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Showing articles tagged Startup Evaluation.
A Critical Analysis of Assessment Criteria, Decision Logic, and Evidence Requirements in the UK Innovator Founder Visa System1. Introduction: The Invisible Decision Layer The success or failure of an Innovator Founder Visa application is determined not at the visa submission stage, but significantly earlier, within the endorsement process. This stage represents the most decisive and least understood component of the system. While applicants often focus on preparing business plans or meeting formal requirements, endorsing bodies operate within a fundamentally different evaluative framework—one that prioritises market...…
IntroductionEntrepreneurial organisations do not operate in isolation. They are embedded within complex economic, political, legal, technological and socio-cultural environments that shape opportunities, constraints and strategic choices. Understanding the business environment and institutional context is therefore foundational to sustainable entrepreneurial success. While internal capabilities such as innovation, leadership and culture are essential, external forces often determine the feasibility, scalability and legitimacy of new ventures (North, 1990; Scott, 2014). In entrepreneurial settings, environmental analysis is not merely a strategic exercise but a survival mechanism. Start-ups face high...…
AbstractMarket research is often treated as either a one-time market overview document or a set of casual opinion checks. Neither approach produces decision-grade evidence: evidence that can withstand scrutiny from investors, partners, regulators, and the market itself. This article presents an evidence-first market research methodology that integrates external analysis (macro trends and industry structure), competitive and substitute mapping, segmentation and positioning, and a structured “voice of customer” approach that prioritises behavioural proof over opinions. The article links to Dhruvi Infinity’s Strategy Tools learning pages (for...…
1. IntroductionStrategic management requires organisations not only to decide how to compete and how to grow, but also how to allocate limited resources across multiple products, business units, or markets. Large organisations in particular operate portfolios of products and services that vary in profitability, growth potential, and strategic importance. Effective portfolio management is therefore central to long-term organisational success. One of the most influential frameworks for portfolio analysis is the BCG Matrix, developed by the Boston Consulting Group in the late 1960s and early 1970s...…
1. IntroductionStrategic management is fundamentally concerned with how organisations grow and sustain competitive advantage in environments characterised by uncertainty, technological change, and increasing competition. After conducting internal and external analysis using tools such as SWOT, VRIO, and Porter’s Five Forces, organisations must make decisions about their future direction. These decisions often involve questions of market expansion, product innovation, and diversification. One of the most influential and enduring frameworks for guiding such growth decisions is the Ansoff Matrix. The Ansoff Matrix was developed by Igor Ansoff...…
Executive SummaryPorter’s Generic Strategies framework explains how organisations achieve competitive advantage through three main strategic choices: cost leadership, differentiation, and focus. Developed by Porter (1985), the model provides a structured approach to competitive positioning by linking internal capabilities with market competition. This article examines the theoretical foundations and contemporary relevance of Porter’s framework. Cost leadership strategies focus on operational efficiency, economies of scale, and tight cost control in order to offer products or services at lower cost than competitors. Differentiation strategies aim to provide unique...…
1. IntroductionIn strategic management, organisations seek to achieve and sustain competitive advantage in environments characterised by uncertainty, competition, and rapid change. While external analysis tools such as PESTEL and Porter’s Five Forces examine market conditions and industry pressures, internal analysis focuses on what an organisation can do well and how it can deploy its resources effectively. The concept of strategic capabilities lies at the heart of internal strategic analysis. Strategic capabilities refer to the organisational abilities that allow a firm to use its resources efficiently...…
1. IntroductionStrategic management seeks to explain why some organisations outperform others and how they can sustain competitive advantage over time. While external analysis tools such as PESTEL and Porter’s Five Forces focus on environmental and industry-level factors, internal analysis examines how organisations create value through their activities and resources. One of the most influential frameworks for this purpose is Value Chain Analysis. Value Chain Analysis was introduced by Porter (1985) as a method for decomposing an organisation into a series of value-creating activities. By analysing...…
1. IntroductionStrategic success depends not only on external market conditions but also on the internal resources and capabilities that organisations possess. While tools such as PESTEL and Porter’s Five Forces focus on the external environment, internal analysis seeks to understand what an organisation can do well and how it can sustain competitive advantage. The VRIO and VRIN frameworks are among the most widely used tools for evaluating internal resources and capabilities in strategic management. VRIO stands for Value, Rarity, Imitability, and Organisation, while VRIN stands...…
1. IntroductionStrategic management requires organisations to understand both their internal capabilities and the external environment in which they operate. One of the most widely used tools for achieving this integrated understanding is SWOT analysis. SWOT stands for Strengths, Weaknesses, Opportunities, and Threats. It provides a simple yet powerful framework for identifying internal resources and limitations while simultaneously considering external conditions that shape organisational performance (Helms and Nixon, 2010). SWOT analysis is widely applied in business planning, corporate strategy, marketing, and entrepreneurship. Its popularity stems from...…