This document provides an overview of how to build a startup presented by Raomal Perera. It discusses identifying problems worth solving, defining minimum viable products, validating solutions qualitatively and quantitatively, and the importance of customer development. It emphasizes getting outside the building to test hypotheses with customers rather than relying only on internal assumptions. Business model canvases and customer archetypes are presented as tools to help organize thinking and guide customer interactions.
Introduction to Lean Startup tools - Bank of IrelandRaomal Perera
This is an introductory talk on the value of some of the tools we use in Lean Startup such as Business Model Canvas, Value Proposition Design & Mapping the Environment.
Presentation to the New Frontiers Entrepreneurs - Nov 2015Raomal Perera
New Frontiers Networking event - Nov 2015. Presentation on Lean Startup.
Tweets:
Great talk yesterday by @raomal on the Lean Startup #NewFrontiersNetEvent
@raomal Thank u for yesterday @EI_NewFrontiers #NewFrontiersNetEvent .
Great talk by @raomal on #leanstartup Always good to step back and sense check your approach #NewFrontiersNetEvent
Great talk by @raomal "vision, passion & integrity" are key in a #startup! #NewFrontiersNetEvent #WeSavvy
@EI_NewFrontiers #NewFrontiersNetEvent @raomal great advice from raomal perrera never underestimate the power of networking
@raomal 'entrepreneurs aren't RISK TAKERS. They r people who figure out a way to MITIGATE THE RISK, then go for it'! #NewFrontiersNetEvent
"Understand what the problem is before you attempt to solve it" - @raomal #NewFrontiersNetEvent #startup #networking
@owletbabycare 'Are we really creating value for our customers?' @raomal ...#newfrontiersnetevent We sure are! #hiprotein #beefsnack
@raomal ...'your user is not always your customer'...#newfrontiersnetevent
The #NewFrontiers cohort engaged with @raomal's presentation #NewFrontiersNetEvent #leanstartup #networking @Entirl
@raomal To get the answers you are looking for! You need to know your problem. @Newfrontiersnw @EI_NewFrontiers
@raomal talks lean startup @EI_NewFrontiers #NewFrontiersNetEvent
Entrepreneur and Educator Raomal Perera now speaking at the #NewFrontiersNetEvent @EI_NewFrontiers @raomal
@EI_NewFrontiers #NewFrontiersNetEvent @raomal great to hear raomal perrera at the podium. He owes much of his success to Ent Irl
@raomal takes to the floor to discuss his successes with #LeanStartups #NewFrontiersNetEvent #Networking @Entirl
Very excited to have @raomal with us today at the #NewFrontiersNetEvent! #startup #networking @Entirl
The "Genesis: Idea Stage" ebook explains the phase where the journey starts for every startup: the idea stage. This eBook is the first part of the "Startup Master Class" series covering the idea, problem/solution fit, product/market fit and scaling stages.
Introduction to Lean Startup tools - Bank of IrelandRaomal Perera
This is an introductory talk on the value of some of the tools we use in Lean Startup such as Business Model Canvas, Value Proposition Design & Mapping the Environment.
Presentation to the New Frontiers Entrepreneurs - Nov 2015Raomal Perera
New Frontiers Networking event - Nov 2015. Presentation on Lean Startup.
Tweets:
Great talk yesterday by @raomal on the Lean Startup #NewFrontiersNetEvent
@raomal Thank u for yesterday @EI_NewFrontiers #NewFrontiersNetEvent .
Great talk by @raomal on #leanstartup Always good to step back and sense check your approach #NewFrontiersNetEvent
Great talk by @raomal "vision, passion & integrity" are key in a #startup! #NewFrontiersNetEvent #WeSavvy
@EI_NewFrontiers #NewFrontiersNetEvent @raomal great advice from raomal perrera never underestimate the power of networking
@raomal 'entrepreneurs aren't RISK TAKERS. They r people who figure out a way to MITIGATE THE RISK, then go for it'! #NewFrontiersNetEvent
"Understand what the problem is before you attempt to solve it" - @raomal #NewFrontiersNetEvent #startup #networking
@owletbabycare 'Are we really creating value for our customers?' @raomal ...#newfrontiersnetevent We sure are! #hiprotein #beefsnack
@raomal ...'your user is not always your customer'...#newfrontiersnetevent
The #NewFrontiers cohort engaged with @raomal's presentation #NewFrontiersNetEvent #leanstartup #networking @Entirl
@raomal To get the answers you are looking for! You need to know your problem. @Newfrontiersnw @EI_NewFrontiers
@raomal talks lean startup @EI_NewFrontiers #NewFrontiersNetEvent
Entrepreneur and Educator Raomal Perera now speaking at the #NewFrontiersNetEvent @EI_NewFrontiers @raomal
@EI_NewFrontiers #NewFrontiersNetEvent @raomal great to hear raomal perrera at the podium. He owes much of his success to Ent Irl
@raomal takes to the floor to discuss his successes with #LeanStartups #NewFrontiersNetEvent #Networking @Entirl
Very excited to have @raomal with us today at the #NewFrontiersNetEvent! #startup #networking @Entirl
The "Genesis: Idea Stage" ebook explains the phase where the journey starts for every startup: the idea stage. This eBook is the first part of the "Startup Master Class" series covering the idea, problem/solution fit, product/market fit and scaling stages.
A practical guide and template to create a winning corporate venture pitch.
What is it for?
When you need to ask corporate leadership to back your venture and you want to convince them with a compelling story rooted in data.
Available in an editable PPT and Keynote template on our website: https://www.bundl.com/reports/the-proven-pitch-deck-template?utm_medium=Template platform&utm_source=Slideshare&utm_campaign=Slideshare%20-%20proven%20pitch%20
Benefits:
Unlock the funding and resources you need to move your venture forward.
Gain the support of internal stakeholders, your board of directors and/or corporate leadership.
Get real-world examples of successful corporate venture pitches.
9 Steps to Repeatable, Scalable, & Profitable GrowthDavid Skok
In this slide deck, David Skok talks through his 9 step process for B2B startups to get through product/market fit, and to then find a repeatable, scalable, and profitable growth process.
In David's experience some of the most fatal and expensive mistakes founders make is trying to skip steps. Understanding this roadmap will save you countless hours and potentially millions of wasted dollars.
From Caesar to Scientist - Rapid Experiments at IntuitBenBlank
20 Minute presentation from the 2013 Chief Innovation Officer Summit in NYC, highlighting why large organizations should consider learning how to run rapid experiments. If you value lean startup principles, this is a key capability your organization must have. Say hello if you want to know more!
Note: This presentation does not include my audio voice-over.
Teresa Torres, Product Talk, @ttores
In this session, you’ll learn how to create shared context so that everyone on your team knows how to prioritize your experiments. You’ll also learn about two common Lean Startup mistakes and how to avoid them. Come prepared to work through a mini case study.
Designing with Purpose—Differentiating Through Authenticity and TrustCake and Arrow
Gaining consumer trust is integral to creating a compelling experience, especially with the evolving needs and expectations of today’s shopper. This presentation provides and overview of tactics and strategies for how to create authentic connections with shoppers and develop trust in a market where loyalty is hard to come by.
My Slides from the "Implementing Lean Startup" workshop held at the inaugural Ideas to Profit conference at North Central College.
Original sources (Eric Ries & Steve Blank) for the lean startup are in the last slide.
Startup Business Models for Tech Startups - 2013Andrew Scott
Presented at Technopol May 2013 by @andrewjscott, discussing business models and the need to solve a BIG problem for your customer to succeed as a startup. Also covers lean methodology, business model canvas, lean canvas and basic investment or venture and angel funding lessons.
A practical guide and template to create a winning corporate venture pitch.
What is it for?
When you need to ask corporate leadership to back your venture and you want to convince them with a compelling story rooted in data.
Available in an editable PPT and Keynote template on our website: https://www.bundl.com/reports/the-proven-pitch-deck-template?utm_medium=Template platform&utm_source=Slideshare&utm_campaign=Slideshare%20-%20proven%20pitch%20
Benefits:
Unlock the funding and resources you need to move your venture forward.
Gain the support of internal stakeholders, your board of directors and/or corporate leadership.
Get real-world examples of successful corporate venture pitches.
9 Steps to Repeatable, Scalable, & Profitable GrowthDavid Skok
In this slide deck, David Skok talks through his 9 step process for B2B startups to get through product/market fit, and to then find a repeatable, scalable, and profitable growth process.
In David's experience some of the most fatal and expensive mistakes founders make is trying to skip steps. Understanding this roadmap will save you countless hours and potentially millions of wasted dollars.
From Caesar to Scientist - Rapid Experiments at IntuitBenBlank
20 Minute presentation from the 2013 Chief Innovation Officer Summit in NYC, highlighting why large organizations should consider learning how to run rapid experiments. If you value lean startup principles, this is a key capability your organization must have. Say hello if you want to know more!
Note: This presentation does not include my audio voice-over.
Teresa Torres, Product Talk, @ttores
In this session, you’ll learn how to create shared context so that everyone on your team knows how to prioritize your experiments. You’ll also learn about two common Lean Startup mistakes and how to avoid them. Come prepared to work through a mini case study.
Designing with Purpose—Differentiating Through Authenticity and TrustCake and Arrow
Gaining consumer trust is integral to creating a compelling experience, especially with the evolving needs and expectations of today’s shopper. This presentation provides and overview of tactics and strategies for how to create authentic connections with shoppers and develop trust in a market where loyalty is hard to come by.
My Slides from the "Implementing Lean Startup" workshop held at the inaugural Ideas to Profit conference at North Central College.
Original sources (Eric Ries & Steve Blank) for the lean startup are in the last slide.
Startup Business Models for Tech Startups - 2013Andrew Scott
Presented at Technopol May 2013 by @andrewjscott, discussing business models and the need to solve a BIG problem for your customer to succeed as a startup. Also covers lean methodology, business model canvas, lean canvas and basic investment or venture and angel funding lessons.
How to build a startup SLASSSCOM Talk Aug 2015Raomal Perera
An introduction on how to build a startup using lean techniques. The talk was hosted by SLASSCOM and sponsored by Virtusa, Regus Sri Lanka and Pick Me.
VicHealth Physical Activity Innovation Challenge Concept Development Workshop...Doing Something Good
Our slides from the Concept Development Workshop with VicHealth Wed 10 September 2014. Participants, 12 teams, were finalists in the Physical Activity Innovation Challenge. They included representatives from sporting clubs and associations, health and fitness professionals, policy makers, entrepreneurs and change makers. The Concept Development Workshop was the third of a three-part workshop series to build capability in the sector to generate and implement innovative ideas to get Victorians active, and to help applicants for the VicHealth Innovation Challenge to develop their ideas to get the inactive active and reach the hard to reach. Participants were led through the development of a Business Model Canvas for their concept. Learn more about the VicHealth Innovation Challenge here: http://challenge.vichealth.vic.gov.au/
A presentation of the search for Product-Market Fit with the principles, practices and processes that lead to it, from the Lean-Startup and Design Thinking perspective
I would like twenty minutes of your time in which I will present 50 (I know a lot) slides to review 12 Models related to Lean Startup so that I can then introduce the
‘Startup Business Planning Jigsaw’.
The twelve models are:
► Business Model Canvas - Alexander Osterwalder
► Search v's Execution - Steve Blank & Bob Dorf
► Build-Measure-Learn - Eric Ries
►Three Stages of a Startup - Ash Maurya
► MVP and Product Market Fit
►Lean Canvas - Ash Maurya
► Customer Development - Brant Cooper and Patrick Vlaskovits
► Startup Pyramid – Sean Ellis
►Get Keep Grow – Steve Blank & Bob Dorf
► Pirate Metrics – Dave McClure
►One Metric that Matters - Croll & Yoskovitz
When you need to compete on innovation rather than efficiency.
SUMMARY:
The confluence of two fundamental conditions is required to meaningfully spark the types of insights that drive your strategy and create viable products:
* Knowledge
* Imagination
This is being “innovation ready” and is essential to develop smart, thoughtful products that users want and customers will buy.
There are multiple frameworks and theories on product development. Some of the most astute and popular that have shaped our way of thinking and better enabled the start-up and large enterprise alike are:
* Lean Start-up
* Design Thinking
* Jobs-to-be-Done (JTBD)
* Agile
Extending on the collective wisdom of these frameworks, Innovation Ready focuses on the specific conditions necessary to develop the informed insights that drive meaningful product strategy. It's these moments of inspiration that ultimately shape and form our work and, at a minimum, de-risk our product development activities, but more boldly, enable us to deliver the next breakthrough product.
Table of Contents:
Foundation: Problem | Solution | Product
User Problem
Innovation Ready
Building Your Knowledge
User & Customer Needs
Market Dynamics
* Existing Solutions
* Behavior Analytics
* External Constraints
* Secondary Research/ Market Trends
Imagination
Business Model
* Lean Canvas
* Market Size
Iterating & Ideating Your Product
* Plan & Test
* Collect & Learn
* Ideate & Evolve
Minimum Viable / Lovable Product
Evaluation Checkpoints
Product-Market Fit
SIX QUESTIONS TO ASK YOURSELF BEFORE LAUNCHING YOUR STARTUP.Ajay Batra
Launching a Startup is an empowering and uplifting experience. But it can also be a daunting task to juggle so many tasks and solve innumerable challenges daily.
Are you ready for it? Do you know that to do?
Use the 5-level roadmap (Startup Maturity Model) to know where you are, and to plan your next steps towards the launch of your high-performing startup.
The Indian economy is classified into different sectors to simplify the analysis and understanding of economic activities. For Class 10, it's essential to grasp the sectors of the Indian economy, understand their characteristics, and recognize their importance. This guide will provide detailed notes on the Sectors of the Indian Economy Class 10, using specific long-tail keywords to enhance comprehension.
For more information, visit-www.vavaclasses.com
How to Create Map Views in the Odoo 17 ERPCeline George
The map views are useful for providing a geographical representation of data. They allow users to visualize and analyze the data in a more intuitive manner.
Operation “Blue Star” is the only event in the history of Independent India where the state went into war with its own people. Even after about 40 years it is not clear if it was culmination of states anger over people of the region, a political game of power or start of dictatorial chapter in the democratic setup.
The people of Punjab felt alienated from main stream due to denial of their just demands during a long democratic struggle since independence. As it happen all over the word, it led to militant struggle with great loss of lives of military, police and civilian personnel. Killing of Indira Gandhi and massacre of innocent Sikhs in Delhi and other India cities was also associated with this movement.
The Roman Empire A Historical Colossus.pdfkaushalkr1407
The Roman Empire, a vast and enduring power, stands as one of history's most remarkable civilizations, leaving an indelible imprint on the world. It emerged from the Roman Republic, transitioning into an imperial powerhouse under the leadership of Augustus Caesar in 27 BCE. This transformation marked the beginning of an era defined by unprecedented territorial expansion, architectural marvels, and profound cultural influence.
The empire's roots lie in the city of Rome, founded, according to legend, by Romulus in 753 BCE. Over centuries, Rome evolved from a small settlement to a formidable republic, characterized by a complex political system with elected officials and checks on power. However, internal strife, class conflicts, and military ambitions paved the way for the end of the Republic. Julius Caesar’s dictatorship and subsequent assassination in 44 BCE created a power vacuum, leading to a civil war. Octavian, later Augustus, emerged victorious, heralding the Roman Empire’s birth.
Under Augustus, the empire experienced the Pax Romana, a 200-year period of relative peace and stability. Augustus reformed the military, established efficient administrative systems, and initiated grand construction projects. The empire's borders expanded, encompassing territories from Britain to Egypt and from Spain to the Euphrates. Roman legions, renowned for their discipline and engineering prowess, secured and maintained these vast territories, building roads, fortifications, and cities that facilitated control and integration.
The Roman Empire’s society was hierarchical, with a rigid class system. At the top were the patricians, wealthy elites who held significant political power. Below them were the plebeians, free citizens with limited political influence, and the vast numbers of slaves who formed the backbone of the economy. The family unit was central, governed by the paterfamilias, the male head who held absolute authority.
Culturally, the Romans were eclectic, absorbing and adapting elements from the civilizations they encountered, particularly the Greeks. Roman art, literature, and philosophy reflected this synthesis, creating a rich cultural tapestry. Latin, the Roman language, became the lingua franca of the Western world, influencing numerous modern languages.
Roman architecture and engineering achievements were monumental. They perfected the arch, vault, and dome, constructing enduring structures like the Colosseum, Pantheon, and aqueducts. These engineering marvels not only showcased Roman ingenuity but also served practical purposes, from public entertainment to water supply.
Model Attribute Check Company Auto PropertyCeline George
In Odoo, the multi-company feature allows you to manage multiple companies within a single Odoo database instance. Each company can have its own configurations while still sharing common resources such as products, customers, and suppliers.
The French Revolution, which began in 1789, was a period of radical social and political upheaval in France. It marked the decline of absolute monarchies, the rise of secular and democratic republics, and the eventual rise of Napoleon Bonaparte. This revolutionary period is crucial in understanding the transition from feudalism to modernity in Europe.
For more information, visit-www.vavaclasses.com
How to Make a Field invisible in Odoo 17Celine George
It is possible to hide or invisible some fields in odoo. Commonly using “invisible” attribute in the field definition to invisible the fields. This slide will show how to make a field invisible in odoo 17.
Palestine last event orientationfvgnh .pptxRaedMohamed3
An EFL lesson about the current events in Palestine. It is intended to be for intermediate students who wish to increase their listening skills through a short lesson in power point.
7. Find the Gap
How to find
opportunities that others
don’t see.
- Amy Wilkinson
7
8. Lean Startup Dublin Meetup launched Jan 2012 – now over 1,200
members
Workshops run by Ash Maurya, John Mullins, Brant Cooper & Raomal
Perera
Talks on Lean Startup, Social Media, Agile, Fund Raising, How to Build
a Startup, Lego Serious Play, Lean in Corporates, Crowd Funding,
Cartier Women’s Initiative Award (CWIA)
LeanCamp
Lean Startup Dublin Meetup
http://www.meetup.com/Lean-Startup-Dublin/
8
9. Lean Startup for Enterprise Meetup inaugural meeting Feb 17,
2016 opened by Alex Osterwalder on Value Proposition Design.
This is a group for enterprises wanting to learn about the latest
concepts and frameworks in business to help them grow.
Some of the topics we will discuss are: Lean Startup, Business
Model Innovation, Design Thinking, Growth Hacking, Innovation
Accounting, Lean Analytics, Purpose Driven Organisation and Social
Media.
NEW: Lean Startup for Enterprise Meetup
http://www.meetup.com/Lean-Startup-for-Enterprise/
9
18. How breakthrough ideas emerge from
small discoveries
Creative thinkers practice a set of simple but
ingenious experimental methods
• failing quickly to learn fast
• tapping into the genius of play
• engaging in highly immersed
observation
Free their minds, opening them up to making
unexpected connections and perceiving
invaluable insights.
18
21. What is a Startup?
A TEMPORARY organisation
DESIGNED to SEARCH …….
For REPEATABLE and SCALABLE
Business Models
Startups are NOT just SMALLER versions of a LARGE
Company
21
24. 24
Finding the Problem is the Hard Part
– Kevin Systrom & Mike Krieger (Instagram
Co_Founders)
Instagram Co-Founder Kevin Systrom believes building
solutions for most problems is the easy part; the hard part is
finding the right problem to solve. Here he opens up about
how he and fellow Co-Founder Mike Krieger identified the
problems they wanted to solve around sharing photos through
mobile devices. He also reminds entrepreneurs to embrace
simple solutions, as they can often delight users and
customers.
28. Key Question: Do I have a problem worth solving?
Who has the problem?
What is the top problem?
How is it solved today?
Where do they have the problem or in what context do
they have a problem? (milkshake example)
When do they have the problem?
Why is it a problem? (root cause analysis. Why is the
single best word for creating value in a start-up and an
established business) - It is not possible to know what the
top problem is without knowing where, when and why
they have a problem. Also the questions may not be
answered in sequence e.g. will we find the problem and
the person with the problem at the same time?
Identify the Problem
28
29. Take a stab at defining the solution
Build a demo (MVP)
Test it with assumed customers
Will the solution work? (can the proposed
solution create customer value that exceeds the
cost to produce and deliver the solution to the
customer)
Who it the early adopter?
Does the pricing model work?
Define the Solution
29
30. Build an MVP
Soft launch to early adopters
Do they realise the unique value proposition
How will you find enough early adopters to support
learning?
Are you getting paid?
Analysis: There needs to be a bit of intuitive thinking
around the MVP. We need to ask and then guess how we
can create the most unique customer value in the shortest
amount of time with the least resources. With a bit of
thinking and an equal amount of action we have a chance
of appropriating real value in the short term
VALIDATE THE QUALITATIVELY
Validate Qualitatively
30
31. Launch your refined product to a larger audience
Have you built something people want?
How will you reach customers at scale
Do you have a viable business?
Analysis: A refined product needs to test both
qualitatively and quantitatively in order to find out
why the refined product creates customers’ value
and how large is the market potential?
Can this business produce (organically or through
investment) enough cash in the short term in order
that customers value - cost to produce = profit
Validate Quantitavely
31
33. MVP
A Minimum Viable Product (MVP) is
“that product which has just those
features and no more that allows you
to ship a product that early adopters
see and, at least some of whom
resonate with, pay you money for, and
start to give you feedback on”
33
34. MVP #1 Explainer video
Explainer video is a short video that explains
what your product does and why people should
buy it.
A simple, 90 seconds animation is sufficient.
e.g. Dropbox
How to make an explainer video
34
35. MVP #2 A Landing Place
A landing page is a web page where
visitors “land” after clicking a link from
an ad, e-mail or another type of a
campaign.
35
36. MVP #2 A Landing Page
• Craft your Landing Page
• Set up a Google AdWord campaign and drive traffic
to your new landing page. Even here you can let the
AdWord engine rotate different messages and test
what works best on your prospects
• Set up Google Analytics. The most important thing to
measure is conversions – percent of visitors that sign
up (or perform another desired action)
• Set up a chat to make it easy for the visitors to raise
questions
• Set up a service like Qualaroo to survey your visitors
36
37. MVP #3 Wizard of Oz
A “Wizard of Oz” MVP is when you put up a
front that looks like a real working product, but
you manually carry out product functions. It’s
also known as “Flinstoning”.
Zappos shoes is the biggest online shoe
retailer, with annual sales exceeding $1 billion.
In his Lean Startup book, Eric Ries describes
how the founder started with a Wizard of Oz
product.
37
38. MVP #4 The Concierge MVP
Instead of providing a product, you start
with a manual service. But not just any
service! The service should consist of
exactly the same steps people would go
through with your product.
38
39. MVP #5 Piecemeal MVP
This strategy is a blend between the “Wizard of
Oz” and “Concierge” approaches. Again, you
emulate the steps people would go through
using your product – as you envision it.
39
40. MVP #5 Crowd Funding
Sell it before you build it.
The basic idea is simple: launch a crowd
funding campaign on platforms such as
Kickstarter or IndieGoGo.
Not only will you validate if customers want to
buy your product, but you will also raise
money.
40
45. Traction is a measure of your product’s engagement
with its market. Investors care about traction over
everything else.- Nivi and Nival, Venture hacks
Problem/Solution
Fit
Product/Market
Fit
Scale
Ideal
time to
raise
money
45
46. “Studies comparing successful and
unsuccessful innovation have found that the
primary discriminator was the degree to
which the user needs were fully
understood.”
– David Garvin, Harvard Business School
46
52. Our subjective judgements are
biased: we are far too willing to
believe research findings based
on inadequate evidence and
prone to collect too few
observations in our own
research
52
56. What is a business model?
A business model describes the rationale
of how an organisation Creates, Delivers
and Captures value
56
57. Why we need a shared language for
business models?
57
https://strategyzer.com/academy/cours
e/business-models-that-work-and-
value-propositions-that-sell/1/1
Note: You may need to license the online learning tool on Strategyzer to
view this clip from Osterwalder
58. Use of BMC in Established Companies
IMPROVE ----------------------------------INVENT
Know Problem/Know Solution -Unknown Problem/Unknown
Solution
------EXECUTE -------------------------SEARCH------------
58
73. Strategy for Startups
• Planning before the Plan
• Use the Osterwalder Canvas to do two things:
– Organise our thinking
– Get out of the Building to turn the hypothesis into
facts
• SEARCH for the Business Model First and then
Write it Up (Business Plan)
73
74. Customer Development Process
Post it to the Wall
Create the canvas
Make it visible
Use Yellow Post-It
notes with your
guesses
Get out of the building and test your hypotheses.
There are NO FACTS here. Talk to customers, partners,
vendors. Design experiments, run tests,
get data
74
75. Customer vs. Product Development
• More startups fail from a lack of
customers than from a failure of Product
Development.
• We have all the processes to manage the
Engineering Risk
• No processes to manage the Customer
Risk.
75
76. Customer Development Manifesto
1. There are No Facts Inside Your Building, So
Get Outside.
2. Pair Customer Development with Agile
Development
3. Failure is an Integral Part of the Search
4. Make Continuous Iterations and Pivots
5. No Business Plan Survives First Contact with
Customers. So Use a Business Model Canvas
76
77. Customer Development Manifesto
6. Design Experiments and Test to Validate Your
Hypotheses.
7. Agree on Market Type. It Changes Everything
8. Startup Metrics Differ from Those in Existing
Companies
9. Fast Decision-Making, Cycle Time, Speed and
Tempo
10.It is All About Passion
77
78. Customer Development Manifesto
11.Startup Job Titles Are Very Different from a
Large Company’s.
12. Preserve All Cash Until Needed. Then Spend
13.Communicate and Share Learning
14.Customer Development Success Begins With
Buy-In
78
79. Hypotheses or Guesses
The canvas is a set of hypotheses, i.e. guesses
It helps us to organize our thinking! It is not
about functional organisation, but about the
business
The real question is HOW do we change those
guesses into FACTS?
79
80. Customer Archetypes
Meet Paul, Sheetal and Barbara
Paul-RegularExerciser
• 20 – 45
• Aim to maintain and
track active lifestyle
• Looking for
inspiration on diet &
exercise regimes
• Gets a buzz from
exercising
Sheetal-SpiritualHealth
•
• 30 – 55
• Already follows a
healthy lifestyle
• Interested in
alternative
medicines/
treatments
• Believes eating well
is as important as
exercise
Barbara-On-OffDieter
•
• 30 +
• Yo-yo dieter, has
tried many of the fad
diets but never stuck
to one
• Needs tips and
motivation to keep
up a healthy lifestyle
• Irregular or
infrequent exerciser
80
85. “People buy products and services to get jobs
done. As people complete these jobs, they
have certain measurable outcomes that they
are attempting to achieve. It links a company's
value creation activities to customer-defined
metrics.” - Ulwick
OUTCOME-DRIVEN
INNOVATION
85
94. Case Study: Owlet
Owlet Infant Health Tracker Takes The Wearable
Revolution Into The Crib
94
Note: You may need to license the online learning tool on
Strategyzer to view this clip from Osterwalder
95. Review
–First Identify the problem and then define the
solution. Not the other way around.
–Find the Gap
–If you understand the job, how to improve the
product becomes obvious
–The BMC is a shared language for business
modelling. Use the template to change your
guesses to FACTS.
–Never underestimate the power of
networking
95
102. Additional Resources
102
BMC Online Tools:
Strategyzer
https://canvanizer.com/ (free tool)
BMC tool for educators:
Launchpad Central offers end-to-end solutions to
validate business hypotheses, testing for value and
accelerating time to market.
103. Additional Resources
103
Stattys Notes; http://www.stattys.com/
- A new generation of adhesive notes with a unique "Write
and Slide" function.
Mapping the business model design space
109. “People buy products and services to get jobs
done. As people complete these jobs, they
have certain measurable outcomes that they
are attempting to achieve. It links a company's
value creation activities to customer-defined
metrics.” - Ulwick
OUTCOME-DRIVEN
INNOVATION
109
110. Key Value Proposition Questions
• Problem Statement: What is the problem?
• Ecosystem: For whom is this relevant?
• Competition: What do customers do
today?
• Technology / Market Insight: Why is the
problem so hard to solve?
• Market Size: How big is this problem?
• Product: How do you do it? 110
111. • Problem Statement: Net security without a CTO
• Ecosystem: Small banks under FDIC pressure
• Competition: Expensive, Custom or DIY
• Technology / Market Insight: Small Companies
without Big Resources…Fines getting bigger
• Market Size: 9000 little banks, 5000 + more
• Product: perimeterusa.net
Example
111
113. Through what
mechanism
will your service
(product) be
delivered to your
client?
How will we GET,
KEEP and GROW
Customers? How will I
get the Value
to my
Customers?
How best to
communicat
e to each
customer
segment
Channels & Customer Relationships
113
114. Two Critical Channel Questions
How do you want to sell your product?1
is subtle, but more important than the first:
How does your customer want to buy your
product?
2
114