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Come with a pencil... Daniel Tenner (@swombat) http://swombat.com http://granttree.co.uk

2012 10-24 come with a pencil

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Page 1: 2012 10-24 come with a pencil

Come with a pencil...Daniel Tenner(@swombat)

http://swombat.comhttp://granttree.co.uk

Page 2: 2012 10-24 come with a pencil

Come with a pencil...Daniel Tenner(@swombat)

http://swombat.comhttp://granttree.co.uk

#penc

ilStar

tup #idub12

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Overview

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0. Starting thoughts

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1. Business Model Canvas

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2. Coming up with your idea

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3. Lean Startup, or where to go from here

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4. Recap and closing thoughts

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0. Starting thoughts

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• Entrepreneurship is a career

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• Entrepreneurship is a career

• Startups are (risky) experiments

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• Entrepreneurship is a career

• Startups are (risky) experiments

• You don’t have to experiment full-time

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• Entrepreneurship is a career

• Startups are (risky) experiments

• You don’t have to experiment full-time

• Ideas are only a small part of it

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• Entrepreneurship is a career

• Startups are (risky) experiments

• You don’t have to experiment full-time

• Ideas are only a small part of it

• Running your own business is great

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• Entrepreneurship is a career

• Startups are (risky) experiments

• You don’t have to experiment full-time

• Ideas are only a small part of it

• Running your own business is great

• Start today with what you have

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Disclaimer

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Disclaimer

• No silver bullets

• No substitute for experience

• Just one tool

• Not the whole tool

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Disclaimer

• No silver bullets

• No substitute for experience

• Just one tool

• Not the whole tool

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Disclaimer

• No silver bullets

• No substitute for experience

• Just a couple of tools

• Not the whole tool

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Disclaimer

• No silver bullets

• No substitute for experience

• Just a couple of tools

• Not the whole tool

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1. Business Model Canvas

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“Send me your business plan”

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Problems with B-plans• Hard to see if complete

• Discourages collaboration

• Not for visual people

• Lengthy and tedious to prepare

• Lengthy to absorb

• Can hide issues under mountains of words

• Most people won’t read any of it!

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Problems with B-plans• Hard to see if complete

• Discourages collaboration or change, static

• Not for visual people

• Lengthy and tedious to prepare

• Lengthy to absorb

• Can hide issues under mountains of words

• Most people won’t read any of it!

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Problems with B-plans• Hard to see if complete

• Discourages collaboration or change, static

• Not for visual people

• Lengthy and tedious to prepare

• Lengthy to absorb

• Can hide issues under mountains of words

• Most people won’t read any of it!

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Problems with B-plans• Hard to see if complete

• Discourages collaboration or change, static

• Not for visual people

• Lengthy and tedious to prepare or absorb

• Lengthy to absorb

• Can hide issues under mountains of words

• Most people won’t read any of it!

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Problems with B-plans• Hard to see if complete

• Discourages collaboration or change, static

• Not for visual people

• Lengthy and tedious to prepare or absorb

• Can hide issues under mountains of words

• on’t read any of it!

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Problems with B-plans• Hard to see if complete

• Discourages collaboration or change, static

• Not for visual people

• Lengthy and tedious to prepare or absorb

• Can hide issues under mountains of words

• Most people won’t read any of it!

• on’t read any of it!

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Problems with B-plans• Hard to see if complete

• Discourages collaboration or change, static

• Not for visual people

• Lengthy and tedious to prepare or absorb

• Can hide issues under mountains of words

• Most people won’t read any of it!

• Present just one vision

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But business plans serve a purpose...

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“Plans are worthless, but planning is everything.”

- A great many people(incl. Dwight D. Eisenhower)

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Business planning has evolved

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Better business planning:

• Easy to see what’s missing

• Dynamic, open to suggestions and changes

• Visual

• Quick to prepare, change and grasp

• Issues come up to the surface

• People actually want to read it!

• Present multiple possibilities

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Is that possible?

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Hero Rats...

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Hero Rats...

• Genetically modified super-rats with brain chips.

• At the press of a button, the Hero Rat will seek out nearby explosives (e.g. in a land mine). Press another button and the Hero Rat returns (if still alive...).

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Hero Rats...

• Due to a revolutionary process called “Rat Magic”, the rats are inexpensive to breed and fit out with brain chips.

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Hero Rat Exercise 1

• Come up with as many different possible customer types as possible.

• Time: 4 minutes.

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Hero Rat Exercise 2

• What makes Hero Rats valuable?

• Time: 3.5 minutes.

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Hero Rat Exercise 3

• How can you sell Hero Rats?

• Time: 3 minutes.

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Hero Rat Exercise 4

• You get the idea...

• Time: 2.5 minutes.

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Hero Rat Exercise 5

• Sell the Hero Rats!

• Time: 2 minutes.

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Let’s have some funwith the rats...

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There are many ways to run Hero Rat Inc...

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Free rats for all?

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Hero Rat Exercise 6

• How can you give away the Hero Rats for free?

• Time: 3 minutes.

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Hero Rats for the mass market

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Hero Rat Exercise 7

• Can you sell Hero Rats as a consumer product?

• Time: 3 minutes.

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HRaaS?

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Hero Rat Exercise 8 (last!)

• Can you make Hero Rats a subscription service?

• Time: 3 minutes.

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Recap

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Business Plans in 2012• Easy to see what’s missing

• Dynamic, open to suggestions and changes

• Visual

• Quick to prepare, change and grasp

• Issues come up to the surface

• Present multiple possibilities

• People actually want to read it!

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2. Coming up with your idea

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2. Coming up with your ideas

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Idea Reach

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Constraints

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1. Start with you...

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effectuation.org

Expert entrepreneurs start with what they have and who they are. 

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Who do you care about helping?

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Exercise 1

• Using yellow post-its, pin down things you really want to have on your business model.

• Time: 3 minutes.

• Note: don’t put things you don’t care about!

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2. Then, the not-you

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What do you hate doing?

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What is ridiculously hard for you?

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Exercise 2

• Using red post-its, pin down things you don’t want on your business model.

• Time: 2 minutes.

• Note: don’t put things you don’t care about!

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3. Your assets

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What communities/markets do you have

access to?

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What resources do you have access to which

others don’t?

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Exercise 3

• Using green post-its, pin down assets and resources.

• Time: 3 minutes.

• Note: put anything that could help.

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Groups of 3-5!

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Exercise 4

• Help each other: come up each with a customer, resource and activity.

• Time: 5 minutes.

• Note: more options is better!

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4. Get some help!

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Who else cares about your customers?

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Exercise 5

• Add other potential players around your canvas (partners or customers).

• Time: 3 minutes.

• Note: more options is better!

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Remember: your first idea is always dumb.

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Exercise 6

• Sketch out 3 alternative business models that fit your constraints.

• Time: 3 minutes.

• Note: more options is better!

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...but what next?

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3. Lean Startup, or where to go from here

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“Lean Startup”

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What is a startup?

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What is a startup?

“The act or fact of starting something; a setting in motion.”

-Dictionary (useless)

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What is a startup?

“Startups are fresh, new companies trying to do cool stuff.”

-Instinctive (still mostly useless)

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What is a startup?

“A startup is an organization formed to search for a repeatable and scalable business model.”

-Steve Blank

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What is a startup?

“A startup is a human institution designed to deliver a new product or service under conditions of extreme uncertainty.”

-Eric Ries

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What is a startup?

“...essentially a startup is a new business designed for scale.”“A startup is a small company that takes on a hard technical problem.”

-Paul Graham

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What is a startup?

“A startup is a business which has ambitions and plans to grow by a large factor over the next few years.”

-Me!

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Key points

• Uncertainty, search, difficulty

• Ambition, growth

• Methods, plans

• Business, money

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How should I build a startup?

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Some typical approaches that don’t

work

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1. First, write a business plan...

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2. Raise lots of money and then figure it out

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3. Plan it, build it and they will come

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4. Get lots of users and figure the rest out later

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5. Don’t spend anything at all.

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A better method... “Lean”

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Lean is not...

• Cheap

• Rigid

• Limited to simple ideas

• The magic key to success

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Lean is...

• A method to organise the chaos

• Less waste

• Less risk

• More learning

• A common language

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The fundamental principle of “Lean”

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• People don’t care about things they don’t need/want

• Building things people don’t need is waste

• Building large things that people don’t need is large waste

• You have no idea what you’re doing

• You have no idea what to build

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• People don’t care about things they don’t need/want

• Building things people don’t need is waste

• Building large things that people don’t need is large waste

• You have no idea what you’re doing

• You have no idea what to build

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• People don’t care about things they don’t need/want

• Building things people don’t need is waste

• Building large things that people don’t need is large waste

• You have no idea what you’re doing

• You have no idea what to build

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• People don’t care about things they don’t need/want

• Building things people don’t need is waste

• Building large things that people don’t need is large waste

• You have no idea what you’re doing

• You have no idea what to build

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• People don’t care about things they don’t need/want

• Building things people don’t need is waste

• Building large things that people don’t need is large waste

• You have no idea what you’re doing

• You have no idea what to build

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Sounds hard!

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➡Building things is probably a waste of your time right now.

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➡Building things is probably a waste of your time right now.

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The “Lean” approach:

Build the smallest, easiest, smartest thing that teaches you what you need to learn

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➡Building this thing is probably a waste of your time right now.

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➡Building this thing is maybe a waste of your time right now.

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➡Building this thing is maybe not a waste of your time right now.

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➡Building this thing is probably not a waste of your time right now.

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The “Lean” approach:

Build the smallest, easiest, smartest thing that teaches you what you need to learn

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What do you need to learn?

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Do people want it?

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Can I sell it?

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Can I build it?

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A startup plan

1. Do people want it?

2. Can I sell it?

3. Can I build it?

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The “Lean” approach:

Build the smallest, easiest, smartest thing that teaches you what you need to learn

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Minimum Viable Product

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Minimum Viable Product

• Landing page

• Paper prototype

• Presentation/pitch

• Anything that enables you to learn!

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Minimum Viable Product

• Landing page

• Paper prototype

• Presentation/pitch

• Anything that enables you to learn!

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Minimum Viable Product

• Landing page

• Paper prototype

• Presentation/pitch

• Anything that enables you to learn!

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Minimum Viable Product

• Landing page

• Paper prototype

• Presentation/pitch

• (Fake) demo video

• “Concierge MVP”

• Anything that enables you to learn!

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Minimum Viable Product

• Landing page

• Paper prototype

• Presentation/pitch

• (Fake) demo video

• “Concierge MVP”

• Anything that enables you to learn!

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Minimum Viable Product

• Landing page

• Paper prototype

• Presentation/pitch

• (Fake) demo video

• “Concierge MVP”

• Anything that enables you to learn!

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MVP

• MVP is not a crappy version of the product.

• MVP is driven by the questions you need answered.

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The Lean Cycle

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The Lean Cycle (backwards)

Metric

Hypothesis Experiment

Text

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Lean Toolkit

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Metrics

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Up and to the right...

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Vanity metrics

• User signups

• Traffic

• Retention rate

• Any metric in a vacuum

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Good metrics

• Mostly: A/B test results

• Cohort breakdowns

• Retention rates over time

• Activity stream

• Any metric that’s actionable

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Actionable?

• Must be related to the key engines of your business...

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Engines:value and growth

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Engine of value

• How much value is your startup delivering?

• Is it enough to be worth paying for?

• Do people perceive that and agree?

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Engine of growth

• How does your startup acquire new customers?

• Paid

• Viral

• Sticky

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Engine of growth

• How does your startup acquire new customers?

• Paid (CAC & LTV)

• Viral (Viral Coefficient)

• Sticky (Retention rate)

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Actionable Metrics

• Actionable metrics are the ones which can lead to a change which you know will impact your key drivers.

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“If you simply plan on seeing what happens, you always succeed... in

seeing what happens!”- Eric Ries

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“If you can’t fail, then you can’t learn.”

- Eric Ries

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“Innovation Accounting”

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Lean reporting

• If you only report usage/revenue, that’s what you’ll be judged on

• Track validated learning instead

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Pivots(hot buzzword alert)

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Experiment failed... what now?

• Why did it fail? Which assumption was wrong?

• Can the assumption be tweaked, or does it need to be thrown out?

• How can we rework the business model now we know that we know this?

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Experiments succeeded, but...

• If it’s not working well enough to build a sustainable business, it’s not working, period.

(diminishing returns...)

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How to know if it’s working well enough?

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Types of pivots

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• Zoom-in pivot: single feature becomes the whole product

• Zoom-out pivot: the product becomes a feature of a larger product

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• Customer segment pivot: some customers like us, but not the ones initially targeted

• Customer need pivot: the product doesn’t solve a big enough problem for our customers

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• Business architecture pivot: low margin, high volume, vs. high margin, low volume

• Value capture pivot: change the way you monetise

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But... don’t abuse pivots.

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4. Recap and closing thoughts

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Let’s recap...

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EVERYTHING!

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Startups are experiments

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Test critical things as quickly as possible

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Work back from what you want to test...

Metric

Hypothesis Experiment

Text

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Actionable metrics, not vanity metrics

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Report on learning progress

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Pivot when assumptions are wrong

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What to do from here

• Be Smart

• Get Advice

• DO THINGS!

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Where to go from here...

• “The Lean Startup” - Eric Ries

• “Running Lean” - Ash Maurya

• “The entrepreneur’s guide to customer development” - Brant Cooper & Patrick Vlaskovits

• Numerous blogs online...

• Mentors...

• EXPERIENCE!

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Thank you!Daniel Tenner(@swombat)

http://swombat.comhttp://granttree.co.uk