Friday, January 10, 2020
MooBella Case Study Essay
1. What categories of costs would you expect to see in a list of MooBella start-up costs? The categories of costs I would expect to see in a list of MooBella start-up costs are: ââ¬â Ownerââ¬â¢s salary ââ¬â Employee wages and benefits ââ¬â Computers, internet, telephone, and other technology ââ¬â Promotion, advertising, web site hosting ââ¬â Professional services ââ¬â Insurance ââ¬â Debt service ââ¬â Taxes ââ¬â Maintenance ââ¬â Legal/accounting fees ââ¬â Supplies 2. It took nearly 20 years from idea to market for MooBella. Clearly, it had a long development and start-up period. Reflect on the emotional and other nonmonetary factors that were likely involved for Bruce Ginsberg. MooBella was a seemingly simple concept that was technically complex and cost nearly $85 million in investment capital. Ginsberg was faced with many challenges with the research, development and start-up processes. The machines themselves were very costly, costing approximately $40,000 per machine, and it took 5 years to develop the computer portion alone. 3. What was the mix of funds used by MooBella to get started? Some of the start-up funding included: ââ¬â Saturn Asset Managementââ¬â$25 million in equity (2000-2005) ââ¬â Inventages (Swiss venture firm)ââ¬â$15 million in 2007 and $18 million in 2009 ââ¬â Bruce Ginsbergââ¬â$1 million ââ¬â W Health LPââ¬â$9 million (November 2010) ââ¬â Debtââ¬â$17.5 million in high-interest loans and convertible notes 4. What are the start-up costs that you would expect to encounter if you were a company that purchased a MooBella machine? I would expect the cost of buying the machine itself, the supplies for the ice cream the machine dispenses, taxes, maintenance, if I buy multiple machines for different locations and hire people to refill and maintain them then employee wages, and debt if I cannot pay out of pocket.
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