will outweigh the upfront investment
If all proved true, we will invest
Victor Cheng: asking for segmentation data
I’d like to segment units sold into component parts. Do we have any data on the components that drive units sold?
Investigating capabilities and expertise
Ask:
(1) what does this company excel at/ do well?
(5) what does this company do better than its competitors?
Elements of labor costs
(1) wages per hour
(2) time spent on each unit