Meta Principles
Meta Principles
My format of choice is to use the one-page business model diagram (Lean Canvas):
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Benefits:
Fast
Concise
The canvas forces you to pick your words carefully and get to the point. This is
great practice for distilling the essence of your product. You have 30 seconds to
grab the attention of an investor over a hypothetical elevator ride, and eight
seconds to grab the attention of a customer on your landing page.
Portable
A single-page business model is much easier to share with others, which means
it will be read by more people and probably will be more frequently updated.
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Entrepreneurs spend a disproportionate amount of time talking about their solution
and not enough time talking about the other components of the business model.
Your job isn’t just building the best solution, but owning the entire business model
and making all the pieces fit.
Lean Canvas helps deconstruct your business model into nine distinct subparts that
are then systematically tested, in order of highest to lowest risk.
The bigger risk for most startups is building something nobody wants.
Customers buy from you when they trust you can solve their problems. Investors bet
on you when they trust you can build a scalable business model.
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Stage 1: Problem/Solution Fit
Key question: Do I have a problem worth solving?
From there you derive the minimum feature set to address the right set of problems,
which is also known as the minimum viable product (MVP).
Stage 3: Scale
Key question: How do I accelerate growth?
Your focus at this stage shifts toward growth, or scaling your business model.
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Pivots → validate parts of the business model hypotheses in order to find a plan that
works.
Your first goal should be to establish just enough of a runway to allow you to start
testing and validating your business model with customers.
What Is an Experiment?
A cycle around the validated learning loop (Build-Measure-Learn loop) is called an
experiment.
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Begins in the Build stage with a set of ideas or hypotheses that are used to
create some artifact (mock-ups, code, landing page, etc.) for the purpose of
testing a hypothesis.
We put this artifact in front of customers and “measure” their response using a
combination of qualitative and quantitative data.
This data is used to derive speci!c “learning” that serves to validate or refute a
hypothesis, which in turn drives the next set of actions
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