Author Eric Ries states a few times that he is out to debunk the entrepreneurial myth that a good idea and hard work trump all. Calculated risks, A/B testing, and failing fast seem to be Eric’s equivalent for working smarter, not harder. It’s a notion that is completely counter-intuitive to the American way, but it is a necessary one. Everyone hears the success stories of the 0.1% of entrepreneurs who hit the jackpot due to what seems like magic (though they claim it’s the result of having the right idea, at the right place and time). The stories that don’t get mass acclaim are of the other 99.9% of ideas that waste time, talent, and money because they were built on unproven assumptions.
Another interesting piece of Ries’ book is his emphasis on
instilling the entrepreneurial mindset in any organization, no matter the size.
He recommends doing this through the use of MVPs (minimum viable products).
MVPs emphasize building the smallest scale version of a product/service as fast
possible, and bringing it to market to gauge adoption. MVPs can be all smoke
and mirrors or completely inefficient at their initial scale. The emphasis of
an MVP is not to accrue revenue initially, it’s to test if people care enough
about what you’re building to use it/pay for it.
Some of these points seem like common sense, but I can see
how they get pushed to the side amongst all of the other pressures an
entrepreneur faces. Someone in the traditional startup setting could receive
financial backing for an idea early on, and depending on the source of funding,
they may receive pressure to monetize as fast possible without knowing whether
their product is valuable or not. Feeling pressure by the bottom line and
overall user base (vanity metrics), the entrepreneur completely ignores more meaningful data.
Eric Ries uses proven logic and reason to address crucial business flaws. The Lean Startup is a must read for anyone in the business of developing new business.
Eric Ries uses proven logic and reason to address crucial business flaws. The Lean Startup is a must read for anyone in the business of developing new business.
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