"PROJECT LEADER" Suggestion
It might be a good idea to set up a format to be followed in presenting candidates. This will make it easier for participants to prepare and for the rest of us to evaluate. A beginning outline is below. This can, of course, be improved upon, but it gives us a place to start. Comments welcomed.
I Company Overview: who they are & what they do, how long they have been in business, # of employees, product offerings
II. Their market: who are their competitors, who are their customers. (source: Edgar 10K filing)
III. Financial Information: last 4 quarters - Sales, gross profit %, net profit %, eps, q over q sales and earnings growth rates
IV. Stock Information: shares outstanding, float, % owned by insiders, % owned by institutions, 52 week hi/lo,
V. G/K Characteristics: a. is there a discontinuous innovation? proprietary open architecture? b. does it have the potential to grow into a mass market phenomenon, become a standard c. are there high barriers to entry and high switching costs? d. have value chains developed? e. have they crossed the chasm (the chasm is the point where the visionaries (early adopters) begin to lose interest but the pragmatists (the herd) have not yet adopted the product. no gorilla game begins until the market has crossed the chasm. just on the other side of the chasm is the bowling alley - the beginning of the mainstream market. In the bowling alley market niches begin to adopt the new technology.) f. existence of hypergrowth (the Tornado is a period of hypergrowth that coincides with the first surge of mass market adoption of a new technology, the tornado occurs when the pragmatists stop hesitating and rush to adopt the new technology en masse. This hypergrowth is often in excess of 300% per year)
Note: their can never be a gorilla without a tornado. some tornados do not sporn gorillas - these are markets without proprietary standards (such as fax machines). These become royalty games. In such a market if one vendor has more than twice the market share of its nearest competitor it becomes the king.
Sources of Information: Wall St. Research Net wsrn.com Market guide marketguide.com SEC Filings freeedgar.com Co. profiles, analysts recs justquotes.com
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