Steve Blank's Blog, page 58
September 13, 2010
Job Titles That Can Sink Your Startup
I had coffee with an ex student earlier in the week that reminded me yet again why startups burn through so many early VP's. And after 30 years of Venture investing we still have a hard time articulating why.
Here's one possible explanation – Job titles in a startup mean something different than titles in a large company.
You Can't Always Get What You Want
I hadn't seen Rajiv in the two years since he started his second company. He had raised a seed round and then a Series A from a name brand V...
September 2, 2010
Why Product Managers Wear Sneakers
I gave a talk last night to the Silicon Valley Product Management Association. It's a San Francisco Bay Area forum for networking, jobs and education for over 500 Product Management professionals. This is one of the Silicon Valley organizations that remind you why this is a company-town whose main industry is entrepreneurship, (and a great example of an industry cluster.)
The published title of the talk was, "How to Create a $100M Business and Out Innovate your Competition." I read that and ...
Why Product Managers Wear Sneakers
I gave a talk last night to the Silicon Valley Product Management Association. It's a San Francisco Bay Area forum for networking, jobs and education for over 500 Product Management professionals. This is one of the Silicon Valley organizations that remind you why this is a company-town whose main industry is entrepreneurship, (and a great example of an industry cluster.)
The published title of the talk was, "How to Create a $100M Business and Out Innovate your Competition." I read that and ...
August 30, 2010
Boys Rules, Girls Lose – Women at Work
My two daughters are now in college and have put their toes in the working-world with summer jobs. As they've grown older, they've heard their parent's advice about women in the workforce.
This post is not advice nor is it a recommendation of what you should do. It's simply my interpretation of what I observed watching my daughters grow up. Our circumstances were unique, times have changed, and your conclusions and opinions will most certainly differ.
Gender Differences
Growing up in the 60's a...
August 26, 2010
The Non-Dummies Guide to Customer Discovery
Customer Development is a stupidly simple idea. It's one that you can describe in 30-seconds or less. But it took me 3 years and almost 300 pages of 10-point type to describe the concept in my book The Four Steps to the Epiphany. Unlike a traditional business book, The Four Steps is more akin to a reference manual for how to "engineer" a startup – from the initial search for a repeatable business model all the way through the management techniques to transition to a company. Entrepreneurs...
August 23, 2010
Solving the Innovator's Dilemma – Customer Development in a Big Company
One of the ways I learn is to teach. My students ask questions I can't answer and challenge me to solve problems I never considered. At times I'll do what I consider an extension of teaching; a two-day Customer Discovery/Validation intensive session with a large corporation serious about Customer Development at my ranch on the California Coast.
My last session was with a passionate, smart, entrepreneurial team from a Fortune 100 company. (And if I told you who they were I'd have to kill you.) ...
August 18, 2010
How Customer Development Failed Us
One of the attributes of great entrepreneurs is that they are tenacious and relentless. This guest post is from Andrew Elliott of Lottay. Andrew read the Four Steps to the Epiphany, tracked me down at California Coastal Commission hearing in Santa Barbara, and had me meeting with him in a stairwell during a break in my day-long meeting.
Here's his story of when Customer Development failed.
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Hi, we're Lottay! We've been a startup for the past two years or so and we've come to a critical...
August 10, 2010
Teach Like You're the Student
"I never have let my schooling interfere with my education."
- Mark Twain
Every time I see my graduate students try to teach for the first time, it's usually so painful I bite my lip. Then I remember the first day I stood up in front of a classroom.
You Hired
My first job in Silicon Valley was at ESL (a supplier of intelligence and reconnaissance systems,) I had managed to talk myself into getting hired as a training instructor. (Long back-story here.) The company had a major military contract ...
August 5, 2010
The Rise of the Lean VC – Consumer Internet Gets Its Own Investors
Consumer Internet investing seems to have split off from traditional Venture Capital, and is creating a new category of VC's: Lean VC's. I think you can blame Customer and Agile Development for a small part of it.
Here's why.
Electron-based Venture Capital
When I first came to Silicon Valley the world of Venture Capital looked pretty simple. VC's invested in things that ran on electrons: hardware, software and silicon. While individual VC's inside venture firms specialized in particular...
July 29, 2010
Keeping Score
One of the toughest problems for entrepreneurs is to keep score as they search for their business model.
Keeping Score
One of the key concepts of Customer Development is writing down your initial hypotheses (guesses) of all the parts of your business model, then updating them with the facts you find outside the building.
Since I first wrote the book Four Steps to the Epiphany I've realized that an even better way to keep score is by diagramming each of your business model hypotheses on a...
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