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The Customer Development Model Steve Blank Stanford School of Engineering / UC Berkeley, Haas Business School www.steveblank.com Eric Ries The Lean Startup Startuplessonslearned.blogspot.com
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Customer Development at Startup2Startup

Apr 21, 2017

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Page 1: Customer Development at Startup2Startup

The Customer Development Model

Steve BlankStanford School of Engineering /

UC Berkeley, Haas Business Schoolwww.steveblank.com

Eric RiesThe Lean Startup

Startuplessonslearned.blogspot.com

Page 2: Customer Development at Startup2Startup

More startups Fail from a Lack of Customers than from

a Failure of Product Development

Page 3: Customer Development at Startup2Startup

Conundrum

• We have process to manage product development

• We have no process to manage customer development

Page 4: Customer Development at Startup2Startup

An Inexpensive Fix

Focus on Customers and Markets from Day One

How?

Page 5: Customer Development at Startup2Startup

Build a Customer Development Process

Concept/Bus. Plan

Product Dev.

Alpha/Beta Test

Launch/1st Ship

Product Development

Customer Development

? ? ? ?

Page 6: Customer Development at Startup2Startup

Customer Development and Product Development

Concept/Bus. Plan

Product Dev.

Alpha/Beta Test

Launch/1st Ship

Product Development

Customer Development

CompanyBuilding

CustomerDiscovery

CustomerValidation

Customer Creation

Page 7: Customer Development at Startup2Startup

Customer Development: Key Ideas

• Parallel process to Product Development (agile)

• Measurable Checkpoints

• Not tied to FCS, but to customer milestones

• Notion of Market Types to represent reality

• Emphasis is on learning & discovery before execution

Page 8: Customer Development at Startup2Startup

• Stop selling, start listening– There are no facts inside your building, so get outside

• Test your hypotheses – Two are fundamental: problem and product concept

Customer Discovery: Step 1

CustomerDiscovery

CustomerValidation

CompanyBuilding

CustomerCreation

Page 9: Customer Development at Startup2Startup

Customer Discovery: Exit Criteria

• What are your customers top problems?– How much will they pay to solve them

• Does your product concept solve them?– Do customers agree? – How much will they pay?

• Draw a day-in-the-life of a customer (archetypes)– before & after your product

• Draw the org chart of users & buyers

Page 10: Customer Development at Startup2Startup

Customer Validation: Step 2

CustomerDiscovery

CustomerValidation

Customer

Creation

CompanyBuildin

g

• Develop a repeatable and scalable sales process

• Only earlyvangelists are crazy enough to buy

Page 11: Customer Development at Startup2Startup

Customer Validation: Exit Criteria

• Do you have a proven sales roadmap?– Org chart? Influence map?

• Do you understand the sales cycle?– ASP, LTV, ROI, etc.

• Do you have a set of orders ($’s) validating the roadmap?

• Does the financial model make sense?

Page 12: Customer Development at Startup2Startup

Sidebar

Market Type

Page 13: Customer Development at Startup2Startup

New Product Conundrum

• New Product Introductions sometimes work, yet sometimes fail– Why?– Is it the people that are different?– Is it the product that are different?

• Perhaps there are different “types” of startups?

Page 14: Customer Development at Startup2Startup

Three Types of Markets

• Who Cares?• Type of Market changes EVERYTHING• Sales, marketing and business development

differ radically by market type• Details next week

Existing Market Resegmented Market

New Market

Page 15: Customer Development at Startup2Startup

Type of Market Changes Everything

• Market– Market Size– Cost of Entry– Launch Type– Competitive

Barriers– Positioning

• Sales– Sales Model– Margins– Sales Cycle– Chasm Width

Existing Market

Resegmented Market

New Market

• Finance• Ongoing Capital• Time to Profitability

• Customers• Needs• Adoption

Page 16: Customer Development at Startup2Startup

Definitions: Three Types of Markets

• Existing Market– Faster/Better = High end

• Resegmented Market– Niche = marketing/branding driven– Cheaper = low end

• New Market– Cheaper/good enough can create a new class of

product/customer– Innovative/never existed before

Existing Market

Resegmented Market

New Market

Page 17: Customer Development at Startup2Startup

So What Does Engineering Do?

Page 18: Customer Development at Startup2Startup

Problem: known Solution: known

Waterfall

Traditional Product DevelopmentUnit of progress: Advance to Next Stage

Requirements

Design

Implementation

Verification

Maintenance

Page 19: Customer Development at Startup2Startup

Problem: Known Solution: Unknown

“Product Owner” or in-house customer

AgileUnit of progress: a line of working code

Page 20: Customer Development at Startup2Startup

Problem: Unknown Solution: Unknown

Product Development at Lean StartupUnit of progress: validated learning about customers ($$$)

Page 21: Customer Development at Startup2Startup

Minimize TOTAL time through the loop

IDEAS

CODEDATA

BUILDLEARN

MEASURE

Page 22: Customer Development at Startup2Startup

So What Do I Do?

Really

Page 23: Customer Development at Startup2Startup

First Steps• Fact-based culture, built to learn• Decide on business model

– What are the "fundamental drivers of growth”

• Create a decision loop (build-measure-learn)

• Write your hypotheses down (3 diagrams)– Business model, distribution channel, demand creation

• Prove it in micro-scale

Page 24: Customer Development at Startup2Startup

Execution

• Relentless execution• Team needs to be true believers not employees • Focus on the few things that matter • Don’t confuse your hypothesis with facts• Continuous customer contact • Only you can put your company out of business

Page 25: Customer Development at Startup2Startup

General Principles

• If you think entrepreneurship is about the money become a VC

• If everyone else thinks it’s a bad idea that may be a good sign

• The better your reality distortion field the more you need to get outside the building

• Ethics and values are about what you practice when the going gets tough

Page 26: Customer Development at Startup2Startup

Further Reading

Course Text at: www.cafepress.com/kandsranch

Blogs www.steveblank.com

http://startuplessonslearned.blogspot.com/

Page 27: Customer Development at Startup2Startup

There’s much more…

IDEAS

CODEDATA

BUILDLEARN

MEASURE

Code FasterUnit Tests

Usability TestsContinuous Integration

Incremental DeploymentFree & Open-Source Components

Cloud ComputingCluster Immune System

Just-in-time ScalabilityRefactoring

Developer Sandbox

Measure FasterSplit TestsClear Product OwnerContinuous DeploymentUsability TestsReal-time MonitoringCustomer Liaison

Learn FasterSplit TestsCustomer InterviewsCustomer DevelopmentFive Whys Root Cause AnalysisCustomer Advisory BoardFalsifiable HypothesesProduct Owner AccountabilityCustomer ArchetypesCross-functional TeamsSemi-autonomous TeamsSmoke Tests

Funnel AnalysisCohort Analysis

Net Promoter ScoreSearch Engine Marketing

Real-Time AlertingPredictive Monitoring

Page 28: Customer Development at Startup2Startup

Thanks!

• Startup Lessons Learned Blog– http://startuplessonslearned.blogspot.com/

• Webcast: “How to Build a Lean Startup, step-by-step”– May 1, 2009 at 10am PST– http://www.oreillynet.com/pub/e/1294

• The Lean Startup Workshop– An all-day event for a select audience– May 29, 2009 in San Francisco– Sign up at: http://bit.ly/a5uw8