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Adopting Real Options as an accessible and user friendly tool within your organisation.

Adopting Real Options as an accessible and user friendly tool within your organisation. David Houldridge Technology Valuation Manager E-mail. David.Houldridge@Smith-Nephew.com. Contents. Overcoming Barriers to adoption Why they may exist. How Smith & Nephew overcame some.

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Adopting Real Options as an accessible and user friendly tool within your organisation.

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  1. Adopting Real Options as an accessible and user friendly tool within your organisation. David Houldridge Technology Valuation Manager E-mail. David.Houldridge@Smith-Nephew.com

  2. Contents • Overcoming Barriers to adoption • Why they may exist. • How Smith & Nephew overcame some. • Upside of using options • What it may lead to • Practical advice on using Real Options

  3. Innovation from Objectives “The innovation process must be set at the highest level of the corporation by identifying goals and priorities, ... The targets you set must be clear and challenging, for you cannot wait for innovation just to show up at your company one day. But you need not, and should not, possess the entire solution to the challenge you set. You have to be sure…that that you raise is realistic, though it might appear impossible.” -Akio Morita - Sony Corporation The Innovation Lecture London Feb 1992

  4. Why do barriers exist? C = SN([Ln(S/X)+(r+2/2)t]/t) - Xe-rtN([Ln(S/X)+(r-2/2)t]/t) V= Ge-rt d(k,h;r)-Ke -rt d(k-s Ö t*,k-s Ö t;r) -K*e -rt D(k-sÖt*) Long Term Capital Management

  5. Culture • “Successful investment risk management is dependent on the right company culture being in place, so chief executives and senior management must take a major interest in the development and application of their procedures.” From Strategic Investment Decisions. Harnessing opportunities managing risks. L Krantz, A Thomason. FT/Prentice Hall. London.1999.

  6. Accountants? “The challenge from the point of view of the finance department is to put parameters around curiosity and determine what is and what is not productive. After all, our success or failure in R&D won’t result from the quality of our scientists alone; it will also come from the quality of our thinking about where to invest” Scientific Management at Merck. - an Interview with CFO Judy Lewent. Harvard Business Review, 1994.

  7. Flexibility quality “Systems” What ifs Investors Uncertainty Objectives Resource Flexibility Knowledge Company characteristics • Rules • “Quality” systems • Planning • ‘Bean counters’ • Predictability • Tasks • Budgets • Assets vs

  8. Intuitive Computer averse Short attention span Skim readers Set in ways Make ‘long lasting’ decisions Are right most of the time Have invested a lot of themselves in the old way Analytical Utilise technology Focussed Flexible Accuracy is not needed Conceptual Knowledge gathering Utilise “Team” “Typical” decision maker characteristics vs

  9. Intuition • Decisions based on intuition are commonly flawed because of bias and missing or misleading information. From Strategic Investment Decisions. Harnessing opportunities managing risks. L Krantz, A Thomason. FT/Prentice Hall. London.1999.

  10. Proper analysis • Alternatively, proper analysis may be discouraged because it is seen as • too complex to conduct, • too time-consuming, • too costly or ineffective. • Individuals may prefer to rely on intuition, ‘gut feelings’, to determine their course of action. From Strategic Investment Decisions. Harnessing opportunities managing risks. L Krantz, A Thomason. FT/Prentice Hall. London.1999.

  11. Black Box Mentality What decade did your decision makers learn their trade? Output?? Inputs What was the current state of technology at that time?

  12. Advisors • What are they employed for? • How much have they invested in their advice? • How much has the company invested in their advice? • Do they know their job?

  13. Flicking the switch • How do we get them turned on? GO

  14. Spreading the ‘Word’ • Assumption: being right will not gain support and buy-in. • Permeation will occur when and where weaknesses allow it.

  15. Let them adopt it for their needs Smith & Nephew for example • Lead customer • Early adoption by a big customer • Raised as questions in other business situations • Not imposed on middle management • Just communicated with examples for discussion • Raised awareness of opinion leaders within S&N • Used as part of idea selection • adoption by scientists / project leaders.

  16. Key diffusion issues within Smith & Nephew • Broadly accepted need • Justified gut feel projects that other methods throw out. • Key enablers in place to allow adoptions • Forecasting, Portfolio management • Solution not threatening to top management • Presented as a decision support tool for top management • Methodology allowed better representation of key information • Presenters and recipients were more comfortable

  17. Luehrman Portfolio

  18. When do “Real Options” make a difference? • Traditionally • If Return is >>> Investment • “No Brainer” • If Investment >>> Return • “Kill”??? • Look for marginal calls, where the decision maker has a vested interest.

  19. Value Option £0 DTA Project Lifetime DCF Comparison of Methods FromVrettos & Steiner.In Vivo May 1998, p27-32

  20. Pet projects • Tissue Engineering ten years ago? • Traditional approaches with negative £ value led to • “gut feel” • Soft items • Science • Ambition • Legacies Real Options can incorporate gut feel especially where it relates to upside £

  21. Reducing Uncertainty and Expectations Max NPV Actual Outcome Min Time Possible outcomes at review dates

  22. Regulatory Development End of Research Project start Managing Uncertainty - after Newton and Pearson Project Timeline Likelihood Return

  23. Qualitative and Quantitative • The risk management process requires the integration of qualitative and quantitative analytical support in an iterative cycle of management activities through the whole life of an investment. • The quantitative analysis tests the insights and conclusions developed during the qualitative analysis by producing real dimensions required for most decisions. From Strategic Investment Decisions. Harnessing opportunities managing risks. L Krantz, A Thomason. FT/Prentice Hall. London.1999.

  24. Opening up opportunities that may have been dismissed • Volatility • Our volatility is limited by the thoughts of the organisation? • What if? • Should lead to how? ? ££££

  25. Cumulative Probability 0% 20% 40% 60% 80% 100% Maximum Cost Expected Cost Target Cost Expected Minimum Cost Target Total Cost (£) 20% probability of attaining cost target Target Finish Expected Finish Latest Finish Earliest Finish 100% 80% 60% Cumulative Probability 40% 20% probability of attaining schedule target 20% 0% Time (years) Setting targets and Contingency levels

  26. Raising targets • How often do you get… • “I can guarantee to deliver that” • Does this lead to rapid growth or maintenance of the status quo? • Commitment or committed?

  27. Intangible assets • Intelligent use of Real Options can lead to a “valuation” of intangibles such as Knowledge, patents… • Relies on definition of the work and imposing decisions after the acquisition of the intangible.

  28. Upside of risky decisions • Given that some of our investments will fail, how do we know our more risk acceptance culture will pay back? • If we are risk averse, why should we change our nature?

  29. Current Markets New Markets Our Current Portfolio is low risk. Risk comfort line New Products Current Products

  30. Total Revenues Accumulated by all firms, 1976 -1994 Total Revenues Accumulated by all firms, 1976 -1994 Total Revenues Accumulated by all firms, 1976 -1994 Total Revenues Accumulated by all firms, 1976 -1994 $14420 $36050 $237 $3056 Average per Company Average per Company Average per Company Average per Company $83 $16 $1500 $1800 Total accumulated revenues, 1976 –1994, of all companies employing each entry strategy From: Clayton M Christensen, The opportunity and threat of disruptive technologies, 1997 New Products Current Products Current Markets New Markets

  31. Level of accuracy • If the future is uncertain why do we need to be certain about now? • What are we trying to do? • Justify this piece of work? • So how positive does it need to be? • If the precision improves our thinking on the model of the future it is worthwhile, otherwise…

  32. What are we valuing? max  C = SN(d1) - Xe-rtN(d2) t S C min YES NO X C,X,S all in £

  33. Simple software allows easier examination of inputs

  34. Qualitative and Quantitative • “Whenever we are tempted to further refine our scoring of uncertainties, we should ask ourselves if we are attempting to use qualitative analysis to produce quantitative measures.” From Strategic Investment Decisions. Harnessing opportunities managing risks. L Krantz, A Thomason. FT/Prentice Hall. London.1999.

  35. Real world scenarios into real options calculations • Five data points • Have an NPV (S) • Have Cost (X) • Know T-t • R is often given • Sigma – guess or use Pert methods • Quick Black - Scholes, change variables and understand what happens when the calculation goes belly up off we go.

  36. Pert Method of Forecasting • EV = (a + 4m + b)/6 • s.d = (b-a)/6 • a = pessimistic • b = optimistic • m = most likely • Needs experts! s= s.d/EV Can use Delphi approach

  37. Management • Successful investments are not delivered by analysis alone and management of both objectives and risks must continue throughout the whole life of an investment. From Strategic Investment Decisions. Harnessing opportunities managing risks. L Krantz, A Thomason. FT/Prentice Hall. London.1999.

  38. Speculation and Investment • “Speculation is an effort, probably unsuccessful, to turn a little money into a lot. Investment is an effort, which should be successful, to prevent a lot of money becoming little.” • Fred Schwed – FT 22/11/99

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