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Teach For America: The Bay Area Expansion Net Present Value (NPV) / MBA Resources

Introduction to Net Present Value (NPV) - What is Net Present Value (NPV) ? How it impacts financial decisions regarding project management?

NPV solution for Teach For America: The Bay Area Expansion case study


At Oak Spring University, we provide corporate level professional Net Present Value (NPV) case study solution. Teach For America: The Bay Area Expansion case study is a Harvard Business School (HBR) case study written by James A. Phills, Debbie Choy, Justin McNabney, Erica Vaughan. The Teach For America: The Bay Area Expansion (referred as “Tfa Placements” from here on) case study provides evaluation & decision scenario in field of Innovation & Entrepreneurship. It also touches upon business topics such as - Value proposition, Social enterprise, Strategy execution.

The net present value (NPV) of an investment proposal is the present value of the proposal’s net cash flows less the proposal’s initial cash outflow. If a project’s NPV is greater than or equal to zero, the project should be accepted.

NPV = Present Value of Future Cash Flows LESS Project’s Initial Investment






Case Description of Teach For America: The Bay Area Expansion Case Study


Founded in 1989, Teach for America (TFA) was a nonprofit organization that placed highly qualified college graduates into 1,000 under-resourced urban and rural public schools across the country to teach for two years. The enthusiasm of the founding members inspired thousands of college graduates to take up the mission of eliminating educational inequalities throughout the country. Applicants for fall 2001 were twice what TFA had expected and applications for spring 2002 would be exceptionally high as well. Without drastic efforts to expand the number of placements, however, the organization would probably not be able to place all of the admitted applicants. Thus, the national office was asking many of its regions--and especially the Bay Area because of its popularity with applicants--to accommodate as many new corps members as possible. The Bay Area region placed its corps members into two local school districts and although relations with both were very positive, each district only held capacity to take approximately 40 corps members each year, for a total of 80 placements. Bay Area staff immediately realized that to grow up to 150 placements for the next year, they would need to expand the TFA program to a new school district. San Francisco Unified (SFUSD) seemed like a good candidate. SFUSD had recently hired a new superintendent (a long-time supporter of TFA) and served an incredibly diverse student population, much of which consisted of low-income, underprivileged children--exactly the kind of students TFA targeted. Expanding to SFUSD posed challenges as well and TFA Regional Staff had to determine the best option for quickly creating a large number of new placements.


Case Authors : James A. Phills, Debbie Choy, Justin McNabney, Erica Vaughan

Topic : Innovation & Entrepreneurship

Related Areas : Social enterprise, Strategy execution




Calculating Net Present Value (NPV) at 6% for Teach For America: The Bay Area Expansion Case Study


Years              Cash Flow     Net Cash Flow     Cumulative    
Cash Flow
Discount Rate
@ 6 %
Discounted
Cash Flows
Year 0 (10003828) -10003828 - -
Year 1 3456724 -6547104 3456724 0.9434 3261060
Year 2 3960885 -2586219 7417609 0.89 3525174
Year 3 3939661 1353442 11357270 0.8396 3307815
Year 4 3227393 4580835 14584663 0.7921 2556398
TOTAL 14584663 12650447




The Net Present Value at 6% discount rate is 2646619

In isolation the NPV number doesn't mean much but put in right context then it is one of the best method to evaluate project returns. In this article we will cover -

Different methods of capital budgeting


What is NPV & Formula of NPV,
How it is calculated,
How to use NPV number for project evaluation, and
Scenario Planning given risks and management priorities.




Capital Budgeting Approaches

Methods of Capital Budgeting


There are four types of capital budgeting techniques that are widely used in the corporate world –

1. Payback Period
2. Profitability Index
3. Net Present Value
4. Internal Rate of Return

Apart from the Payback period method which is an additive method, rest of the methods are based on Discounted Cash Flow technique. Even though cash flow can be calculated based on the nature of the project, for the simplicity of the article we are assuming that all the expected cash flows are realized at the end of the year.

Discounted Cash Flow approaches provide a more objective basis for evaluating and selecting investment projects. They take into consideration both –

1. Magnitude of both incoming and outgoing cash flows – Projects can be capital intensive, time intensive, or both. Tfa Placements shareholders have preference for diversified projects investment rather than prospective high income from a single capital intensive project.
2. Timing of the expected cash flows – stockholders of Tfa Placements have higher preference for cash returns over 4-5 years rather than 10-15 years given the nature of the volatility in the industry.






Formula and Steps to Calculate Net Present Value (NPV) of Teach For America: The Bay Area Expansion

NPV = Net Cash In Flowt1 / (1+r)t1 + Net Cash In Flowt2 / (1+r)t2 + … Net Cash In Flowtn / (1+r)tn
Less Net Cash Out Flowt0 / (1+r)t0

Where t = time period, in this case year 1, year 2 and so on.
r = discount rate or return that could be earned using other safe proposition such as fixed deposit or treasury bond rate. Net Cash In Flow – What the firm will get each year.
Net Cash Out Flow – What the firm needs to invest initially in the project.

Step 1 – Understand the nature of the project and calculate cash flow for each year.
Step 2 – Discount those cash flow based on the discount rate.
Step 3 – Add all the discounted cash flow.
Step 4 – Selection of the project

Why Innovation & Entrepreneurship Managers need to know Financial Tools such as Net Present Value (NPV)?

In our daily workplace we often come across people and colleagues who are just focused on their core competency and targets they have to deliver. For example marketing managers at Tfa Placements often design programs whose objective is to drive brand awareness and customer reach. But how that 30 point increase in brand awareness or 10 point increase in customer touch points will result into shareholders’ value is not specified.

To overcome such scenarios managers at Tfa Placements needs to not only know the financial aspect of project management but also needs to have tools to integrate them into part of the project development and monitoring plan.

Calculating Net Present Value (NPV) at 15%

After working through various assumptions we reached a conclusion that risk is far higher than 6%. In a reasonably stable industry with weak competition - 15% discount rate can be a good benchmark.



Years              Cash Flow     Net Cash Flow     Cumulative    
Cash Flow
Discount Rate
@ 15 %
Discounted
Cash Flows
Year 0 (10003828) -10003828 - -
Year 1 3456724 -6547104 3456724 0.8696 3005847
Year 2 3960885 -2586219 7417609 0.7561 2994998
Year 3 3939661 1353442 11357270 0.6575 2590391
Year 4 3227393 4580835 14584663 0.5718 1845272
TOTAL 10436509


The Net NPV after 4 years is 432681

(10436509 - 10003828 )








Calculating Net Present Value (NPV) at 20%


If the risk component is high in the industry then we should go for a higher hurdle rate / discount rate of 20%.

Years              Cash Flow     Net Cash Flow     Cumulative    
Cash Flow
Discount Rate
@ 20 %
Discounted
Cash Flows
Year 0 (10003828) -10003828 - -
Year 1 3456724 -6547104 3456724 0.8333 2880603
Year 2 3960885 -2586219 7417609 0.6944 2750615
Year 3 3939661 1353442 11357270 0.5787 2279896
Year 4 3227393 4580835 14584663 0.4823 1556420
TOTAL 9467535


The Net NPV after 4 years is -536293

At 20% discount rate the NPV is negative (9467535 - 10003828 ) so ideally we can't select the project if macro and micro factors don't allow financial managers of Tfa Placements to discount cash flow at lower discount rates such as 15%.





Acceptance Criteria of a Project based on NPV

Simplest Approach – If the investment project of Tfa Placements has a NPV value higher than Zero then finance managers at Tfa Placements can ACCEPT the project, otherwise they can reject the project. This means that project will deliver higher returns over the period of time than any alternate investment strategy.

In theory if the required rate of return or discount rate is chosen correctly by finance managers at Tfa Placements, then the stock price of the Tfa Placements should change by same amount of the NPV. In real world we know that share price also reflects various other factors that can be related to both macro and micro environment.

In the same vein – accepting the project with zero NPV should result in stagnant share price. Finance managers use discount rates as a measure of risk components in the project execution process.

Sensitivity Analysis

Project selection is often a far more complex decision than just choosing it based on the NPV number. Finance managers at Tfa Placements should conduct a sensitivity analysis to better understand not only the inherent risk of the projects but also how those risks can be either factored in or mitigated during the project execution. Sensitivity analysis helps in –

What are the key aspects of the projects that need to be monitored, refined, and retuned for continuous delivery of projected cash flows.

What can impact the cash flow of the project.

What will be a multi year spillover effect of various taxation regulations.

Understanding of risks involved in the project.

What are the uncertainties surrounding the project Initial Cash Outlay (ICO’s). ICO’s often have several different components such as land, machinery, building, and other equipment.

Some of the assumptions while using the Discounted Cash Flow Methods –

Projects are assumed to be Mutually Exclusive – This is seldom the came in modern day giant organizations where projects are often inter-related and rejecting a project solely based on NPV can result in sunk cost from a related project.

Independent projects have independent cash flows – As explained in the marketing project – though the project may look independent but in reality it is not as the brand awareness project can be closely associated with the spending on sales promotions and product specific advertising.






Negotiation Strategy of Teach For America: The Bay Area Expansion

References & Further Readings

James A. Phills, Debbie Choy, Justin McNabney, Erica Vaughan (2018), "Teach For America: The Bay Area Expansion Harvard Business Review Case Study. Published by HBR Publications.


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