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Lecturer: Mr J.A. Lang
(jlang@esi.co.uk)
No. of lectures: 12
Or ``How to Start and Run a Computer Company''
- So you've got an idea?
- Introduction. Why are you doing it and what is it? Types of
company. Market analysis. The business plan. Futures: some emerging
ideas for new computer businesses.
- Money and tools for its management.
- Introduction to accounting: profit and loss, cash flow, balance sheet,
budgets. Sources of finance. Stocks and shares. Options and futures.
- Setting up: legal aspects.
- Company formation. Brief introduction to business law; duties of
directors. Shares, stock options, profit share schemes and the like.
Intellectual Property Rights, patents, trademarks and
copyright. Company culture and management theory.
- People.
- Motivating factors. Groups and teams. Ego. Hiring and firing:
employment law. Interviews. Meeting techniques.
- Project planning and management.
- Role of a manager. Pert and Gantt charts, and critical path
analysis. Estimation techniques. Monitoring.
- Quality, maintenance and documentation.
- Development cycle. Productisation. Plan for quality. Plan for
maintenance. Plan for documentation.
- Marketing and selling.
- Sales and marketing are different. Marketing; channels; marketing
communications. Stages in selling. Control and commissions.
- Growth and exit routes.
- New markets: horizontal and vertical expansion. Problems of growth;
second system effects. Management structures. Communication. Exit
routes: acquisition, floatation, MBO or
liquidation. Summary. Conclusion: now you do it!
In addition to the above, there will be four guest lecturers.
Recommended books:
Brooks, F.P. (1975). The Mythical Man Month. Addison-Wesley.
Townsend, R. (1971). Up the Organization: how to stop the company
stifling people and strangling profits. Hodder Fawcett.
Townsend, R. (1985). Further Up the Organization. Coronet (2nd
ed.) (now out of print but try a library).
Additional books:
Dyson, J.R. (1994). Accounting for Non-Accounting Students.
Pitman (3rd ed.).
Niblett, B. (1980). Legal Protection of Computer Programs. Oyez.
Keenan, D. & Riches, S. (1990). Business Law. Pitman (2nd ed.).
Buckle, J.K. (1977). Managing Software Projects. Macmillan.
Institute of Directors (1985). Guidelines for Directors. London:
Director Publications.
Drucker, P.F. (1994). Innovation and Entrepreneurship. Oxford:
Butterworth Heinemann.
Weinberg, G.M. (1971). The Psychology of Computer Programming.
Van Nostrand.
Anon. (1985). The Cambridge Phenomenon. Cambridge: Segal Quince
and Partners.
Next: Part II (General) of
Up: Easter Term 1999: Part
Previous: Denotational Semantics
Christine Northeast
1998-10-01