·
You. Who you are? What your talents are. What
your skills and experiences are. Also: what are your aspirations? Specifically,
regarding your business concept, how do you see this business (if you were to
start it) playing a role in your life?
o
I am a UF senior student in a business school. My
talents are good at geography and navigation. I am a sushi chef and can-do
simple java. I think I can write a program for equipment to make fast sushi
roll.
·
What are you offering to customers? Describe the
product or service (in other words, how you'll solve customers' unmet needs).
o
I am offering the best service and the freshest food
to my customers. In another word, sushi and sashimi are should be fresh all
the time. Also, I want to make my customers feel happy when they eat the food I
made.
·
Who are you offering it to? Describe, in as much
detail as possible, the demographic and psychographic characteristics of your
customers. Think especially of this question: what do your customers all have
in common?
o
The people near the Tioga Town Center. The local
who are middle class.
·
Why do they care? Your solution is only valuable
insofar as customers believe its value to them. Here, explain why customers
will pay you money to use your product or service.
o
A box of orange chicken can make everyone full,
but I need to make people pay more for more “luxury” food. This will include
taste, decoration, price, service, the value of the food itself. Fresh yellowtail is not cheap.
·
What are your core competencies? What sets you
apart from everyone else? Also: what do you have that nobody else has?
o
At the beginning, my competency is the price. Use a good
price to attract customers from another restaurant. Then, the taste will grab
customers’ stomachs with standard services.
¬¬¬¬¬¬Hi Dongen He, I like that I have been able to follow your blog through the development of your idea for your restaurant. I think you have a very unique skill set that you referenced in the first section of your post. I personally want to start to learn java. I also like your idea of combining the two sills of java and sushi making.
ReplyDeleteHey Don! I think this is such a great idea and ties in two of your talents. I love sushi so think you could really attract a ton of customers if you have a reasonably prices since the market is so big for sushi lovers. Especially if it is quick it makes it easy for people on the go.
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