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  • Everything you need to know about the lean startup

    The lean startup ultimate guide – Everything you need to know about the lean startup

    Welcome to the ultimate guide to the lean startup. Launching a new company, be it a hi-tech startup company, small or medium-sized family company or a business initiative inside a big organization, always included a series of hit‑or‑miss hypotheses about customers, the market, price policy and other business aspects.

    According to recommendation’s that were used in entrepreneurship for decades, the best framework for successfully analysing these hypotheses was preparing a business plan, followed by obtaining investors, building a team, building a product and finally following the goal of reaching the highest possible sales.

    Building by following this methodology, called the traditional new-product development model, doesn’t work in entrepreneurs’ favour. According to the research of the Harvard Business School, more than 75 % of companies started this way fail.

    In the past decade, a new set of methodologies and recommendations arose as an answer to this big risk of startup company failure, and they strongly decrease this risk.

    It’s the lean startup company methodology, favouring experimentation over business planning, immediate customer feedback over the entrepreneur’s intuition, and gradual cyclical and agile product development in collaboration with the market (based on the build – measure – learn cycle).

    The lean startup methodology, together with concepts such as “pivot” and “minimum viable product”, are increasingly in use, amongst new-age startups as well as in study programmes at the best global business schools and big companies, namely everywhere where a new product needs to be developed in highly uncertain circumstances.

    The lean startup - the ultimate guide

    1. The traditional new-product development model

    The traditional new-product development model, presented in Steve Blank’s Book The Startup Owner’s Manual and The Four Steps to the Epiphany as a no longer effective model for startups, developed from the general concept of manufacturing and the basic process of manufacturing various new or improved products.

    The traditional new-product development model is thoroughly established in the business world and is successfully serving mostly mature companies, where the customers and their problems are well-known, the competition is known and understood, and the specifications of the product and its improvements are clearly defined.

    Traditonal product development

    The traditional new-product introduction model consists of four key stages:

    • Concept and business planning: In this stage, the business team defines its vision and describes the business idea, which becomes the basis for preparing a business plan. Through individual chapters of business planning, the foundations of business strategy are defined, from defining the specifications of the product and carrying out marketing research to preparing a marketing plan and all up to financial projections with detailed predictions of how financial results will be achieved.
    • Development: In the development stage, planning and discussing stops completely, and hard work begins. A functional organization is formed in the company, where development engineers take care of product manufacture, marketing and sales implement various focus groups, prepare marketing materials and similar.
    • Testing: Passing into the testing stage includes collaboration with a small group of users whose task is to test the product to see if it works perfectly. Marketing materials are completed, suitable external co-workers are hired, such as a PR agency, new people responsible for sales are employed, and everything is finally prepared for the first real product sales on the market.
    • Market launch: In the last stage, the product is launched on the market, with big costs of marketing and advertising as well as opening events, the purpose of which is to create enough demand. Sales start being measured, and it is soon shown how truly interesting the product is for the market.

    What’s problematic with this model is that the large majority of products, even though they have extremely good quality, are not interesting for the market. Nobody wants to buy the built products.

    The main reason for this is the conviction that the business team knows exactly what they’re doing, what customers want, and which product functionalities customers need or which functionalities are the key competitive advantage on the market.

    Thus the business team focuses exclusively on deadlines for launching the product to the market based on a business plan, and the team’s work only emphasizes good implementation, not learning about the market and customers, and quickly adapting to their needs.

    The key entrepreneurship question, when we’re talking about traditional new product development is what if the business team doesn’t know exactly what customers need and the market wants.

    Traditional new-product development also doesn’t allow trying, mistakes and adjusting the direction (of the vision and strategies).

    Blindly following the plan and clearly divided responsibilities based on the functional organizational structure (department for development, quality control, marketing, sales etc.) don’t only lead to focusing exclusively on implementation but also often to unsuitable measurement of the newly founded company’s progress (focus exclusively on accounting metrics), wasting resources, and too early rapid growth.

    The fact is that no business plan survives the first contact with customers, so we urgently need a different approach than blindly following a plan that’s based on untested hypotheses of the business team.

    Startups usually don’t fail because they don’t know how to make a quality working product, but because of a lack of customers and a business model that doesn’t work.

    When startups launch a new product to the market, it turns out again and again that the transition from a few early customers to the mass market isn’t possible, that the product or service aren’t solving a real problem, or that the distribution costs are simply too high.

    So the main business challenge isn’t to make a product based on a business idea, but to systematically get feedback from the market about whether the product is even interesting for potential customers.

    The problem of traditional new-product development is that it’s most often based on untested hypotheses that the business team has about the market and customers, and it doesn’t enable rapid adjustments of the vision, strategies and functionalities of the product to the customers.

    It also leads to many other business mistakes, such as wasting resources, developing functionalities no one is prepared to pay for (waste), and setting weak foundations for a young company.

    1.1. Weaknesses of business planning

    Within the first stage of the traditional new-product introduction model, the first step is preparing the concept and planning company launch, which includes preparing a business plan.

    The business plan is where the business team writes its hypotheses, and it becomes the fundamental document of the company, which is why it has an especially visible role in the traditional new-product introduction model.

    Writing a business plan is good practice for an entrepreneur, but it usually doesn’t include a conversation with people who are key for company success – customers. Most starting plans turn out to be wrong in practice, so the entrepreneur needs something that isn’t as rigid as a business plan.

    If an entrepreneur spends a couple of weeks or months on writing a 60-page long document that’s based on untested hypotheses, this can only be a waste time and other resources.

    In accordance with lean production, on which the lean startup is based, waste is any activity of the entrepreneur that wastes resources and doesn’t create actual value (something customers are prepared to pay for).

    The most important question for the entrepreneur is whether the new company is progressing in the direction of a successful, long-term sustainable business operation. A common wrong measure for this progress is progressing according to the business plan and the set time and financial goal.

    Such measurement is problematic because the plan is often set wrongly due to big uncertainty and untested assumptions. Product manufacture can be planned for a product that no one will wish to buy in the end.

    No matter how well-prepared the business plan is, if it plans to manufacture a product that isn’t interesting for the market, then the business plan is practically without value.

    The main actual weaknesses of the business plan can thus be summed up in the following points:

    • Reality rarely unfolds according to plans.
    • If entrepreneurial success means trying and discovering approaches that don’t work, how can the entrepreneur then even prepare a relevant business plan.
    • At the beginning, the entrepreneur doesn’t really have an idea of how the company will even look in the future, because the company develops together with market demand.
    • Nearly no one reads business plans anymore, not even venture capital investors. The most successful global investors claim that business plans are too long and that successful flexible companies adapt to the market faster than it takes to read a business plan.
    • 5-year planning is impossible and pointless. Even yearly planning is problematic and that much more impossible in the long term.
    • In the real world, most business plans don’t survive the first contact with customers. The environment changes too quickly and a business plan is nothing but a bunch of untested hypotheses.
    • In a world of high uncertainty, it’s incredibly difficult to plan, so it is crucial to adapt and improvise.

    The value added of a business plan has decreased mostly with the change of the environment, which became significantly more unpredictable and rapidly changing. In such an environment, planning (especially long-term planning) is a thankless task.

    This is why it’s incredibly important to understand these changes of the business environment and the laws of today’s markets, so that we can better understand the need for new methodologies of launching a newly founded company.

    Tech changes

    1.2. Transition into a complex knowledge society

    The most advanced nations today are in the so-called post-information economy or the knowledge economy (society), where innovation and creativity are crucial for success. In this, information and knowledge are tools for creativity as the central component element of innovation.

    Thus the most advanced geographic areas marked with a high measure of creativity have three key elements (3T – technology, talent, tolerance), namely these are rapid technological development, a high concentration of talented (educated, entrepreneurial, ambitious) individuals, and a high level of tolerance (to diversity, difference and failure).

    Tolerance has a big influence on accepting diversity and entrepreneurial risk. Those environments that significantly stand out in these criteria can be said to have an incredibly strong creative class.

    As an interesting fact, California reaches incredibly high positions in all three elements (technology, talent, tolerance), so it’s not weird that lean methods originate exactly from the best local private university Stanford.

    Across the world, there are more and more geographic hubs driven by the creative class, and with help of globalization and global connection a hypercompetitive global business environment is being created.

    Hypercompetition is marked by uncertainty, market instability, rapid non-linear technological development, and a short lifespan of competitive advantages. And hypercompetition is driven by the creative class.

    Globalization is what led to hypercompetitiveness, together with rapid technological development, rise of transnational corporations, political liberalization of markets, strong demand on global and local markets, low entrance barriers, and a large number of providers (strong competition).

    In technology, as one of the strongest accelerators of these changes, we mostly have to highlight communication and information technologies as well as a significant drop in transport costs. The central dynamics of the new economy (knowledge society) is thus an unstoppable cycle of competing, innovating and raising productivity.

    Consequently, the following are some of the extremely important business, social and other trends for all entrepreneurs, brought about by the creative economy and hypercompetition:

    • a large number of products on the market and complete market saturation, amongst which we must especially emphasize the incredibly big offer of cheap goods (a good example of this is the choice between dozens of different cereal types on shopping shelves),
    • customers are highly informed and participate in the market,
    • completely new forms of global company organization,
    • high marketing buzz,
    • high level of individualization (the so-called egonomy),
    • high level of interactivity (connection between technological devices and their omnipresence),
    • work specialization (and the rise of the creative class),
    • knowledge has become the most important good (talent),
    • rise of cities (where technology, talent and tolerance are concentrated),
    • consumers are mostly interested in fun and new experiences.

    It’s the new age we all live in, with all the pros and cons. Brand Cooper goes even a step further and says that today, we live in the so-called value economy. The company that consistently creates the most value for a certain market wins. This goes for established companies as well as for young, newly founded companies.

    A fact that should be especially emphasized is that customers have special power in the value economy. Customers demand products that exceed all their expectations, they wish to have a personal relationship with the provider and to be treated respectfully but above all, they want to influence the design and further development of the product.

    The recommended strategy for companies that compete in a hypercompetitive environment is thus that they develop internal abilities for facing rapid changes, meaning that the organization needs to become (or stay) flexible, dynamic, adaptable, and learn constantly. This is all the more true for newly founded companies.

    1.3. Lean startup – answer to changes in the environment

    If an entrepreneur wishes to create a truly successful product and company, their key task is to reduce various risks. Entrepreneurship is a risky business, and as such one of the key missions of entrepreneurs is to gradually and systematically eliminate risks. The key in this is that when developing a product, the entrepreneur focuses on the biggest risks first.

    As mentioned before, the biggest risk in newly founded companies is rarely the manufacture of the product or solution. In today’s times of cheap manufacture, the entrepreneur can very quickly create a product with enough time, money and effort.

    The biggest risk for entrepreneurs is that they’ll create a product that absolutely no one wants to buy. When the entrepreneur is in the beginning, they only have a hunch about the problem that potential customers face, a suitable solution and maybe even the most logical customer segment.

    Exactly because they are only entrepreneur’s hunches, developing the solution too quickly, choosing the customer segment or even the entire business model too early can most often lead to failure.

    A good plan, solid strategy and implementation of a marketing plan seem like the right strategy at the first glance, because these are the things that successful big companies have. But applying these traditional tools to newly created companies doesn’t make sense, because the latter face too much uncertainty.

    The bigger the uncertainty, the more difficult it is to predict the future. This is why planning can be exact only when it’s based on a long, stable history of the company in a relatively stable environment, which doesn’t apply to newly created companies.

    If entrepreneurs build a product that no one will want to buy, it makes absolutely no difference if it’s made on schedule and with planned resources. This statement clearly indicates the fact that the fundamental task of the entrepreneur is to learn which product to make at all – that is the product for which customers are prepared to pay, and in the shortest possible time.

    As an answer to complex and quick changes in the environment, the so-called new methodology of building a new company developed, called the lean startup.

    The lean startup is a new look on the development of innovative products, emphasizing quick iterations of product development based on new insights into the customers’ wishes, and simultaneously including big visions and high ambitions of the business team.

    In modern economy, the question “Can this be built?” isn’t important anymore, because nearly any product can be built, since enough means of production are available.

    Significantly more important questions in the modern economy are whether a certain product should be built and whether it is possible to build a long-term sustainable business model around the product.

    Manufacture capacities of developed countries are significantly bigger and more developed than the knowledge of what exactly the markets want. With manufacturing capacities reaching the point where we can manufacture nearly anything we can think of, the question of whether we can make a new product or service isn’t in the foreground anymore, but rather whether it makes sense to build it and if it is profitable.

    For all lean startups, it is thus of necessary that they let go, as soon as possible, of the wrong assumption that they can exactly describe history, even more exactly predict or plan the future and thus co-create it.

    What should come to the forefront is the realization that the assumptions of the entrepreneur or the business team about the market, customers and their problems are wrong at first, and only by trying, measuring and discovering patterns with a scientific method can they become true.

    The history of successful startups in modern times teaches us that by far the most important factor for the business success of new as well as established companies is a desire for testing, verifying assumptions on the market, learning based on small failures, and looking for the right combination of a problem, solution and market, which brings the final big success.

    Customers are what makes the product into a success story. Without customers who are prepared to buy the product, it isn’t important how innovative an idea is or how affordable a product is, because the company will fail.

    In this, there is the important realization that bigger uncertainty doesn’t only bring disadvantages and challenges to long-term business planning. Bigger uncertainty is also an opportunity, because uncertainty and innovation go hand in hand.

    Without the first, there is no opportunity for the second. Disruptive innovations can happen in an environment where the final product, value offer, marketing, sales channels and (most importantly) price are at most informed guesswork, but more likely a complete unknown.

    1.4. Different types of startups and markets

    Before we delve into the basic concepts of lean startups, we need to emphasize the fact that not all startups are the same, and neither are the markets that they address, which means that lean launch methods aren’t suitable for all newly created companies.

    The type of market and startup changes the suitability of using different business tools and approaches for company launch, making it necessary for the business team to first exactly define which market type they are addressing and which company type they wish to build.

    1.4.1. Five market types

    Steve Blank divides markets, addressed by startups, into the following five types:

    1. New product for an existing market
    2. New product for a completely new market
    3. Resegmentation of the existing market with a low-price product
    4. Resegmentation of the existing market with a niche entrance
    5. Cloning a business model that is successful in another country

    When a startup launches a product to an already known existing market, traditional planning methods and preparing a business plan work just fine. The problem appears when a startup targets a new or resegmented market, where customers, channels and markets aren’t well‑known yet or are an unknown.

    And most startups with a potential for rapid growth address such a market. Addressing a new market means that a startup’s solution will enable the customers to do something that couldn’t be done by now, and that the startup wishes to create something completely new, yet unknown, meaning that there are that much more unknowns and risks, connected to launching a new solution.

    Different types of markets and suitability of using the lean startup methodology

    Market type Suitability lean startup
    New product – existing market No
    New product – new market Yes
    Low-price resegmentation Yes
    Niche resegmentation Yes
    Cloning a business model No

    1.4.2. Six types of startups

    Besides the five different market types, you also need to know six different types of startups, which are directly linked to the vision of the company and the type of market that the startup addresses.

    We know the following six types of startups (segmentation suggested by Steve Blank):

    1. Startup with the goal of satisfying the lifestyle of the founders, who are living out their passion (for example teaching surfing).
    2. Micro and small newly created businesses, whose primary motive isn’t capital gain but rather decent income, with the purpose of putting food on the family table (for example a hairdressing salon, family specialized store etc.).
    3. Startups with the potential for rapid growth (for example mobile apps).
    4. Social companies, whose primary purpose is to create big social value and change the world to the better.
    5. Big companies and corporations, which need to follow the philosophy of “innovate or die”, so there are similar processes to startups inside corporations.
    6. Scalable startups, founded with the purpose of growing and becoming big companies. The founders’ motive isn’t income but rather lies in profit and in increasing the value of the ownership share. They usually address new and resegmented markets.
    Startup type Suitability of lean startup
    Lifestyle startup Rarely
    Micro and small businesses Rarely
    Potential for rapid growth Depends on the market
    Social companies Depends on the market
    Big companies and corporations For launching new products
    Scalable startups Yes

    Each of the five different types of markets and six different types of startups demands a different business team, different financing sources, and includes different growth and profitability goals.

    The startup team should not only clearly define the type of the market and the company they wish to build, it is that much important for them to find answers to several key questions that help define the market, vision of the business team, and other key elements of the newly created company, such as:

    • which problems does the product solve,
    • are these problems really painful for the customer,
    • who exactly is the customer,
    • what will be the profitability of individual customer and similar.

    First of all, there needs to be the awareness that startups aren’t only small versions of big companies, which is a common false belief. Established and big companies are meant to implement the known, while startups are looking for a suitable business model.

    Second of all, the startup team is often convinced that they already know the information about the market and the customers (since everything is written in the business plan), but usually that is nothing but a bunch of untested assumptions that can turn out to be wrong.

    Write a business plan, build a product, and customers will come on their own isn’t a strategy, but rather a naïve hope, especially in cases where the market and the customers aren’t known.

    The first orientation within lean startup methodologies is thus for the business team to clearly define the type of company it wishes to build, and the type of market it’s addressing, on this, they can decide if lean methods are even suitable or not.

    2. Basics of the lean startup concept

    Lean startup (wiki) is a term introduced by Eric Ries and similarly to what the vehicle production system Toyota does, it connects customer development, methods of agile product development, and lean business practices.

    In this, an important starting point is Ries’ definition of a lean startup, which says that a lean startup is nothing other than an institution of people, organized with the purpose of making a new product or service in incredibly uncertain circumstances.

    The definition clearly shows that the lean startup includes the launch of a new product in uncertain circumstances, which means that lean startup methodologies are suitable for newly created companies as well as for big companies, and we shouldn’t forget about government institutions, non-profit organizations and other examples where new products or services are developed in such uncertain circumstances.

    The lean startup methodology is based on the fact that a business plan is nothing but a collection of assumptions. The document includes only assumptions about the strategy that the company should probably follow to achieve its vision.

    The main goal of the business team in lean startup is thus to first organize its activities in a way to check these assumptions without losing the company’s vision with it.

    Startups do not exist solely for the purpose of creating new products, becoming profitable and taking care of their customers, rather their mission is to learn how to build a long-term sustainable business around their idea.

    Lean startup is a temporary form of an organization developed with the purpose of using suitable systematic learning about the market to find a repeatable and scalable business model with the potential for rapid growth.

    Achieving a repeatable and scalable business model means that a startup has a developed sales team with a clearly defined price policy that regularly sells the solution to a known segment of customers.

    A long-term sustainable model with the potential for rapid growth means that a startup can obtain a large number of customers, not only some, and that every additional customer increases the profitability of the company. The path to this point isn’t easy and simple, and it demands a lot of learning.

    This means that the business model in the lean startup is still a complete unknown and it has to be “discovered”. We can consequently differentiate between two types of activities.

    The first type of activities focuses on finding a suitable business model, which is the lean startup’s task, and the second type on implementing an already discovered business model, wherein traditional methods of business planning, organizing and leading the company are an option (for established companies).

    In the early stages of company growth, focusing on implementation based on wrong assumptions is what usually leads to a quick collapse of a newly created company.

    This is why it is necessary to focus on learning and discovering insights into customers and the market through a carefully designed process that clearly shows what exactly needs to be implemented for the company to become successful and profitable.

    Difference between a lean startup and an established company

    Lean startup Established company
    Looking for a repeatable and scalable business model Implementing a known working business model

    Looking for the right business model is divided into several stages of the process called customer development and includes:

    1. Customer discovery
    2. Customer validation
    3. Customer creation
    4. A transition from a lean startup to a mature company that focuses on growing and implementing an already discovered business model.

    In the stage of searching, it is necessary to maintain complete flexibility and high tolerance for failure, in the foreground are mostly learning about the market and customers.

    This also means that it doesn’t make sense to organize a lean startup in a traditional functional organizational structure, but rather the founders should be surrounded mostly by a team that’s carrying out the process of discovering and validating customers.

    Besides a team that’s created to carry out the process of discovering and validating customers, the lean startup has to form another team, namely the team for rapidly developing the product’s functionalities.

    Gaining insight into what the market and customers want doesn’t make sense if new iterations of the (minimum viable) product aren’t being developed in accordance with the feedback, enabling new and repeated tests.

    This rapid development should mostly take place based on agile methodologies of management and new product development.

    So the lean startup doesn’t form its organizational structure according to the traditional functional form (development, marketing, sales, finances etc.), instead two teams are formed around the founders of the company and they have an exactly set purpose and goal – develop the right product for the right market in close interaction with customers.

    Tight collaboration between both teams is incredibly important: there shouldn’t be friction between them, as they should both constructively and transparently follow the common goal of developing a product that customers will actually be prepared to buy.

    Organization of a lean startup compared to a traditional organizational structure

    Traditional functional organization Lean startup organization
    Department for …

    • Management
    • Development
    • Marketing
    • Sales
    • Finance
    • Other functions
    • Team for discovering and validating customers
    • Team for rapidly developing new iterations and versions of the minimum viable product

    In doing so, each newly formed business team has to realize that failure is part of looking for a working business model, which is why you should constantly do pivots and adapt business operations based on the feedback from the market and potential customers.

    The fundamental concept of lean startups can thus be summarized in the statement: don’t sell what you can make, make what you can sell.

    2.1. Short history of the lean startup

    The lean startup originated in the revolution of lean manufacturing and lean thinking, developed by Taiichi Ohno and Shigeo Shingo in Toyota.

    The concept of lean manufacturing and lean thinking completely changed the method of manufacturing and delivery, with approaches such as encouraging the innovativeness of industrial workers, reducing the number of manufactured products in a series, meticulous control of supply, just-in-time manufacture, and accelerating manufacturing cycles.

    Lean manufacturing and lean thinking are dedicated mostly to a strict distinction between value added and wasting company’s resources, and how to systematically ensure product quality. Lean manufacturing and lean thinking are today especially known under the name “The Toyota Way”. The book with the same title was the first book to introduce such lean thinking outside Japan.

    The toyota way

    The content of the book is focused on how companies can significantly improve their processes by eliminating the waste of resources, systematically taking care of product quality, as well as by searching for low-budget alternatives to expensive high technology, perfecting company processes, and building a learning organization that’s constantly improving.

    Tools used by lean manufacturing or that stem from it are Kanban (work visualization), 5S methodology, Kaizen – continuous improvement, PDCA cycle, 5-Whys, Six Stigma, just-in-time manufacturing, and many other approaches. The lean startup transfers this philosophy from the field of manufacturing to the field of launching new companies.

    The term lean is here often misunderstood as “cheap”. Lean means you eliminate the unnecessary and use resources effectively, so this explanation isn’t completely wrong by itself, because one of the resources is money. But with a lean startup, we further strive to optimize the use of the resource we have the least of – time.

    If we are even more exact, the goal of the entrepreneur is to get to know as much as possible about the customers in a short amount of time. Thus with the lean startup, it’s very clearly defined what wasting resources means, that is directing resources into anything that doesn’t bring value to customers, and value is exclusively what customers are prepared to use and pay for.

    Such a waste of resources can include writing a business plan.

    3. Key techniques and tools of the lean startup

    The lean startup is thus a temporary organization founded for quick, active learning about the market and customers. Important elements of a quickly learning organization is that it puts concrete data before rhetoric, testing before implementation, and its customers before a business plan.

    A quickly learning organization constantly does experiments with the purpose of reducing risks, uses concrete data for solving internal conflicts, and is in constant interaction with existing customers and potential customers in order to understand them as well as possible.

    The lean startup does all this before it even has a complete product. How?

    Traditonal product development

    3.1. Three stages of a lean startup

    Every startup goes through three exactly defined stages, namely these are:

    1. stage of the problem/solution fit,
    2. stage of product/market fit, and
    3. growth stage.

    The second stage, so the stage of the product/market fit, is the most important milestone for every startup. Reaching this milestone strongly affects the strategy and method of leading the company.

    This is why it makes sense for the startup to divide building the company into a period “before product/market fit” and period “after product/market fit”.

    In the stage before “product/market fit”, it’s important for a startup to focus its activities on learning and pivoting the business model canvas. After the completed “product/market fit” stage, it makes sense for the startup to start focusing mostly on growth of the company and optimization of business processes.

    The following are the three stages of the startup, amongst which the second stage is the first important milestone:

    • Problem/solution fit: The first stage of a startup is called the problem/solution fit. In this stage, the startup decides whether it is trying to solve a problem that’s even worth solving. By doing this, the startup avoids the trap of spending months or even years developing something that nobody wants. Even though business ideas are cheap and there are a lot of them, their implementation can be rather expensive. That’s why concrete facts need to be chosen, showing that the right problem is being solved and that the business idea is reasonable. In the problem/solution fit stage, the startup should have a clear answer to three questions, namely whether the solution is something that customers need and want, are they prepared to pay for the solution and, of course, is the problem technically solvable. In this stage, the startup makes the minimum viable product.
    • Product/market fit: The second stage is called product/market fit, in which the startup tests the reliability of the product and the attractiveness of the product for sales. In this stage, the startup goes from testing different business models to a plan that works, meaning that the startup is regularly acquiring customers that make repeated purchases and are prepared to pay for the solution regularly. In this stage, the lean startup thoroughly knows the key functionalities of the product that the market is prepared to pay for and that solve key problems for customers.
    • Growth: The third stage is the stage of increasing the scope of business operations or the so-called growth. In this stage, the startup focuses its attention on increasing the scope of the business model. The lean startup increases the scope of the business model by using suitable mechanisms of marketing, sales and sales channels, and by choosing a suitable engine of growth.

    The end of the problem/solution fit can be called business idea confirmation, the end of the product/market fit can be called value hypothesis confirmation.

    And for rapid growth, confirmation of marketing, sales and engines of growth are needed (growth hypothesis). In this, it is crucial that the lean startup systematically establishes the collection of feedback (metrics) from the market or customers in every stage.

    Four stages of customer development

    Customer development Fit Validation
    1. Customer discovery Problem/solution fit Idea confirmation
    2. Customer validation Product/market fit Product confirmation
    3. Customer creation Growth Confirmation of engines of growth
    4. Building a traditional functional business organization

    The stage of discovering and validating customers (1st and 2nd stage of customer development) includes defining the consecutive steps that the lean startup follows when looking for a working business model. Steve Blank defines the steps as:

    • Phase 1: Write down the vision and hypotheses on a canvas
    • Phase 2: Test the problem
    • Phase 3: Test the product solution
    • Phase 4: Confirm the assumptions or pivot

    First, the lean startup team writes down its vision and hypotheses by using the lean or business model canvas. Then it tests the problem and solution by using the concept of the minimum viable product and out-of-the-building learning.

    All this enables validated learning based on the build – measure – learn feedback loop. Validated learning means that the company decides to confirm or reject assumptions written in the canvas based on concrete innovation metrics, and then decides to either keep the business strategy or pivot.

    In doing so, it is necessary for the business team of the lean startup to focus mostly on the problem (not the solution), namely on the smallest possible problem that it can solve and for which customers are prepared to pay.

    A niche approach is crucial, and if the entrepreneur becomes the first in a niche, they then have the option of expanding with a leverage, because they know customers better than the competition. Besides focusing on the problem, the vision of the business team is definitely incredibly important, and flexibility in business strategy should be kept around it.

    3.2. Vision of the lean startup

    Even though the lean startup represents a new business methodology and approach, at the beginning the business team (or startup team) needs a big vision (as it is written in the business plan) that defines any type of a blooming business that entrepreneurs wish to build.

    To achieve that vision, the startup team needs a starting vision that includes a business model (devised on a lean or business model canvas), plan of product development, strategic look into potential partners and competition, and a rough idea of who the potential customers could be.

    Examples of questions that help to define company’s vision:

    • How will the company contribute to the industry?
    • How will the company change people’ lives?
    • How big could the company become?
    • How big the team wants the company to become?
    • How many products there will be?
    • What will be the core competence of the company?

    Building a product is the final result of the vision and strategy. But in doing this, the startup team constantly supplements, upgrades and changes the product through optimization.

    The startup team changes the strategy with a pivot if that is needed based on the feedback by customers and market, but the vision of the team rarely changes significantly or only parts of it change.

    The lean startup’s vision stays more or less the same final goal, but the path to it is flexible. In some way, the task of the startup team is to find synthesis between the business vision and what customers are prepared to buy.

    So the goal of the lean startup is to use scientifically devised experiments to discover and learn how to build a long-term business around the vision of the business team. Considering that the vision of the lean startup is very viable, it is often called the minimum viable vision.

    On the one hand, the business team must always have a pragmatic and practical approach rooted in the reality of metrics, but on the other hand it needs a vision that is exciting, daring, unshakable and attractive for founders.

    The minimum viable vision is what provides an exciting explanation of why the lean startup will become the dominant and disruptive player on the market. It often includes a lot more than only empty illusions of the business team.

    The minimum viable vision reflects concrete exciting facts, for example that a new business ecosystem is being built around the company or that there are several options for monetizing the idea, marginal costs that lean towards zero, trends support the vision, it isn’t hard to set a pricing strategy, and other concrete facts that show a business opportunity.

    After defining the vision and consequently the type of company and the type of market, there is the step of writing down hypotheses (assumptions) in the lean canvas, followed by verifying hypotheses on the market with actual customers, first by focusing on the size of the problem and suitability of the solution.

    The Golden Circle

    3.2.1. Start with why

    The big vision must also include a clear answer to why the vision is important to founders. According to Simon Sinek, every great company must start with why.

    The general idea is that a startup team to find powerful why that gives their work a deeper meaning and makes everything else secondary. A powerful why gets team motivated and enthusiastic, and an enthusiastic team is always personally invested and stays like that much longer.

    The more clearly an organization describes and communicates their why, the more people will like it, and that goes for all stakeholders, especially customers. The truth is that people don’t buy what people make, they buy things for why people make them.

    The founders should have a clear answer on the questions like:

    1. Why are we making this?
    2. Why doesn’t this exist already?
    3. Why us?
    4. Why now?
    5. Why do people need this product?
    6. Why will people want this product?
    7. Why will people pay for this?
    8. Why will this make people do/feel/be, what they want to do/feel/be?
    9. Why would people buy from our competitors?
    10. Why will people cross the street to buy from us?
    11. Why does this idea matter?

    3.3. Lean canvas and business model canvas

    An alternative method of business planning inside the concept of the lean startup, enabling the team to regularly verify assumptions and quickly adapt the business idea to the market, is called using a business model or lean canvas.

    Because the business model needs to be turned on its head several times, it makes a lot more sense to use the lean canvas or business model canvas instead of traditional business planning. The use of the lean canvas is what enables the transition from a static business plan into dynamic adjustment of the business model.

    The main idea behind using a canvas instead of a business plan is the option of displaying the business model in a portable single-page schematic. Two main canvases are most in use, namely the business model canvas, designed by Alexander Osterwalder in the book Business Model Generation, and the lean canvas, which Ash Maurya derived from the business model canvas.

    By using the canvas, the startup team can very quickly and efficiently find potential business models, set priorities, and follow continuous learning based on the build – measure – learn feedback cycle.

    The business model canvas allows the business team to avoid many weaknesses of business planning, such as time-consuming long texts, unclearly written assumptions, long‑term planning etc.

    The key advantages of using the canvas instead of the business plan are mostly the following:

    • Speed – Compared to the business plan, which the startup team can spend several months writing, it is possible to sketch several business models on the canvas in a single afternoon.
    • Succinctness – The way that the canvas is designed allows the startup team to focus on the key elements of business operations and extract the essence of its product. Succinctness is achieved with clear visualization of the business model by using a frame (in lean manufacturing, this visualization is known as the Kanban philosophy).
    • Portability – The business model that’s presented on one page in the scope of the canvas is a lot easier to share with other stakeholders of the lean startup. That means that more people read it and that the frame is easier to update than a business plan.

    The lean or business model canvas don’t only represent a record of the currently planned business model of the company in a certain moment. Using them also enables the team to monitor the progress in finding a working business model, and to keep an eye on the state of confirmation or rejection of assumptions.

    This is why it’s incredibly important that the team of the lean startup refreshes the lean or business model canvas at least weekly. It is necessary to regularly write down assumptions, confirm or reject them, write down new assumptions, and clearly show the adaptation of the strategy.

    Business Model Canvas
    Business Model Canvas, Click to Enlarge

    3.3.1. Business model canvas

    The business model canvas was devised by Alexander Osterwalder. Using the frame allows you to present how the company will generate money with a diagram structure and clear visualization.

    The diagram structure, which can be used by all types of organizations for writing down key hypotheses and rapidly designing business models, including lean startups, encompasses nine frames:

    • Value proposition – Value proposition defines the way in which the organization solves the problem and satisfies customers’ needs. Value proposition is what defines the reason why customers decide to buy from a specific company.
    • Customer segments – The organization offers its products or services to one or more customer segments. In this segment, there is the important decision to be made about which segments take priority and which are not important.
    • Sales channel – Customers access the value proposition through communication, distribution and sales channels. This part of the business model includes all activities, from increasing the awareness about the product on the market to planned use of different distribution channels.
    • Customer relationships – An organization has to implement certain activities with which it establishes and maintains customer relationships. This includes activities like retaining customers, after-sales activities, additional sales, and other activities for building a strong customer relationship.
    • Revenue streams – Successful value proposition for potential customers through sales channels is seen in successfully created revenue streams. Revenue streams can be one‑time, in case there is a single purchase, or repeatable, if the customer makes a purchase with the provider several times.
    • Key resources – The part of canvas that includes key resources deals with assumptions about which resources are vital for serving customers and other business activities. Key resources can be physical resources (such as machines, facilities), they can be intellectual property (such as patents, brands etc.), and amongst them are also human resources and the need for capital resources.
    • Key activities – The organization achieves all desired goals through implementing a certain number of key activities that lead to the goal step-by-step. Key activities have to be defined mostly on the basis of all other parts of the business model.
    • Key partners – Some of the activities are carried out by other partners or the organization leases certain resources and services on the market, meaning it needs reliable key partners. Key partners mostly include strategic partners, subcontractors, suppliers and joint investments.
    • Cost structure – Business operations of an organization create costs that need to be thoroughly defined and compared to the revenue streams. With costs, it is important to define fixed and variable costs as well as the potential positive impact of the economies of scale.
    Lean Canvas
    Lean Canvas, Click to Enlarge

    3.3.2. Lean canvas

    Ash Maurya derived the lean canvas from the business model canvas by Alexander Osterwalder, as described in his book Business Model Generation. The lean canvas differs from the business model canvas mostly in that it is meant exclusively for startups.

    The business model canvas includes a large part of planned infrastructure (partners, activities, resources, customer relationships), while the lean canvas focuses exclusively on areas that are most important for startups. Thus key partners are substituted by the problem, key activities with the solution, resources with metrics, and customer relationships with unfair advantage.

    The purpose of the lean frame is that it helps the startup dissect the business model to nine components that can be systematically tested, starting with the most and ending with the least risky one. An important fact is that not only is the startup’s product a “product for the market”, but rather the entire business model is a “product for the market”.

    The nine components of the lean canvas are:

    • Problem – The startup team lists the three biggest problems that customers face and that need to be solved for the chosen customer segment. The problems can be imagined as the tasks and effort that the customer should make or does have to make without the solution. It’s also important that under problems, the startup team writes how the customers are currently solving them.
    • Solution – In the solution segment of the canvas, the startup team writes every thought on what is the easiest way to start solving every problem written down.
    • Unique value proposition – The field of unique value proposition defines how the startup’s solution is different from the competition and why it is worth the attention. In the starting stages of building the company, grabbing the attention of the customer is highlighted more than sales. By defining the unique value proposition, the startup extracts the essence of the product and has to describe it in a few words that clearly show how it will attract customers. A well-defined unfair advantage answers two key questions, namely what the startup’s product is and who the product customer is.
    • Unfair advantage – An unfair advantage is defined as something that can’t easily be copied by the competition. Unfair advantages can include everything from internal information and personal authority to the community and existing customers. Usually certain unfair advantages start as the basic values of the company and become the company’s differentiators, so what the customers use to differ the company from the competition.
    • Channels – Channels are paths to customers. In the learning stage, it makes sense for the startup to use all channels to potential customers and find those that lead to a sufficient number of customers as soon as possible. In this, the startup needs to realize that free channels don’t exist. Even those that seem free (social media, search engines etc.), have costs in the form of human capital. It is also sensible for the startup to give priority to inbound channels, namely those where customers find you on their own (the so-called pull messaging), rather than outbound channels. Examples of inbound channels are blogs, e-books etc. It is also advisable that at the beginning, the startup focuses on channels that are as direct as possible, because that enables maximum learning.
    • Segments – In the field of segments, the startup recognizes all potential users and puts them into segments (groups that are as homogenous as possible). Inside every segment, it is crucial that a startup creates a picture of a ideal customer (personas), whereby it makes sense to follow the goal of finding the early adopters, not aiming at all customers and the mainstream market from the very beginning.
    • Key metrics – In the canvas, the startup defines its key metrics. These include certain key numbers based on which the startup can measure progress and how well it is doing. In this, the recommended model is to use Dave McClure’s pirate metrics, which include the whole picture from raising awareness of the brand and creating demand to recommendations.
    • Revenue streams – Revenue streams, together with the cost structure, help the startup evaluate the lucrativeness of the idea. In this, it is important that the startup doesn’t think about long-term three- to five-year predictions, but more about the short term. It is also incredibly important that the startup thinks about potential streams from the beginning, because the way of pricing is an important part of the product. There is a rule (with certain exceptions) that if the entrepreneur is intending to charge for the product, they should do so from the first day. Beside this, the price determines which customer segment the company is in, and payment is the first form of validating the business idea. Revenue streams, pricing strategy, and earliest possible charging are thus important aspects of the business model.
    • Cost structure – With costs, it’s important that the startup knows the necessary amount of capital needed to launch the minimum viable product. Afterwards, it constantly renews and supplements this amount based on the feedback from the market. At the beginning, this amount of capital includes covering the costs for doing 30 – 50 interviews with customers, and for creating and launching the minimum viable product. The startup simply lists all operative costs that will grow until product launch.

    3.3.3. Recommended steps in making a lean or business model canvas

    It is recommendable that the startup (entrepreneur) starts thinking about who the potential customers for their product could be, and make a list. In this, they must strictly distinguish between customers (those who pay) and product users.

    In the next step, it’s advisable that they divide wide segments of users into smaller ones, because in entrepreneurship there is the general rule that it isn’t possible to create, design and position a product for everyone. When the startup is preparing a list of potential customers, it has to keep very specific customers in mind.

    In the next step, the startup starts preparing the lean (or business model) canvas. It is recommendable to start with one canvas, with two to three customer segments that are most promising, and using different colours and labels for different segments in the same canvas.

    During preparation, it is important that the startup sketches the canvas in one go (in less than 15 minutes), because the point of the first sketch is for the startup to write a short summary of its current thoughts and assumptions.

    There’s nothing wrong with a few fields staying empty, it’s more important that the startup is succinct with the first sketch, thinks about the present, focuses on the customers, then goes out of the building as soon as possible to test its model with other stakeholders.

    When the startup team goes out of the building and starts doing interviews, it upgrades the lean canvas based on the feedback.

    Lean startup - Hypotheses example
    Example of setting hypotheses – simplified and made up case

    3.4. Setting and verifying hypotheses

    The basis of the lean startup methodology is that the entrepreneur changes their business thoughts, ideas, assumptions and strategies into falsifiable assumptions or hypotheses. The point of such an approach is better risk management.

    A falsifiable hypothesis is nothing other than a statement that can easily be proven wrong. The statement we are testing as a hypothesis has to have a specific and measurable outcome, and be based on a specific and repeatable action.

    The prediction already enables you to more easily verify the actual state and a better judgement, even though mistakes are possible in evaluating the expected outcome.

    Verifying assumptions always takes place in collaboration with (potential) customers. The most typical mistake made by startups is to develop a product in absence of customers.

    It is simply impossible to learn about the market and the customers if there is no interaction with the customers and if at a certain point, customers don’t start using the minimum viable product and that is then the source of real feedback.

    Ash Maurya defines the falsifiable hypothesis as:

    Falsifiable hypothesis = [specific repeatable action] will [expected measurable outcome]

    The key purpose of testing assumptions is that instead of having blind faith in its assumptions, the startup team purposefully tests and tries to prove that their assumptions about the business and customers are wrong. By verifying assumptions, the team or entrepreneur-individual try to find shortcomings in their business idea on purpose.

    Setting hypotheses is confirmed qualitatively, and checked quantitatively. The sequence of using methods is that qualitative verification takes precedence over the quantitative. By testing, the startup follows goals to receive a strong positive or negative reaction from the market.

    Not a big sample of potential customers is needed to achieve that. By verifying hypotheses, the startup wishes to better manage mostly three key risks:

    • Product risk – Product risk is connected to how to correctly make a product, namely which functionalities to develop so that the customers will be willing to pay for it. When using the lean startup methodology, it is recommended that the entrepreneur first makes sure that they have a problem that needs to be solved; if they have one, they can then determine the specifications of the minimum viable product and make it; when it is made, the startup validates the minimum viable product on a small scale and in the last step on a big scale.
    • Customer risk – Customer risk is connected mostly to how to find the path to customers. The process of lowering risks with the lean startup method recommends that the entrepreneur should first focus on who even has a problem, then focus on the earlyadopters that want to have the product immediately.
    • Market risk – Market risk deals with the question of how to create a profitable business. Systematically managing risk according to the lean startup methodology includes recognizing the competition and its alternative existing solutions, setting the product price, and testing the price based on first spoken and written reactions of customers and their behaviour. In the last step, the startup optimizes costs by arriving at a suitable business model.

    All three risks can be summarized in two key assumptions that the lean startup must confirm, namely the value hypothesis and the growth hypothesis.

    When the business team sets a vision, the next step inside the lean startup methodology is that they break it apart into smaller pieces inside the business model or lean canvas. The most important components are exactly these two hypotheses.

    The startup uses the value hypothesis to check whether the product based on a vision really brings value to the customers (they’re prepared to pay for it), and uses the scientifically-set growth hypothesis to check how new customers will discover the profitable product or service.

    A condition for learning is failure, which shows through rejected hypotheses. If you don’t experience failure, you can’t learn, which leads us to validated learning.

    Two basic hypothesis of the lean startup

    Main hypothesis Validation
    Value hypothesis Idea confirmation
    Product confirmation
    Growth hypothesis Confirmation of engines of growth

    3.5. Validated learning

    When customers use a product, they create feedback and with it important information. Feedback can be qualitative as well as quantitative.

    Information from the first customers is significantly more important for a startup than an investment, victories at various competitions or media releases, because they are the input element for further development of product functionalities and ranking the importance of business ideas.

    When we speak of entrepreneurial learning, high caution is necessary. Learning is one of the most frequent excuses for failure. We can often hear the excuse we didn’t succeed, but at least we learned a lot.

    Entrepreneurs as well as managers quickly find excuses in saying what important lessons and new knowledge the failure brought. It can be very cold comfort, mostly to investors in the company who lost the invested resources, and entrepreneurs who lost the invested resources as well as their time and precious energy.

    Learning is important, but it shouldn’t only serve as a cheap excuse, but rather needs a different name and a more detailed definition. We are talking about validated learning.

    Learning about the market and customers is the key task of startups, because it’s the only way to build a real product. In doing so, actual learning isn’t the one that serves only as an excuse, but rather the one that tells which elements of the strategy work and which ones don’t.

    Real learning says exactly what customers want and what they don’t. Not even what they say they want or what they think they want, but what they actually want. Real learning gives feedback about the behaviour of potential customers. It’s called validated learning and it’s a key concept of the lean startup.

    Validated learning is a process that can empirically prove that the business team has discovered an insight into the market and customers, current and future ones. In validated learning, the information is more concrete, exact and faster compared to traditional marketing research and business planning.

    Validated learning helps the business team to learn and systematically eliminate everything that is a waste of resources, which includes all that the customers aren’t prepared to pay for. It should be stressed once again that validated learning is always supported with empirical data that are gathered from real (potential) customers.

    Thus the key goal of discovering and developing customers, and validated learning, is that the lean startup team understands which functionalities in the product aren’t needed. At the end, validated learning must show in improvements of key and lean startup metrics.

    In the beginning stages of business operations, these metrics are rarely the revenue, they are always connected to what the customers want. The customers might not know what they want, so it’s crucial to systematically verify assumptions with help of the minimum viable product.

    By validating or disproving hypotheses, the startup learns about the market and customers. A validated hypothesis thus means nothing other than that the business team is, based on data, confident enough to continue investing time, money and effort into a certain direction.

    In this, a healthy measure of scepticism is always necessary, the customer’s behaviour is more important than their words. This leads us to the fact that in a lean startup, learning first takes place outside the conference room (amongst the customers).

    3.6. Learning outside the conference room

    As we have seen, the main function of a lean startup as a temporary organization for validating the business model is customer discovery and development.

    In the stage of discovering and developing customers, the vision of the founders is transformed into a set of assumptions on the lean or business model canvas that need to be tested on the market.

    Discovering customers always takes place “out of the building”, and the key purpose of the process is mostly detailed understanding of the customer’s problem and the greatness of need for making the solution for the problem.

    First, let’s say a word about where the concept of learning outside the conference room comes from. In Toyota methodology of lean production, an important concept is “genchi gembutsu”, the translation of which is “go and see for yourself”.

    The wisdom of this concept is that you get direct knowledge about something through your own experience. The same concept is also used in lean startup, called “get out of the building” because early contact with the customer is what reveals the riskiest and most critical assumptions of the business.

    No matter how many intermediaries are between the company and customers, at the end customers are living and thinking individuals who behave according to certain patterns that are measurable and can be influenced. This is why intense contact between the lean startup and customers is necessary for developing the right product.

    The startup learns fastest in conversation with customers. When it comes to learning, talking to people is more important than collecting analytical data. Because customer discovery is about discovering the unknown, surveys and focus groups aren’t the best option.

    With a survey, the startup assumes that they already know the right questions (and sometimes answers), and this prevents additional explanations and the analysis of other unexpected areas. Focus groups often develop into group thinking, which prevents the collection of real concrete data.

    Customer discovery thus takes place mostly with interviews. For effectively doing interviews, mostly the following instructions are recommended:

    • The startup should focus on learning, not on selling their idea. It is crucial that in the interview, you only set the context, then let the customer speak most of the time. Every communication with a potential customer has to be a learning opportunity for the startup.
    • In interviews, potential customers often aren’t completely honest, either from politeness, a lack of interest or any other reason. That’s why it’s important that the startup observes the customers’ behaviour and measures what they are doing or how they are reacting. An example of getting a reaction is a call-to-action, such as getting a verbal commitment for buying the product with advance payment.
    • It’s important that the interviews follow a certain scenario, meaning that the startup is able to ensure the consistency and repeatability of interviews. The best way to achieve that is by using fixed scenarios.
    • A startup can start with a wider range of starting potential customers when doing the interviews, and set the exact target group later, once it starts a new round of detailed interviews.
    • It is recommended that at least two people are present at the interview, so that mistakes resulting from forgetfulness are prevented and more facts are detected.
    • Different financial incentives or rewards for participating in the interview aren’t desired. After all, the startup wants the potential customer to buy the product, not for the startup to pay the potential customer for participating in the interview.
    • Interviews should take place live, if at all possible, it’s best to start with personal contacts, choose a neutral location, and ensure enough time. It’s recommended that you avoid recording the interviews, because interviewees behave differently. The results should always be noted directly after the interview, while the thoughts are still fresh.
    The mom test
    Source: Rob Fitzpatrick – The mom test

    3.6.1. The customer discovery interview – problem

    The startup guarantees the consistency and repeatability of interviews by preparing a suitable scenario. In general, there are two types of interviews, namely the interview for learning about the problem and the interview for testing the solution.

    The goal of the first is to gain information from potential customers about whether they actually face a certain problem, while the second interview type is dedicated to obtaining feedback about the startup’s solution and inbound data for creating the minimum viable product.

    The scenario of doing the interview for learning about the problem (not testing the solution) includes several stages, suggested by Ash Maurya:

    1. Welcome (2 min),
    2. Collecting general and important demographic information (2 min)
    3. Presenting the problem together with the context and ranking problems that the customer supposedly faces (6 min)
    4. Discovering the customer’s view on the world and posing sub-questions (15 min)
    5. Conclusion (2 min)
    6. Writing down results (5 min)

    In the stage of conclusion, it is important that the startup does two more things: Explains its solution on a conceptual level and gains the permission to further inform about the product.

    An individual interview should consequently take about 30 minutes. Before an entrepreneur decides to make the final product following the lean startup methodology, they should test the solution with a minimum viable product, about which more below.

    The biggest challenge in doing interviews for learning about the problem of the lean startup is usually that the lean startup finds it difficult to resist the desire to present its solution and business idea. But that leads the conversation away from the key goal, which is deeply and thoroughly understanding the customer’s problems.

    Within the interview about the problem, it is incredibly important to realize that the purpose isn’t for the team to gather information about what specifications the customer would want. The team’s task is to find early users that need a solution consistent with the company’s vision.

    The most important things that a startup should learn when talking to potential customers about the problem are:

    1. One to three main problems that potential customers face, including the suitable context of the startup’s business idea
    2. How potential customers are currently solving this problem
    3. How big or painful is this problem
    4. What are the costs of this problem and existing solutions, are there any obstacles preventing the potential customer from starting to use a new better solution
    5. In what way could the customers most easily get the information about a new better solution the the startup has to offer

    For quality insight into understanding the problem, the startup should carry out between 30 and 60 interviews in the period of four to six weeks. The best measurement for stopping interviews is when they don’t give any new more knowledge to the startup.

    There are many opportunities for obtaining potential interviewees:

    • the startup can start with personal contacts,
    • by collecting contacts through a website,
    • collecting contacts through social networks,
    • and with cold calls and e-mails.

    3.6.2. The customer discovery interview – solution

    Only talking to customers about problems isn’t enough, because most potential customers know how to clearly express problems that they’re facing, but they often have problems with visualizing solutions.

    That’s why it’s important to do the second type of interviews (in approximately the same scope), where the startup is focused on the solution.

    The scenario of leading the solution interview also consists of:

    • A welcome (2 min),
    • Collecting demographic information (2 min) and presenting the problem with the context (2 min)
    • Presentation of the product, with which you test the solution (15 min)
    • Test of the price (3 min)
    • A conclusion, including writing down the results (2 min).

    In the end, the startup asks for permission to send further notifications and asks for recommendations if the potential customer knows any other potential customers for doing additional interviews.

    For leading a solution interview, the startup needs at least a demo product, if not already a minimum viable product that replaces the actual solution. Feedback based on a demo product can be excellent inbound information for making a minimum viable product.

    Demo products can be sketches, models, prototypes, clay products or products made with a 3D printer, demo presentations etc.

    When making a demo product it’s important that the startup makes it in such a way that it is feasible in practice, it has to look like the real thing, it has to enable quick iterations for additions and upgrades, and it mustn’t be financially wasteful.

    At the interview about the potential solution, the lean startup needs to get information about whether its solution is a sustainable or disruptive innovation – whether the solution can be directly compared to an existing solution.

    This gives the right context of whether you are addressing a new market or not, whether customers have a suitable business environment and the necessary conditions to start using the new solution immediately, whether they see an opportunity and reality of using the new solution in everyday working process and of course, are they prepared to pay for the new solution.

    An important part of the solution interview with potential customers is testing the price. In doing so, you have to stick to the principle that you shouldn’t ask a potential customer how much they are prepared to pay, because this often leads to embarrassment and there is also no reason why the potential customer wouldn’t give an unreasonably low price.

    It’s also important that in the stage of verifying the price, the startup doesn’t decrease the purchase friction (lower price, free use with the purpose of obtaining the first satisfied customers etc.) but increases it instead, because otherwise postponed validation can occur – the customer confirms that they will buy something for a fair price, but we actually don’t know this or they wouldn’t do it.

    The difference between a pitch and a solution interview is that a pitch is an “all-or-nothing” type of an offer. In a solution interview, learning is still in the forefront and the startup leads every step with a clear hypothesis and evaluates the customer’s reaction.

    The stage of customer discovery and validation is concluded when the team, based on tests and iterations of the minimum viable product, proves that the chosen business model can achieve the volume of sales that are needed for the desired profitability of the company.

    The startup team also needs to have concrete metrics and proofs that they can reach a bigger number of customers and consequently rapid growth. At the end of the stage of customer discovery and validation, the business team already has an exact sales plan. In the stage of customer discovery, it’s important that the business team obtains enough information for building the minimum viable product.

    Diffusion of innovation and early adopters

    3.6.3. Earlyevangelists – Excited early users

    In his book Crossing the Chasm, Geoffrey Moore popularized the concept of how new technologies are adopted by the market (based on Everett Rogers’ Diffusion of innovations), whereby the use of technology spreads through five different stages or user groups:

    • Innovators – Aggressively adopt new technologies, exclusively for technological interests. They are mostly the people working with technology, innovators, scholars and other technology enthusiasts. Their main characteristic is that they don’t have a problem spending hours upon hours with a certain technical product until it starts working properly.
    • Early adopters – Adopt and use new technologies because of the actual benefits that they bring. Early adopters are usually visionaries outside and inside organizations, who are the first buyers of new technological products and as such finance their further development. They are prepared to accept bigger risks and convince others in their environment to do the same. Their characteristic is that it is easy to sell something to them but it’s difficult to satisfy their needs, because they are, after all, a type of visionaries.
    • Early majority – They adopt and use new technologies, but only after the technology is developed well enough that there aren’t too many errors and un-working aspects. It’s a pragmatic segment that’s more difficult to profile, because they don’t accept overly large risks like visionaries do.
    • Late majority – They aren’t interested in technology, but they buy a solution when it becomes the market standard. We can call them conservatives. They are against technological changes and are often somewhat afraid of new technologies. They are stubborn towards changes and when they start using new technologies, that doesn’t mean that they like it.
    • Laggards – They don’t want to use new technologies or they adopt them extremely late. They often block the buying of new technologies in environments they work in, which is why it’s incredibly important that technological companies neutralize them.

    Successful lean startups in the first stages don’t develop a product for the mass market, because they usually lack the resources to do so. Instead, it makes sense for them to focus on identifying small groups of people with a big problem or pain that the startup solves with its product.

    Above all, members of this group have to strongly believe the startup’s vision. This group of customers are called earlyevangelists and they are a special segment of early adopters. So the goal of the startup isn’t to find the average customer through the customer discovery process, but to find the enthusiastic earlyevangelist.

    Earlyevangelists are the people who feel that they need the product right away, are prepared to participate in the development stage with feedback, and they allow development mistakes as the first users of the product.

    Steve Blank states the characteristics of earlyvangelists in five key elements:

    • Have a problem and a need.
    • Realize that they have a problem.
    • Were actively looking for a solution in the past and have to solve the problem as soon as possible.
    • Somehow manage to solve the problem temporarily in an ineffective way using several different parts and activities.
    • Have a budget for buying a better solution.

    The key participation of earlyevangelists in the process is mostly that these users have no problem giving feedback and including their idea of which functionalities the product needs and they would be prepared to pay for.

    The incredible importance of enthusiastic earlyevangelists lies mostly in the fact that they are already looking for solutions for the problems they have.

    Thus their purpose isn’t only a desire to use new technology, like it is with innovators. What’s even more important is that they disregard others when making buying decisions and they are prepared to help with feedback.

    Through the customer discovery process, the lean startup must thus find the so-called earlyevangelists who are prepared to actively participate in further development of the solution and buy it, and thus co-finance its development in a way.

    The majority of learning takes place in interaction with these users, and the minimum viable product is indispensable for learning.

    3.7. Minimum viable product

    Developing the entire solution or product is time-consuming and wasteful, especially if it turns out that the startup is developing the wrong solution or developing unnecessary properties. The goal of the lean startup methodology is also to increase the speed of learning.

    The problem is that in the stage of collecting demands, developing the product, and ensuring quality, you get very little information about the market and the customer, so there is almost no learning. The lion’s share of learning happens after launching the product.

    The solution for this problem in the lean startup methodology is the concept of a minimum viable product. With it, the startup learns about the market and customers more quickly, without already finalizing product development based on assumptions that can be wrong.

    In traditional methods of product development, which usually includes long development stages up until perfecting the product and until it is ready for the market, learning typically starts only in the end, when the product is already complete and on the market.

    The goal of the minimum viable product is that learning starts immediately. Unlike the prototype or pilot concept, the purpose of the minimum viable product isn’t to answer the technical and designer questions of the product, but to enable the testing of key business assumptions.

    The minimum viable product is completely different from the final, shiny and incredible product made by perfectionistic values, and it isn’t the product that you gladly show to your parents and that gets awards at different fairs. A minimum viable product often seems like an unacceptable compromise, an unfinished product full of mistakes.

    MVP enables the maximal amount of learning about the customers and the market with the minimum amount of effort.

    This is why when making the minimum viable product, good judgement is important and so is simplification, if the business team doesn’t know whether to add a functionality or not. The minimum viable product needs to include the smallest possible scope of functionalities that solve the central problem for customers.

    The minimum viable product often isn’t a lot more than an advert. Examples of a minimum viable product are:

    • video presentation,
    • manually doing the service instead of building the product,
    • landing pages,
    • testing the idea through crowdfunding,
    • quickly prototyping with 3D printers,
    • and other approaches that give a simulation of the actual product and the potential customer’s purchasing decision.

    The minimum viable product needs to be constantly upgraded based on feedback from customers. Upgrading and iterating the minimum viable product and later the final product in companies following the lean startup methodology often takes place following the methodology of continuous deployment.

    If we summarize what the minimum viable product is, it’s the version of the product that enables the maximal amount of learning about the customers and the market with the minimum amount of effort. It encompasses the smallest possible extent of functionalities that customers are prepared to pay for.

    In this, the rule is that if you aren’t at least a bit embarrassed when you show the minimum viable product to customers, you don’t have a real minimum viable product.

    3.7.1. The customer discovery interview – MVP

    After making an MVP, it’s recommendable that a startup does the third interview, namely the interview about the minimum viable product. The purpose of this is still learning and convincing users to sign up to use the service and in doing so, test the messaging, prices and activation stream.

    The scenario of such an interview includes a welcome (2 min), displaying introductory materials or website (2 min), showing and explaining the price (3 min), acquiring the customer (15 min) and conclusion (2 min), together with writing down the results (5 min).

    The goal is thus to gain additional feedback about the minimum viable product and marketing material, and to get the first paying customers.

    The lean startup cycle

    3.8. Build – measure – learn loop for validated learning

    The method of the lean startup is based on a scientific approach, which means that performing experiments is of key importance.

    An experiment in the lean startup methodology means implementing the cycle that includes the entire validated learning process. This is the build – measure – learn loop whose essence is to get feedback from customers.

    Based on this loop, the basic activity of the startup is to build individual functionalities of the product (which are part of the minimum viable product), and measure how potential customers react (product use metrics). Afterwards, based on the metrics of use and validated learning, entrepreneurs make a decision about whether to keep the functionality or pivot.

    The learning cycle has three stages.

    1. The first stage is the stage of creating, called build, in which the startup makes the minimum viable product based on the assumptions written on the canvas.
    2. Then in the next stage, the startup shows the minimum viable product to customers and, with a combination of qualitative and quantitative data, checks the reaction of customers and thus validates or rejects its assumptions. The stage is thus called measure because the startup measures the reactions of potential customers.
    3. All this leads to the last stage, namely the stage of learning. The findings are what help the startup decide whether a pivot is necessary or not.

    The main point of the build – measure – learn loop, is mostly in reaching a high speed of learning about the market and customers. The goal of the startup is to find a working plan before it runs out of resources, and it finds a working plan based on learning (validating hypotheses) about the market and customers.

    The startup’s goal should be to increase the amount of learning about the biggest risks of the business model in a time unit.

    The faster that the lean startup follows the build – measure – learn loop, the bigger the possibility that the startup finds a working business model on time. If the startup is too slow in following this cycle, it usually fails because the money for financing launch runs out.

    Meanwhile in speed and validated learning, the biggest problem is psychological (ego), because you have to admit small defeats and face unverified assumptions. You must have no problem with being wrong, knowing that you are always wrong before you are right.

    Types of research
    Types of research with examples

    3.9. Startup’s engines of growth

    Once the startup confirms the plan and validates hypotheses on the market, it passes to the stage of rapid growth. In this, the revenue is the first and customer retention the best form of confirming the hypotheses and the right business model.

    Company growth based on the lean startup methodology can originate from three foundations, called the engines of growth.

    An engine of growth is a mechanism and way that startups use to achieve sustainable growth of the company. Company growth primarily depends on three things:

    1. Profitability of individual customers
    2. Costs for acquiring a new customer (CAC)
    3. The speed of repeated purchases by existing customers.

    These are the basic elements of growth of a lean startup, and the bigger that these values are, the faster the company will grow and the more profitable it will be.

    In doing this, engines of growth are a mechanism that the startup uses to reach the desired constant growth. The startup can achieve constant growth only on the basis of:

    • activities of its existing customers, for example through word-of-mouth publicity,
    • repeated purchases,
    • reinvesting the revenue from existing customers into advertising, or
    • consequence of using the product, for example an invitation of friends into online social networks.

    These sources of growth compose the three basic engines of growth. The name “engines of growth” comes from the fact that this is a strong feedback loop where more existing and new customers bring even more new customers to the company.

    In the lean startup theory, we know three basic engines of growth that the company can focus on:

    • The sticky engine of growth: The sticky engine of growth mostly relies on the fact that once customers start using the product, it’s difficult for them to switch to a new product or to stop using it, and so they make repeated purchases. An example of such a product are databases. Growth in this case is determined mostly with the factor of how quickly the startup acquires new customers compared to the churn of existing customers. The sticky engine of growth is based on retaining a large number of customers as compared to the churn rate of existing customers. Growth in this engine is measured and achieved by keeping the customer acquisition rate higher than the churn rate. Churn includes all those customers who leave or don’t want to use the product anymore.
    • The viral engine of growth: Viral growth happens automatically, when existing customers bring in new customers by using the product. The speed of growth in this case depends on the viral coefficient, which measures how many new customers the startup obtains based on one existing customer (and how quickly that happens). For exponential growth, the coefficient has to be at least 1.0, meaning that every existing customer gains at least one new customer. Examples of companies that use such an engine are online social networks. In this, we know three types of virality: such that is inherently a part of the product and happens through product use; such that is artificial and achieved through a reward system; and word-of-mouth virality that happens based on customer satisfaction.
    • The paid engine of growth: The paid engine of growth means that the company reinvests the revenue of existing customers into paid advertisement for obtaining new ones. The speed of growth in this case depends on two factors – how much revenue from an individual the company can reinvest into paid advertising, and how much it costs to acquire one new customer. In this, there is the rule that the cost for customer acquisition is higher for more expensive products, but the profitability of such a customer has to be bigger. The paid engine of growth is based on a high margin. If a startup really achieves very high margin, then it can reinvest part of customer revenue into acquiring new customers. Growth based on the paid engine is measured based on the customer lifetime value and customer acquisition cost. The golden rule is that the customer lifetime value is even three times higher than the cost of their acquisition.

    It’s important for the startup to focus on one model of growth, which usually isn’t obvious at the beginning, but can change throughout the curve of the company’s lifecycle. Choosing the engine of growth strongly defines the choice of metrics that show the progress and development of the company.

    In this stage, not only searching for the suitable engine of growth is important. This stage comes after confirming the problem, solution and customers, and Steve Blank calls it customer creation.

    Customer creation includes finally launching the product after confirming all hypotheses in the customer discovery stage, marketing positioning of the product and company on the market, official launch to the market, and constantly creating new demand with different methods of sales and market communication.

    3.10. Innovation accounting and metrics

    The instinct of the business team gives ideas for experiments, while concrete data and metrics are proof of the accuracy of this instinct. Customer development gives the startup the first feedback about which minimum viable product to build, then validation with concrete metrics is necessary.

    The purpose of innovation accounting and metrics of the lean startup is to ensure a method for measuring progress in extreme uncertainty, where traditional financial planning isn’t useful.

    Traditional accounting and controlling (balance and income statements together with the financial plan) don’t give such good insight into the success of business operations with startups as they do in already established companies, mostly due to a lack of information about stable past business, and an uncertain future.

    This is why a different metric frame for measuring progress of disruptive startups is needed – the so-called innovation accounting. In lean startup, the purpose of analytics and metrics is thus that they show the business team the path to the right product and market before money in the account runs out.

    Innovation accounting is based on three key steps.

    1. The first step is that based on the minimum viable product, the startup starts obtaining concrete information about where the company currently is. Without a factual picture of the current situation, it is impossible to measure progress.
    2. In the second step, the startup must use different tests to try to improve the metrics of growth and progress.
    3. The last step covers the metrics-based decision of whether the company should continue with the strategy or decide to pivot. The startup decides to pivot when every next experiment doesn’t improve business metrics. This means that something is wrong with the strategy and it has to be changed. In case the strategy is changed, the startup returns to step two and once again works in the direction of improving metrics for the ideally planned picture.

    With metrics, making decisions stops being about what customers said in interviews and starts being about strictly measuring what customers are really doing and what their behaviour is. However, it is still necessary for the startup to see actual people or customers behind the numbers of metrics.

    An important problem solved by the minimum viable product and the set metrics is that the more disruptive the innovation, the less the customer is aware of what exactly they need and whether they would use and buy a certain product.

    In sustainable innovations, it’s usually clear what exactly the customer needs (a better and cheaper product), while in disruptive innovations it usually isn’t, because the potential customer hasn’t even had an experience with such a product yet.

    With disruptive innovation, the customer doesn’t know exactly what they want, simply because they aren’t aware of what’s possible outside their current experience and knowledge. This is why it’s necessary to measure the reaction of customers based on the minimum viable product based on metrics, and not only do interviews.

    3.10.1. Vanity metrics

    Vanity metrics are those metrics that note only the current state of the product, but don’t give an insight into how the startup arrived to a certain result and even less how to continue and which strategy to choose.

    Vanity metrics give the team good feelings, you can brag with them or even collect money from inexperienced venture capital investors, but they can absolutely have fatal consequences if the team makes business decisions based on them.

    So every metric or information that doesn’t influence the behavior of the business team and the strategy is a vanity metric. Based on a metric, there should always be an answer to the question of what the business team will do differently.

    3.10.2. Measuring actionable metrics

    The opposite of vanity metrics are actionable metrics. An actionable metric is defined as a metric that can connect specific and repeatable actions to a measurable result. Actionable metrics are actionable, accessible and auditable, which is known as meeting the 3-A criteria.

    Additionally, it’s important that metrics are comparative in different time periods, understandable to the business team and stakeholders, a good metric is also usually a ratio, but above all it strongly influences the behaviour of the business team, answering the question of what the team will be doing differently.

    That’s why it’s necessary that metrics are closely connected to clearly set goals of the lean startup.

    Metrics are often introduced based on funnel reports and cohort analyses. Funnel reports are designed in a way that you choose a certain period of reporting, in which certain key events inside the sales funnel are considered and shown.

    The key events inside a sales funnel are, for example, acquisition, activation and sales. For a more advanced analysis, funnel reports have to be connected to cohorts.

    Cohort analysis
    Example of cohort analysis. Source KD nugget

    The cohort can be designed based on any characteristic that we wish to assign to users, but the most usual characteristics when preparing cohort analyses are the starting date of product use, gender, operating system and similar.

    We can compare cohorts with one another and then observe differences inside the sales funnel – for example how many potential customers activated and bought a product in this week compared to the week before or any other time period that we wish to monitor.

    Cohorts are important because with rapid development of new product iterations, those users who start using the product in the first week don’t have the same experience as those who start using the product a week later. Designing cohorts enables you to monitor various metrics in detail, including revenue, churn rate, virality and other important metrics.

    When measuring metrics, it’s important that startups consider all the key rules of statistical data management, namely keeping the data clean and normalized, and correctly considering bigger deviancies, seasonal components and other possible irregularities.

    In doing so, it’s important to know that a startup drowning in data that it doesn’t know how to interpret is no better than a startup that collects no data.

    That’s why when it comes to measuring actionable metrics, it’s incredibly important that in each growth stage, the startup chooses the one most important metric. This helps keeps focus and discipline in the company. Focus is one of the most important factors of every startup’s success. The one metric that matters is what completely focuses the workings of a lean startup in a certain stage.

    The one metric that matters in a given stage should inspire a culture of experimentation, focus the entire company, answer the most important and critical questions of the business model, be closely connected to the goals, and show the startup’s progress or, in other words, define success.

    The formula for correctly focusing the company is that a startup team should have 1 to 2 specific business goals, one key metric, a list of activities that lead to business goals (whereby we always have to stay flexible about what these activities are based on market feedback), and lastly a real timeframe is necessary.

    In this, it is necessary to realize that it’s better to have 1 to 2 key goals than 3, 5 or even more goals.

    3.10.3. Pirate metrics

    For defining business metrics, Dave McClure’s pirate metrics are the most used model. It was designed mostly for companies making software, but it can also be used in other industries.

    The model encompasses five different stages – the so called AARRR funnel, inside which different metrics types are measured. The five stages inside the model are:

    • Acquisition – Acquisition happens when a random visitor transforms into an interested potential customer. It happens based on marketing, which can be advertising, using social networks, recommendations, or through any other channel that triggers interest with potential customers.
    • Activation – Activation is when a customer has their first user experience with the use of the product. Activation means that the user buys or uses the service at least once, registers for product testing, or establishes active interest for buying the product in some other way.
    • Retention – Retention is defined as repeated use of the product and the level to which the product attracts the customer. Because the customers are happy with the product’s functionalities, they use it again and regularly. Examples of metrics in this stage are the time from last use of the product, the frequency of product use, customer churn rate etc. Customer retention is the best indicator of the success and suitability of the product.
    • Revenue – Revenue metrics measure when and why customers pay. Examples of metrics that a startup can monitor in this stage are customer lifetime value, purchase conversions, size of purchase chart and similar.
    • Referral – Referral metrics measure how many of the existing customers bring new customers into the conversion funnel. Referrals are a more advanced form of customer acquisition, where satisfied customers bring in new customers. The existing customers are so excited about the product that they use word-of-mouth marketing or even bragging to bring new customers to the top of the funnel. Examples of metrics in this stage are the number of sent recommendations, the viral coefficient, and the speed of the virality cycle.

    3.10.4. Four stages of a lean startup

    Based on different stages of building a lean startup (customer discovery, customer validation, customer creation, building a company) and the frame of innovation metrics based on which the lean startup monitors its progress (funnel, cohort analysis, pirate metrics),…

    …we can define four stages that describe the set of metrics that the lean startup should most focus on.

    These four stages are:

    • Emphatic stage – In this stage, all metrics are focused on understanding the market and customers, what’s happening in the customer’s mind, and whether the problem being solved is truly one for which customers are prepared to pay for. Metrics are connected mostly to interviews, surveys and research.
    • Sticky stage – In this stage, metrics are mostly connected to whether the right solution is being built for the problem that customers have. If customers don’t use the product regularly, this is a clear indicator that their problem isn’t big enough or that the solution isn’t suitable.
    • Viral stage – When the company successfully completes the emphatic and sticky stage, it transitions into the viral stage, where all the important metrics are focused into how many new customers are brought in by existing customers, either through excitement about the product or in any other way.
    • Revenue stage – When the company confirms the value hypothesis based on empathy, regular product use and viral acquisition of new customers, it focuses on maximizing and optimizing revenue. It transitions more and more from innovation metrics to traditional monitoring of the company’s financial status.
    • Rapid growth stage – The last stage focuses metrics on expanding business operations to new geographic markets, new verticals and secondary segments. The company invests additional resources into new distribution channels and rapid growth. For a successfully completed stage of rapid growth, the company must know the company’s key engines of growth.

    It’s incredibly important for the business team to know which stage it’s in, and to focus its actions and the metrics it’s monitoring.

    Of course it’s possible for the lean startup to be somewhere in between the stages or in several stages at once, but it’s still important that it’s clearly defined where exactly the startup is, and that the metrics it monitors are suitably adjusted.

    3.11. Pivot

    We know two basic strategic activities of business operations. The first one is optimization and the second one is pivot. When the startup is in the stage of pivot, it’s looking for a real plan that works.

    Within the stage of finding and developing customers, the startup is trying to validate individual parts of business model canvas assumptions. Based on validating individual parts of the assumptions, the startup decides to adjust the direction or pivot, if needed.

    A pivot is nothing other than a fundamental change in strategy, while the startup keeps the vision. A pivot can be expertly defined as a structural course correction with the purpose of testing a new central assumption about the product, strategy or engine of growth.

    A successfully executed pivot in business demands that the startup considers everything it learned about the market and product up until the pivoting point, and decides to pivot with the purpose of additionally accelerating validated learning. The more money, time and creative energy that were invested in the initial idea, the more difficult it is to pivot.

    Examples of the most frequent pivots in business are:

    • Zoom-in pivot: An individual functionality of the product or service becomes the one and only functionality, others are abandoned.
    • Zoom-out pivot: The product or service becomes only one of the functionalities of a bigger and more expansive product or service.
    • Customer segment pivot: The startup realizes that it actually solves a problem on the market, but for a different target group than expected, so it decides to pivot to the new customer segment.
    • Customer need pivot: In the stage of customer discovery, the startup realizes that customers have bigger challenges with a different problem type, so it decides to build a solution for a different problem than initially intended.
    • Platform pivot: The startup decides to rearrange the application into a platform or vice-versa. It’s mostly applicable to IT companies.
    • Business architecture pivot: The startup decides for a different business architecture, for example going from a boutique market to the mass market or changing the basic business architecture in another way.
    • Value capture pivot: The startup decides for a different pricing strategy, different way of charging (for example from one-time payment into a subscription model) or decides for a different change that influences the way of charging and the pricing policy.
    • Engine of growth pivot: Based on several types of engines of growth, the startup decides to go from one model of growth to another with the purpose of achieving bigger profitability and quicker growth.
    • Chanel pivot: The startup decides for other main distribution channels and a way to market, sell and distribute its products and services to its customers.
    • Technology pivot: New technologies can often allow a startup to achieve a better price, quicker development, and ensure bigger quality. In such cases, the startup can decide to pivot in its use of the basic technologies with which the product or service is made.

    If the startup team doesn’t decide for a pivot, optimization follows. Optimization is an acceleration of a working plan.

    Within the scope of optimization, the startup stops validating individual parts of the business plan, and starts to work on the hypotheses with the purpose of achieving the highest possible effectiveness and growth of the company.

    3.12. Team formation

    As already mentioned, in line with a completely different approach to building a company, the lean company methodology recommends a different organizational structure.

    Instead of the standard functional organization structure and the traditionally named departments, such as engineering, marketing, quality control etc., it’s recommended that a startup forms two working groups:

    1. The team for the problem (or customer discovery)
    2. The team for the solution (or making the solution with quick iterations)

    The purpose of such an organizational structure is mostly that there is no friction between the departments, and employees are focused on real priorities.

    The problem team in a lean startup mostly does activities out of the building, including doing interviews and talking with customers, executing different use tests.

    Meanwhile the other team (called the solution team) mostly does activities inside the office, including product development, doing tests and similar. It’s recommended that both teams share certain tasks, such as customer communication, for example.

    Both teams or all founders of the lean startup need to have a strong passion towards the vision and what they do. Successful lean startups are different from the majority of people, they are only a small part of the entire population. Most people are extremely good in doing tasks.

    But successful lean startups have characteristics that enable them to work incredibly well in turbulent conditions, uncertainty and rapid learning. And even more, they are irrationally and completely focused on customers’ needs and giving the customers incredible products.

    An important part of the lean startup’s culture, which concerns all team members, is sharing all information and realizations in the learning stage. In the most successful startups, there is always the rule of information transparency.

    For such sharing, it makes sense and it’s necessary that besides regular weekly meetings, the team uses different technical tools, such as blogs, tools for product development and customer management, and similar.

    4. Transition from the startup into a mature company

    After validating the value hypothesis, the engines of growth, and the entire business model, the company transitions from the startup stage of “searching” into the stage of rapid growth and designing a professional executive organization.

    In order to transition from the startup stage, it is necessary that the company reaches the mass market with its product, clearly designs the management strategy and the mission of the company, designs the traditional functional organization structure, and consequently forms quick-to-react departments that are responsible for individual functions in the company.

    The company can only transition from the startup stage into the growth stage after the product/market fit. For achieving that, the following conditions need to be fulfilled:

    1. Customers are prepared to pay for the product
    2. The customer acquisition cost is significantly smaller than the customer lifetime value
    3. There is enough firm proof that the market is big enough for the company to grow quickly and reach a big enough segment of customers.

    Entrepreneurs usually know very well when they reach product/market fit (they don’t ask themselves about it anymore), and another good indicator is if more than 40 % of existing customers claim that they’d be very disappointed if the product weren’t on the market anymore.

    In the experience of Sean Ellis, 40 % or more of customers who would be miserable without the product is a good indicator of the product/market fit. A common way of measuring customer satisfaction is also net promoter score.

    Net promoter score
    Net promoter score, Source: Checkmarketing

    In this, he recommends that if the company has not yet found its product/market fit, it should lower the monthly costs of business operations as much as possible and direct all resources into increasing the percentage of customers that would be very disappointed.

    Besides failing to find a business model, the majority of companies fail because of too mature scaling. In such a scenario, there is usually too little concrete proof that the mass market for the product exists, but the team still decides for rapid growth.

    The reason lies in the chasm between the innovators, earlyadopters, and the mass market. This is known as the chasm in the Bell curve.

    For crossing the chasm, it is necessary for the startup to properly confirm the assumptions of the primary engine of growth and the size of the market, and mostly to carry out a suitable transition from a “garage” company organization to a professional one.

    5. Problems and limitations of lean techniques

    The first important fact is that lean startup methodologies aren’t suitable for all newly created companies but mostly for those that are doing business based on disruptive, not sustainable innovations.

    Disruptive innovations are those where the problem still isn’t well-understood, a completely new unknown market is addressed (the so-called blue ocean), the innovation dramatically changes the patterns of operation, the segment of customers isn’t yet clearly defined, and the market is completely unpredictable.

    With sustainable innovations, where the problem is completely understood, the market already exists, the customer segment is well‑plotted, the market is predictable, and the innovation only improves the functionalities, lowers the price, or logically linearly improves the product or service in some other way, traditional methods of planning completely suffice.

    The biggest and most frequent obstacles to using the methodologies of the lean startup, minimum viable product and other approaches, are:

    1. Legal questions connected to the protection of intellectual property
    2. Fear of the competition’s superiority, because having only a MVP
    3. Risks connected to the strength of the brand
    4. A negative influence on the business team’s morale, because of all the small failures (learning)
    5. Entrepreneurs are also usually extremely sceptical and afraid of using a minimum viable product, because they fear that an unfinished product would harm the company, customers would stop using the unfinished product or even that their idea would get stolen.

    We can find several wrong interpretations of lean methods, for example that this means building a company cheaply (speed is essential), that it’s easy to follow these methodologies (it’s not and the problem for that is mostly the entrepreneurs’ ego) and similar.

    But it is definitely the case that the tools and approaches aren’t perfected yet and have as many proponents as opponents.

    6. Resources and additional reading

    Here you can find the collection of resources used for this article and as suggestions for additional reading.

    6.1. Books

    1. Alvarez, Cindy – Lean Customer Development
    2. Blank, Steven, Bob Dorf – The Startup Owner’s Manual
    3. Blank, Steven – The Four Steps to the Epiphany
    4. Cooper & Vlaskovits – The Entreprenur’s Guide to Customer Development
    5. Cooper & Vlaskovits – The Lean Entrepreneur
    6. Croll, Alistair in Benjamin Yoskovitz – Lean Analytics
    7. Ellis, Sean – Lean Marketing for Startups
    8. Fitzpatric, Robert – The mom test
    9. Florida, Richard – The Rise of the Creative Class
    10. Liker, Jeffrey – The Toyota Way: 14 Management Principles from Toyota
    11. Maurya, Ash – Running lean
    12. Moore, Geoffrey A. – Crossing the Chasm
    13. Osterwalder, Alexander, Yves Pigneur – Business Model Generation
    14. Ridderstråle, Jonas, Kjell Nordström – Funky Business Forever
    15. Ries, Eric – The Lean Startup
    16. O’Reilly – The Lean Series

    6.2. Blogs and articles

    6.3. Videos and courses

    AgileLeanLife - Agile & Lean You

    6.4. Agile & Lean YOU – apply the lean startup techniques to increase personal productivity

    As we have seen, one of the toughest career challenges you can set for yourself in life is starting, growing and managing a new business. Living a start-up life is no piece of cake.

    The challenge of the same difficulty or even much harder is living a happy and productive life. We all have to deal with disappointments, obstacles, fears and life tests.

    But there are many parallels and similarities between managing a startup and personal life. And that is the main idea of this blog – how to apply agile and lean techniques in your personal life to achieve a completely new level of personal performance. Read more about it:

  • Don’t worry about failure, because you only have to be right once

    In almost every blog post, I emphasize that you have to search for your personal fits before you commit to or brutally focus on anything.

    The reason for that is to not set your life strategy based on naivety and wrong assumptions, but to really get to know yourself and your environment with mini experiments, which enables you to shape your life strategy based on superior insights, immediate feedback and actionable metrics.

    Consequently, you can adjust more quickly and focus on what really brings progress, success and happiness.

    It’s very well proven that agile and lean strategy works not only in the startup world, but also among big brands, non-profit organizations and other business entities as well as in personal life as this blog teaches you. And we must not forget that the agile and lean methodologies are taught at the best business schools in the World.

    There is only one huge problem with this strategy.

    You must have the guts to experiment, you must have the courage to try hundreds of different things and you must be prepared to fail. You must be prepared to learn through failure and put your ego aside. You have to admit to yourself that you’re wrong, that you don’t know anything. At least in the beginning.

    In addition to that, you also need a little bit of scientific nature. You must be curious, you need the desire to try different things, to understand the world as well as possible, and you must be eager to gain superior insights about yourself and what you want out of life. You also need a set of metrics and a framework to decide when to persevere and when to pivot.

    You almost always have to face some kind of apathy before you find your fit, which means that following the AgileLeanLife strategy requires quite a lot of resilience, persistence and faith in the process. But there is some very good news when we talk about apathy.

    Much like there’s the rule that you are always wrong before you are right, in the same way there is a rule that you only have to be right once. Once you find your fit, you definitely still face different problems and challenges, but your life gets much easier. You know why and for what to fight. Your life mission becomes more important and huge than anything else in life.

    Let’s go step by step and build the case for why you only have to be right once.

    Why does finding the right fit matter so much?

    The only way to be really successful in any area of life is first finding your own fit. Some people are lucky enough that their parents, teachers or mentors see their potential and orientate them onto the right path towards their fit, but in most cases you have to find it once you enter the adult life.

    Values, which show what’s important to you and what you value, are what determines whether you fit with something or not. And your talents and other personality traits also play a big role. Anyway, when you find the right fit, you just know it.

    When you find it, passion awakens in you. You find yourself in something. You know that you can be successful in this. You see potential. You start to flourish and consider yourself lucky.

    I’ve seen people working in companies where they fit in and where they don’t. The difference in their level of happiness, productivity, motivation etc. is like night and day. I’ve seen people struggle with a sport just because it was supposed to help them lose weight the fastest, and people who were doing a sport they’re talented for and really like. The first ones gave up very soon, the second ones made real lifestyle changes.

    I’ve seen people who settled for the first partner they dated as well as people who made up their minds about what kind of a partner they want and then started searching until they found someone close to that. The probability of long-term happiness is much higher for the latter. That’s why finding your personal fit is so important.

    So here’s the first rule of success in life and the road to living a good quality life.

    Find the right person to build an intimate relationship with. Find a person for whom all the struggle is really worth it; and it will be worth it. Find a career that really suits you best, one that you’re passionate about and where you can really deliver the value added. In the same way, find your perfect diet, a sport you like, a group of people who support you and where you fit in, and so on.

    In every single life area put in the effort to find your perfect fit, the thing that is part of your DNA and on which you can build a successful life. Successful people find their fits, unsuccessful people are trying to be something they’re not or do things that lie far away from their talents.

    Hitting target

    You find your fit through the search mode

    I hope finding your fits makes sense to you. But how do you do that? You find your fit using the search mode.

    The idea of the search mode is that you consciously prepare yourself through a series of failures that will hurt a lot, but will open to you the path to validated learning about yourself and your environment. The search mode represents a mindset and a somewhat scientific and systematic approach to finding your fit.

    • You go to a several dates that don’t work out
    • You work at a few companies that just aren’t for you
    • You try a few different occupations and suck at them
    • You buy yourself a thing in hope that will make you happy but it doesn’t
    • All these things hurt, but they enable you to learn about yourself

    The first characteristic of the search mode is a special mindset. In the search mode, you shouldn’t have any expectations, you shouldn’t make any commitments and you shouldn’t do any hard work.

    In the search phase, you just try, experiment, observe, reflect and learn about yourself and the world. The most important thing in this phase is to have no fixed ideas and no expectations at all. The key thing is to not to get too ego invested.

    The second special characteristic of the search mode is the approach. Your only job in the search mode is to test the assumptions you’ve written down, correct them, and try different things. The key is to stay 100 % flexible and open-minded and, as mentioned, not invested in anything. Because the more you get invested, the more inflexible you become.

    In practical terms, that means you should have a spreadsheet or a list of paper, where you write down:

    • What your assumption about yourself or the world is (I think the vegetarian diet would work for me)
    • How you will put your assumption to the test (I won’t eat meat for 3 months.)
    • How you will measure results (blood test, happiness index, energy levels etc.)
    • In which case you will decide to persevere and in which to pivot
    • A list of additional experiments you can make after you finish this one

    The key thing you have to do is to do regular reflections when you’re performing the experiments. That is the most valuable part of the process.

    Before marking a hypothesis as validated or rejected, you should ask yourself what you’ve learned, what you’ll test next, how you’ll change your plans, and so on. A search mode without deep and systematic reflection has very little value.

    Again, if you don’t have a piece of paper with the key findings and insights, and if you don’t write down what you’ve learnt, you’re missing the point of the search mode.

    Only after you find your fit in the search phase do you start executing. Sometimes it may take a few months to find you fit, sometimes a few years. After you find your fit, you go from the search mode to the execution mode. You set strong foundations, have laser focus, commit fully, start working hard and achieving your goals. You optimize, improve, and measure your progress with very detailed and execution type of metrics.

    There are five big problems you have to face in the search mode:

    • You can easily get stuck in the analysis-paralysis.
    • You see learning only as a good excuse and thus there is no real validated learning.
    • You have emotional problems dealing with uncertainty, because you don’t trust the process, yourself or others enough.
    • You stick to things that don’t work, because your mind is not flexible enough or you get tired.
    • You expect short-term results that are rarely achievable.

    All these five problems aren’t easy to deal with. But by far the hardest thing you have to face is the apathy before finding your fit.

    In the search mode you really have to face apathy

    The process before you find your fit is really painful and psychologically demanding. It’s called the apathy before finding your fit. Here are the main reasons that cause apathy:

    • You try a new thing and it doesn’t work. You try a new one, failure again.
    • Then you think you’ve found something good, but in the next step, you realize you haven’t.
    • From time to time, you realize how delusional and wrong you were and your ego suffers.
    • It almost always takes longer than expected and it costs more than you plan.
    • You need to sit down, analyze and be very systematic. Not to mention all the rejections you have to face.

    This search phase really is best described with the quote that success is going from failure to failure without giving up. The whole process before finding your fit sucks even more in the beginning; because in the beginning, you’re a newbie and your competences and skills aren’t that good.

    For example, you’ve just gathered the courage to start dating, but your dating skills suck, so you get rejected again and again.

    But apathy is the necessary part. It’s the life test of whether you really want something and whether you’re prepared to fight for it. It’s a test of whether you’re able to get out of the Valley of Death or not. The alternative is not good.

    If you don’t manage to get out of the Valley of Death, you turn into a zombie and your life turns to shit. On a more positive note, the apathy phase is also the part of the process where you learn and grow the most.

    One more thing you must keep in mind. The worse that your starting position is, the more time it’ll take to find your fit. The worse that your starting position is, the longer the apathy will probably last.

    A worse position simply means that you don’t yet know yourself and what you really want, that you lack resources, competences, leverages, and so on. In other words, you have to work harder for success if your starting point sucks.

    The best news and a motivational thought to deal with apathy is the fact that you only have to be right once.

    You only have to be right once

    But you only have to be right once

    You need to develop ONE competence based on your talents that is in high demand and low supply. You need to find ONE spouse who fits you perfectly and you can build a dream life together. You need to find ONE sport that you don’t dislike and have no troubles doing daily. You have to find ONE diet that enables you to maintain weight and feel energized. You need ONE business idea that works.

    When you find your fit, you have something you can build your success on, which can last for years or even a lifetime. In addition to that, when you find your perfect fit, there is more room for common human errors (well, some of them). The perfect fit is the best cure for your mistakes.

    Don’t worry about failure; you only have to be right once.” – Drew Houston, Dropbox founder and CEO

    But here’s the thing. The moment you’re right, all the bitter past failures turn into a winning strategy. You finally manage to climb to the top of the world.

    Other people see you as lucky, but you know that finding your fit was a very carefully orchestrated process. You know you deserve it, because you put in all the hard and smart work. You know you succeeded because you joined the club of people who are willing to go through the apathy of the search mode.

    Apathy and failure aren’t something that lasts forever. It’s something you pass by, if you learn quickly enough. You are wrong and wrong until you are right. Then you become a true winner. Luckily, you only have to be right once.

  • Design the perfect life you want

    If I mention the word design, you may initially think of a hipster, fashion runway, web graphics, or even a specific kind of art. Design is everywhere and it’s an important part of life. Design is not only about how things look, but also about how we put them together, how we innovate, what’s the overall experience and what kind of a feeling it evokes. Design is about harmony.

    In this blog post, I want to talk about a special kind of design. I want to talk about a design where you are the lead designer, even if design is something completely alien to you or you never considered yourself to be a designer. But you are. You are the designer of your own life.

    Design is not just what it looks and feels like. Design is how it works.

    In this blog post, I will explain to you why you are the designer of your own life in today’s time. By reading this blog post, you will learn the following important facts of life:

    • How and why institutions in history more or less designed life for almost all people
    • How and why you became the designer of your own life in this century
    • Why most people are unfortunately poor designers of their life
    • How you can be different and really create the life masterpiece that leads to the good life you deserve

    Buckle up and get ready to become a really inspiring and breathtaking designer of your own life. Let’s begin creating!

    A few decades ago, life was more or less designed for you

    From the whole human history to a few decades ago (that’s thousands of years), life was more or less designed for you. You became a potter or a blacksmith or a farmer like your father, or your duty was to take care of the home and kids if you were a woman.

    If you were really a rebel and wanted something with more prestige, then becoming a doctor or a priest were the only respected and possible options. Oh, or you could go into the army or become a wanderer. Self-discovery was rare, travelling was only for traders and your real talents were rarely developed.

    There was only one kind of religion that you had to follow or you were beheaded, there was one kind of a diet you could eat because there was no abundance of food, and you definitely had fewer opportunities to date or, more probably, your marriage was already arranged, so you had zero alternatives at all about who to spend your life with.

    Your occupation was determined by your family heritage, your diet by locally grown food, your marriage by your parents or the very few options you had in your local village, and your values by the local church.

    In history, your life and your destiny were more or less determined by the environment and its institutions (family, government, church, company etc.). If you wanted something else, you really had to make a crazy decision, like pack what few clothes you had in a bundle and leave everything behind, hoping to find something that fits you better. But it rarely happened that you found something better.

    There were almost zero options for designing your life as you wanted. Your lifestyle and your future were a done deal. No room for freedom, no room to create. Today things are luckily a lot different.

    Design the perfect life

    Finally, you have the power to design the perfect life for yourself

    Today we live in a very different world, in the free developed world. For the first time in history we live in a world full of material abundance, unlimited options, worldwide interconnectivity, high mobility and connectivity, easy access to information and knowledge, and much more. It’s true that the new era also brought us many new challenges (uncertainty, complexity etc.), but there is one big overall advantage we are rarely aware of.

    Now you have the complete power to design yourself the perfect life you want. You can build your dream life like a mosaic from many different pieces that suit you best. In most parts of the developed world, you won’t be judged no matter what you choose, as long as you aren’t hurting other people or breaking the law in some other way. When your preferences change, you can replace one piece of the mosaic with another one (going from a job to freelancer, to entrepreneur and back to a job).

    Stop for a moment and think about this great advantage. You finally have the power to choose who you will be, what will be happening in your life, and you can finally co-shape your destiny together with the environment that you choose. Institutions have very little power over your life, if we compare it to a few decades ago.

    You can finally build your dream life like a mosaic from many different pieces that suit you best.

    In every area of life, you can find things that fit you best, you can really do things that you enjoy or are good at, develop your talents to the full, travel the world, and you have the opportunity to potentially connect yourself with all the 7 billion people alive today. Opportunities and options are endless, all at your disposal as pieces of your dream life.

    Violence is in big decline and consequently the world is becoming an increasingly safer place to be, tolerance is becoming a more and more important value, further technology development will enable us to be even more mobile, interconnected, productive, creative and educated. It’s totally awesome. Soon you’ll even be able to choose which planet to live on.

    Below are just a few things I want to highlight as part of the options you have today to build your masterpiece called life that weren’t at your disposal at all even a few decades ago:

    • You can be an atheist, choose from more than 15 major religions and many different belief systems or even invent your own religion. A few decades ago, you were hanged for even thinking of converting to another religion if you weren’t forced to do so (religious wars).
    • There are more than 800 occupations you can choose from and new ones are constantly being added to the list with the technology development. Today, you can even do a completely different thing than you studied as long as you are motivated enough to develop new competences.
    • There are more than 190 countries you can travel to and around 2,000,000 cities worldwide, freely choose where you can live and settle in the place that suits you best.
    • You can choose from more than 50 different diets. You can now really eat the food you love, be it Italian, Mexican, Chinese or whatever you like. International restaurants, local organic markets, new creative dishes, cooking books and websites are popping up daily.
    • There are more than 200 different types of hobbies, more than 1000 different sports, and you can buy the cheapest smartphone for 30$. We see more than 20,000 new products monthly.
    • There are more than 200 social networks with 1+ billion people online you can connect with, not to mention all the IM apps, clubs, meetups, social organizations and different parties where you can meet many different people.

    What you will wear, which competences you will develop, defining your value system, doing body art, your sexual orientation and the number of sex partners, where you will live, what you will believe in, what kind of technology you will use, …

    … how you will make you money and where you will invest it, countries you want to travel to, what kind of art you’ll express yourself with, which sports you will do, where you will work, with whom you will forge relationships, how you will help make the world a better place, everything is more or less completely up to you.

    You can finally choose, you can finally design your perfect life. I know there are still limitations, I know that the level of freedom and abundance in different parts of world is not the same, but the trend is more than obvious. In the future, even more options await.

    Freedom brings responsibility

    It’s really awesome that you can finally design the perfect life you want. Nevertheless, this huge benefit comes with a huge price. More options mean more freedom (to choose), which is obviously good, but more freedom also means more personal responsibility.

    If the government, church, parents and family heritage aren’t designing your life anymore, you can’t blame them for the poor choices you make. Today, you hold complete responsibility for your life, your happiness and your potential.

    With good decisions and choices, you can design yourself a really awesome life. By making too many bad choices, your design can quickly become an ugly photo.

    • Your government is not responsible for your pension anymore, you are
    • Your company’s union is not responsible for your job safety anymore, you are
    • Your local grocery store is not responsible for your diet anymore, you are
    • Your parents are not responsible for your occupation anymore, you are
    • Your local university is not responsible for your skills and education anymore, you are
    • Your local church is not responsible for your values, morals and soul anymore, you are
    • Nobody is responsible for your life happiness but you

    It’s up to you how much money you will earn and, even more importantly, save, which talents you will develop, what kind of people you will surround yourself with, whether you will go after your perfect job, and so on. Today you can do whatever you want with your life. That is freedom, but it’s also a huge responsibility.

    You weren’t programmed to handle many choices well

    But here’s the catch. Since the jungle times, you haven’t been programmed to make good decisions and live happily in the abundance world. You were programmed to make bad decisions. Many bad decisions actually, which we can call the desire for instant gratification.

    Sugar was rare in the jungle so you were biologically programmed to eat as much sugar as quickly as possible. Biologically, you were programmed to spread your genes, so you have the desire to mate every time the opportunity shows up, which makes it more difficult to be faithful in monogamous relationships.

    You were programmed to save as much energy as possible, because food was rare, so storing fat and lying in front of the TV on a couch is the perfect thing to do nowadays.

    You can see where this leads. You have many options, the freedom to choose, but you were genetically programmed to make bad choices in the world of abundance. Having too many options (more than 50 types of cereal on the shelf) is already a big psychological burden, called the tyranny of choice.

    Taking poor responsibility of your life (and also a bad design) in the abundance world means:

    • Getting fatter and fatter because you consume too much sugar
    • Taking poor care of your health and eating chips on the couch while watching TV instead of exercising
    • Getting in debt and buying things you don’t need or even things you can’t afford (car, home)
    • Doing a job you hate with people you don’t like, because you are too lazy to develop your talents
    • Isolating yourself or having only superficial relationships due to of a low capacity for love

    All these things are much more frequent than you’d think. The majority of people make bad decisions in the abundance world, and thus they are slowly turning into zombies.

    In the end, they blame the government, financial markets, capitalism, religion, companies or whoever for their misfortune. I’m not saying that institutions aren’t responsible for people’s suffering in some cases, but people often destroy their own life through poor life design and making too many bad choices.

    Luckily you aren’t programmed only for instant gratification. You’re also programmed for carefully planning your future, investing to have more tomorrow instead of spending today, you’re programmed with the curiosity to acquire knowledge, an ability to discipline yourself and considering all that, to consequently make better life decisions.

    You just have to make sure you also develop these abilities and you really get the power in your hands to not only design your life, but to design your dream life, the good life you want and deserve.

    If you want to live happily in the world of abundance, you have to develop new healthy habits. A counter point for the jungle behavior. It’s that simple. You have to educate yourself, build a superior life strategy and then consistently follow it in an agile in lean way (because today’s times are also very uncertain). The end result should be you making many good decisions, big ones and small ones.

    It may be hard in the beginning but at some point, enforced healthy behavior becomes a habit, and a habit is automatic subconscious behavior that takes zero effort to perform. If it at first takes a lot of willpower and ability to develop a new healthy habit (the ability of making good life choices), it becomes a part of your lifestyle and who you are in the long run. That’s why we say that the hard road becomes easy, and the easy road becomes hard.

    • Developing healthy habits (hard thing to do in the beginning) in the abundance world leads to real happiness and real abundance (easy way to live).
    • Only taking the best from the abundance world (easy) without taking any real responsibility for your life leads to fake abundance. Only looking rich but not really being rich, having many online friends but few real ones, having a lot of food at home but drowning in health issues (hard).

    Life puzzles

    Design your life with a superior life strategy

    Let’s repeat that again, because it’s really important. If you want to live a successful and happy life in today’s world, you have to take full responsibility for your life. Complete and full responsibility.

    Taking responsibility means either deciding to develop discipline to make good life choices or to completely accept the misery that bad life choices bring and not blame others.

    You are the artist with the empty canvas called your life, and you can create whatever you want. That means madly educating yourself by going straight to the best knowledge for all life areas, shaping a superior life strategy, being superproactive, employing a first-rate decision and personal management system (like the ALL productivity framework), finding the right balance between instant gratification and investing into a better future and then taking the best that today’s world has to offer.

    If you do that, you really open the doors to the dream life, to the good life, the best life possible on this planet that was never ever accessible before. And all that leads us back to design as a profession.

    You have to see yourself as a designer of your perfect life

    It’s somehow nice that people are posting pictures of their life on social networks, especially Instagram, with the desire to show all other humans how they are designing their perfect life. I hope that many people are really living a life that’s as awesome as they are posting it on the social networks.

    The best way to design your perfect life is to systematically search for what works best for you.

    But life design is so much more than just taking photos and posting them on social networks. Design is about problem-solving, user experience, beauty and putting the right things together. Thus you have to see yourself as a designer in a broader sense. You have to see yourself as a designer of your perfect life, in every aspect.

    • How it looks: Your style, home and office decorations, the photos you take etc.
    • Elements: Your life strategy
    • How it works: Your productivity system, your habits etc.
    • Overall experience: How happy and satisfied you are with your overall life experience
    • Prototyping: How many new things you try and constantly optimize

    Take full responsibility for your life. Stop blaming others. Develop your talents and healthy habits. Make good life choices and design your dream life as it suits you best. Appreciate this chance given to you, which more than 100 billion people who lived in the past didn’t have.

  • The best relationship advice ever

    Here’s some shocking news to start with. Relationships don’t even really exist. They simply don’t. If you don’t believe me, try to hold a relationship in your hand or move it from one place to another. You can’t. Because relationships only exist in your head.

    Every relationship you have in your life is nothing but a collection of thoughts, including memories and different convictions about a person. Why is this such an important fact?

    Well, because if relationships are only thoughts in your head and they don’t really exist, it can be easily manipulated how you see a specific relationship.

    You know the feeling of being in love and seeing the other person with rose-tinted glasses and after two to three months, reality check comes? Or when you’re shocked if someone does something you never expected they could do? Or how because of the halo effect, you think famous actors have much better personalities than they actually do? (The latter is also why you should never meet your heroes.)

    These kinds of errors happen exactly because of the fact that relationships don’t exist, but are only a construction in your head. There are so many such cognitive errors you can make, from projections, transference, stereotyping, the halo effect, perceptual set, Pollyanna principle, self-serving bias, selective perception, contrast effects, expectancy effect etc. The list of cognitive biases in relationships is endless.

    That leads to a few important facts:

    • Your image, including assumptions about any other person, are wrong, at least to a certain extent; and wrong assumptions are the mother of all fuckups. That’s why the glass in relationships is already broken (more about this analogy later). Becoming aware of errors is painful, and that’s a part of life.
    • The wrong assumptions you have also lead to unrealistic expectations about how a relationship will unfold, which only really leaves you one rational option – enjoy relationships while they last, in the present moment, now. Relax. Relationships are to be enjoyed, not controlled. That doesn’t mean you don’t plan your future with other people, but you should do it only in the agile and lean way.
    • Since relationships are only thoughts in your head, you can avoid pain in a relationship by taking care of your own thoughts. You don’t even need the other person in a relationship to participate to solve any relationship issues (especially with troublesome parents or exes). Change yourself (your perspective) and you will change others.
    • Relationships as individual constructions in your head are one of the best ways to better understand yourself and get to know yourself to the core. Because you will try to simulate your early relationship experiences with every relationship later on (abusive parent, abusive partner).

    This is not real.

    The bottom line is that relationships are easy or hard only because you make them as such in your head; and in every relationship, you try to seek and experience what is familiar to you. And what’s familiar to you are your early relationships with the authority figures from your youth. That’s how your image will be distorted.

    Based on these facts, many people then conclude that no matter who you’re in a relationship with, you will always have pretty similar experiences. Well, that couldn’t be further from the truth. Even if you make many cognitive errors in relationships, people are different and every relationship is a unique experience.

    The false image you have about a person always exists, but there’s still also always an actual exchange of energies and actions (thoughts, touches, expressions, intentions etc.) that’s happening in a relationship. Despite the cognitive biases, the energy exchange with every single person is always a unique experience.

    Your image of a person is always wrong, but your experience of a relationship is not. That’s why people remember the most how you make them feel.

    In these terms, people bring out the best or the worst in you. In these terms, who you spend time with and what kind of a person they are matters a lot. Even if relationships don’t exist, we can say that there are positive experiences of a relationship and negative ones.

    You can see relationship with the most rose-tinted glasses possible, but abusive, ignorant, passive‑aggressive or any other similar behavior in a relationship is still toxic. And deep down, you always know if a relationship is toxic or not (making an error is human, but there’s a limit to when a relationship becomes toxic). A passionate love-hate relationship is a toxic one, for example.

    It’s extremely important whether a relationship is a healthy or a toxic one. I’ve seen it over and over again. A very damaged person in a healthy environment and with many healthy relationships starts to blossom. A promising, emotionally healthy and good person in damaging and abusive relationships gets broken and rots away.

    I’ve been in both kind of situations, so I know the difference very well. This is why you have to choose very carefully who you spend time with. It’s one of the most important decisions in your life. There is no middle path; a relationship is either a toxic or a healthy one (as we will see later).

    Before we go to relationship advice, there’s one more important angle to consider. People are animals. Social animals, to be more exact. That means that we compete, collaborate, conquer, make allies, have appetites, trade, pay attention to reputation, have sex, and so on.

    So whether you want it or not, every relationship is a trade. There is no such thing as a free lunch and there are no exceptions. A few decades ago, people had children primary as an economical investment. You get something out of a relationship (or expect to get when you form it) and you have to give.

    No matter how much in love you are, no matter how good of a person you met, it’s a trade. There must be value seen in you and you have to see value in others. The value can be sexual, emotional, intellectual, spiritual, material, social or any other type. No value equals no relationship, at least in the long term.

    Relationship advice

    The best and most honest relationship advice

    Now considering all three facts below, let’s look at the best relationship advice ever.

    1. A relationship doesn’t exist, it’s only a combination of thoughts in your head, which is why you see every relationship with many errors and wrong judgments. So the only win-win situation is to enjoy relationships. Next to that, you always see a person as something familiar to your past experiences.
    2. The tone of a relationship can only be a toxic or a healthy one, and this provides a very real experience of a relationship. No matter your internal image, this is the part of a relationship where you meet the objective truth. Everyone makes mistakes, but there is a limit when a relationship becomes toxic.
    3. Every relationship is nothing but a trade. If you don’t provide value, it’s hard to form deep, lasting and interesting relationships. There are many different types of value you can provide, and by far the best one is your own uniqueness, together with the effort.

    And now here it is, the best and most honest relationship advice:

    1. Always have the center on yourself
    2. Become the best version of yourself
    3. There is no ice to break
    4. There is no middle path, find your fit
    5. No zombies and bozos
    6. Diversity and the 1/3 rule of relationships
    7. Build multiple dimensions with superior communication
    8. Relationships are like bank accounts
    9. No relationship is perfect, the glass is already broken

    Always have the center on yourself

    No matter how much in love you are or how awesome of a relationship started in your life, personal or professional, always keep your center on yourself. The moment the center is on another person or the relationship itself, instead of you, the quality of a relationship starts to decline. Always.

    First, you have to be an independent, emotionally healthy individual, with your own life, visions, missions, goals, hobbies and interests. Only then can you form healthy and deep relationships. There is no other way. Without having the center on yourself, relationships will always be toxic in some way.

    Now, having the center on yourself doesn’t mean that you don’t care, don’t make any compromises and don’t invest in a relationship at all. If you don’t have center on yourself, it only means that you’re clinging to a relationship too much and stifling it without letting any freedom in it.

    Overly attached girlfriendSigns of not having the center on yourself:

    • Too fast commitment escalation (you think about marriage on the first date)
    • You get mad if your message isn’t replied in a second
    • You don’t like your partner’s hobbies and friends
    • Everything you do, you want to do together with your partner
    • Extreme jealousy
    • If you need more ideas, go through overly attached girlfriend or boyfriend memes

    It’s no different in business relationships or friendships, you may want to do everything together, you’re jelly of other people, and so on. In any case, the fact is that the more you pull someone towards yourself, the more they’ll try to back off.

    If you want to improve the relationships in your life, start by having the center on yourself. Start building your own dream life, share your visions with other people, and they will love to join you on your journey. There are a few steps you can take to have the center on yourself:

    Become the best version of yourself

    You definitely are worthy and important as an individual, no matter what you do and what your position in life currently is. There is a very simple and crucial rule of healthy self-worth which goes: never place anyone’s head above your own. Your personal strength must come from this kind of a belief.

    Nevertheless, as I mentioned before, every relationship is a trade. The better version of yourself that you are, the more you have to offer. A valuable consequence of constantly improving yourself is that your relationships get much better in general and you open yourself to completely new relationship opportunities.

    There are many ways of how you can improve your value in a relationship. Here are a few examples:

    • Fit and groomed body, good style, strength and endurance can bring more physical value
    • Higher education, hobbies, interests, visions, etc. bring more intellectual value
    • Many social connections, status, people skills, etc. bring more social value
    • Common values, fighting for a good cause, being a good person can bring spiritual value
    • Money and assets bring material value, and so on.

    People spend time with people with common interests and subjects. People spend time with people they’re attracted to because of charisma (charisma comes from having a powerful why in your life). People spend time with people with whom they can exchange value. I know it sounds completely unromantic, but every relationship is a trade.

    There is no ice to break

    There are 7 billion people living on this planet. Many of them have the potential to really change your life forever with how they see life, with many of them you could experience completely unique adventures, and many of them could help you grow faster or create even more awesome things than you’re currently creating.

    The only thing that’s preventing such a thing from happening is the absence of a fat penguin. What? Well the absence of someone who would break the ice for you. You have no idea how many opportunities you miss just because you’re afraid to say hello to a stranger.

    There’s an eye-opening perspective about that. Assume there is no ice to break and that you’re already connected to all the people. We all share the same planet, we’re all made from the same material, we all face our own struggles and fights. Just show genuine interest in people and know that you’re already connected with everybody.

    Just show genuine interest in someone and the relationship will start unfolding.

    Always connect with new people and don’t be afraid to talk to strangers. There is no ice to break. The ice exists only in your head. That doesn’t mean that every opening will be a pleasant experience (especially in dating), but that has nothing to do with breaking the ice, it has to do with finding your fit.

    Rejection is something that you can move on from. Regret will never leave you.

    There is no middle path, find your fit

    In every relationship, there is common ground (values, interests, etc.) and there are differences. If there is no common ground and only differences exist, relationships don’t form. On the other hand, the wider the common ground, the better your foundations for a relationship.

    It’s called finding your fit. Now, the mistake people make is that they jump into a relationship too quickly, before they even know their preferences, and even less a person. Like in Hollywood movies, where you see someone fall in love at first sight and then live happily ever after.

    Life doesn’t work that way. Irrational thinking and actions like that are based on the scarcity mentality – better safe than sorry and alone for the rest of your life. And then you commit to the first person who shows interest in spending time with you. I’ve seen so many people who settled too soon and then they’re too afraid to break up the relationship, staying unhappy forever.

    In reality, it’s much better to take time and search before you commit. Meet people, talk to them, get to know what you like in other people, etc. You can even help yourself by making a persona of an ideal relationship. Put in the effort to find your true fit, someone with whom things really work well.

    And when you find your fit, know that it only means that you’ve found something that holds true potential. You’ve found something you can build upon and look forward to. It is then that you pass on from searching to hard work in a relationship, and growing and learning together from the differences.

    Now, here’s the main catch in the whole story. You either find a fit or you don’t. A relationship either works or it doesn’t (in a certain moment). There is no other way.

    Homework

    Here’s a very easy task you can do to find out where you stand in your relationships. Take a piece of paper and follow the next steps:

    • Horizontally, write numbers from 1 to 10.
    • Vertically, list 5 – 10 important relationships in your life.
    • Rate every relationship from 1 to 10.
    • For the relationships that you rated between 4 and 7, it means you can’t decide if they work or not, and that tells you nothing.
    • Rate them again, now only with 1, 2, 3 and 8, 9, 10 marks. This will show you if a relationship really works or not.

    All the relationships marked with 1 – 3 clearly don’t work. There are only three options why.

    The first one is that they aren’t your fit. Irreconcilable differences or whatever. The second reason may be that it’s time to let go, it’s time for the relationship to end. The third reason may be that too much was withdrawn from the relationship bank account and it’s time to heavily invest back (more about that soon).

    Know that there’s nothing wrong about ending a relationship in a decent and human way, if the relationship doesn’t work anymore. All things come to an end, and there is always the point when you have to move on. Only a few relationships are lifelong relationships. So don’t be burdened with guilt and shame when it’s time to move on.

    No zombies and bozos

    People will make you or break you. Healthy and deep relationships will make your life on Earth heaven, and toxic people will make it living hell. So you must choose every relationship extremely carefully.

    Here are the rules:

    There are many reasons why people will try to make your life miserable, from clashes of interest, different values and the desire to preserve the status quo, to envy and simply having shitty personalities. Don’t even bother, just understand and then move on.

    When you get in the mud with a pig, you get dirty and the pig likes it. So completely ignore the evil people. Don’t think about them. Don’t talk to them. Don’t write to them. Don’t give them advice. Never gossip about them. It’s you who’s looking for the drama.

    Diversity and the 1/3 rule of relationships

    Let me emphasize again: who you spend time with matters a lot. You have to find people who fit into your life, and you have to find people who love you, support you, mentor you, believe in you, push you, help you to focus, encourage you, and so on. And you must do the same for other people.

    To achieve the universal relationship balance, there is an important formula to follow:

    • Spend 33 % of your time with people who are less competent than you (and mentor them)
    • 33 % of time with people who are on the same level as you
    • 33 % of time with people who are much more successful than you
    • Still, try to learn from everyone you spend time with.

    Next to that, although you have to find your fit to enjoy relationships, don’t spend time only with one type of people who think and act like you. Spend time with as many different people as possible, that’s the only way your relationship experience will be the richest. Never let your ego block you from learning or meeting someone new. I spend a lot of time with entrepreneurs, scientists, writers, athletes, many different people.

    This rule goes for personal and professional life. Science shows that half of the difference in career success (promotion, compensation, industry recognition) is due to one variable: being in an open network instead of a closed one. So network with many different people.

    Build multiple dimensions with superior communication

    Relationships are always multidimensional, and the more dimensions are present, the richer and the more varied they are. So when you spend time with people, try to engage as many dimensions as possible.

    Examples of relationship dimensions are touch, intellectual stimulation, emotional encouragement, sharing economic resources, working towards common goals, having fun together etc. When you’re spending time with someone, you should try to activate as many dimensions as possible. The best way to engage more dimensions in a relationship is to “put down your mobile phone” and listen.

    Want to prolong the battery life on your iPhone? Put it the fuck away when you’re talking to me.

    Yes, the key to outstanding relationships is outstanding communication. In order for every relationship to work, you have to really communicate (in person) and you want to communicate a lot. Put down your phone, look people in the eye and start listening with full attention. Something magical will happen in every one of your relationships.

    Ways of respondingAnd outstanding communication isn’t that hard. You have four types of communication:

    • Active constructive response (80 %)
    • Passive constructive response (10 %)
    • Active destructive response
    • Passive destructive response

    Just make sure you apply the active constructive response 80 % of times in communication with other people, next to really listening to them and showing genuine interest. Oh, and one more important rule I almost forgot. Make the compliment to critique ratio at least 5 to 1. Yes, for every critique, five compliments must follow.

    Relationships are like bank accounts

    Every relationship is like a mutual bank account. By doing something good for the relationship – like offering a massage, listening presently, spending quality time together, sending a loving message, doing hobbies together, etc. you put money in the bank account.

    By doing something bad for the relationship, like being ignorant, passive-aggressive, abusive or disconnected in any other way, you withdraw money from the relationship bank account. The more damaging acts you do, the more money gets withdrawn.

    Every relationship bank account can be full of money, barely above water, in negative numbers or even bankrupt. A lot of “money” means relationship happiness, low numbers mean nothing but low quality of the relationship.

    If everyone is only withdrawing, a relationship will sooner or later go bankrupt. That means a relationship gets terminated. If you do extremely damaging acts like cheating or beating, the bank account will probably go bankrupt immediately, even if it was full before.

    On the other hand, if you’re regularly depositing money, the bank account will be full and your relationship will blossom. The moment you start withdrawing, the relationship starts withering away.

    In the relationship bank account, the same rule applies as it does to the money one – it’s so easy to spend money and it’s so hard to save it. But at the end of the day, that’s what makes the difference between rich and poor people in whichever context, the money or the relationship one.

    Talking about mutual bank accounts, there is one more important rule. Make sure you invest into relationships as much as you get out of them. The investment ratio in every relationship should be as close to 1:1 as possible from both parties. If there is no balance, people get frustrated and even the most beautiful relationship can get in trouble.

    Relationship bank account

    No relationship is perfect, the glass is already broken

    Last but not least, don’t look at any relationship with rose-tinted glasses. Nothing special is going on in your life. You aren’t experiencing anything so unique that other people would be deprived of.

    Remember, you definitely are unique, just like everybody else is. Just like everybody else is. Don’t look at relationships like a fragile glass that can be broken, but like a glass that’s already broken.

    We are all only people with flaws and sins. People will lie to you, disappoint you and sometimes betray you. Rarely intentionally, but sometimes even that can happen. But this is part of relationships and life. Accept it, enjoy relationships while they last.

    Why such a tough reality? Well, it takes a lot of hard work and wisdom to find the right balance between id (animal instincts) and superego (doing the right thing). Even when you do find the balance, periods of life come when you’re thrown off-kilter.

    Before you find this magical balance with enough wisdom and even once you do but are forcibly thrown out of it, id may do a stupid thing. That’s what makes us human. That’s what you do to other people and what other people do to you from time to time.

    When that happens, it may hurt, but if you have the center on yourself (like the first rule dictates), you survive and move on if necessary. Remember, when it comes to life and relationships, the glass is already broken. There is nothing to break, because there is no perfection in life.

    Much like there is no ice to break, there is no glass to break. And at the end of the day, forgive, but never forget. We function based on patterns and so does every relationship.

    And for the end, do you want to know what real relationship tests are? Extremely good and extremely bad life situations. Now knowing the best relationship advice ever, good luck with them in your life. And please share this article with people you love.

  • Minimum Viable Experience

    In the lean start-up theory, there’s a very popular concept called Minimum Viable Product (MVP). The idea is that you don’t build the whole shiny expensive product and then launch it on the market and see the market response (because maybe nobody will buy it and the investment for doing that is big), instead you build the minimum set of features needed to start learning about what the market really wants. The MVP is the smallest thing you can build that tests the value you’ve promised to the market. You build an MVP to start learning about market needs and getting customer insights; or, if you want a fancier definition, a minimum viable product is the product with the highest return on investment versus risk.

    An important part of the MVP concept is that you stop thinking about the big picture and about your desired final outcome, and start thinking about immediately creating value and learning about your potential customers. You’ve probably heard Mike Tyson’s quote that everybody has a plan until they get punched in the face. That’s why you have to test all the small parts of your plan, regularly getting feedback and constantly adjusting. In the lean startup philosophy, that’s also called testing your hypothesis with an MVP (validated learning).

    The important emphasis is also that the MVP is not only a crappy or minimal version of your final product, but a strategy and process aimed towards making and selling a product to customers. It’s a process of idea generation, prototyping, presentation, data collection, analysis and learning.

    In the startup world, you learn the most when you have direct contact with a market – with your potential clients or customers, everything else before are nothing but your personal assumptions and assumptions from your team; and as you know, wrong assumptions are the mother of all fuckups and you’re usually wrong before you’re right. When you have the MVP and are in contact with your market, you can engage in the build-measure-learn feedback loop. You can test and add or remove feature by feature of your product by building it, measuring results with carefully chosen metrics and learning about market response.

    MVPs in business can be landing pages (smoke test), explainer videos, e-mail tests, crowdfunding campaigns, concierge MVPs (manual service instead of a product) and so on. A popular method is also called a Wizard of Oz MVP (or Flinstoning), where you put up a front of the webpage that looks like a real working product, but you carry out product functions manually. There are many ideas for testing and comparing your assumptions (subjective reality) to actual market needs (objective realities); the point is that you don’t fully commit and put all eggs in one basket based just on your ego and what you believe is true. Because at the end, the market always wins in business, no matter what your beliefs are.

    To summarize, the purpose of an MVP is to accelerate learning about the customers and the market, to be able to test hypotheses (your assumptions) with minimal resources, to reduce waste such as engineering hours and financial resources, to get the product to early customers as soon as possible and to have really good customer insight into which features you should actually build. An MVP is also the basis for the final product.
    How to build a minimum viable product An MVP doesn’t only save you a lot of money and energy before getting a market response and prevents you from failing big, it can also help you avoid becoming a zombie company. A zombie company is a company that finds itself in a situation where there’s no death, no growth, no progress and no moving ahead. It’s consuming an enormous amount of resources and is a terrible drain on human energy. A zombie company is a company stuck in the land of the living dead.

    It’s no different in your personal life. You don’t want to fail big in any area of life after a big investment, and you want to become a zombie even less. The MVP concept from the lean startup philosophy can help you with that. Let’s see how.

    Using the MVP concept in your personal life

    One of the biggest mistakes you can make in life is committing to something that isn’t really you, investing your whole self into something that isn’t your perfect fit. One of the biggest wastes in life is doing something you don’t really want, something that you don’t really enjoy. And people do a lot of that shit. They commit to wrong jobs, wrong people, wrong diets and wrong investments.

    In order to not fail yourself and your needs, you must first know yourself and all the options you have in life really well. If you want to be successful in life, you have to know yourself and what you want out of life very clearly, and the best way to get to know yourself and your environment is by experimenting, reflecting and learning. The best way to do personal validated learning is introducing the so-called search mode into your life, testing what your best fits are by using the MVP concept.

    The core idea is that when you’re in the search mode, you shouldn’t have any expectations, you shouldn’t have any commitments and you shouldn’t do any hard work. Expectations lead to disappointments and before you understand something, you definitely have expectations that are completely wrong. Commitments lead to heavy energy investments, and you shouldn’t be investing before you know what you’re truly investing into and whether the investment really fits your character. Hard work should always also be smart work, but you can’t work smartly if you don’t have the right map and coordinates.

    In the search phase, using the MVP concept, you just try, experiment, observe, reflect and learn about yourself and the world. The most important thing is to have no fixed ideas and no expectations at all in this phase. Your only job is to test the assumptions you’ve written down, correct them, and try different things to find out what suits you best. Your only job is to learn about yourself and the world. No goals. No measurement of progress. Just learning and playing.

    To do that, you need MVPs. The idea of MVPs is to not only talk about things (what you should try, what you think you may like etc.), but to go and try them. You don’t assume, you go out and test. Testing and trying is the best way to gain firsthand knowledge about yourself and the world. For every new experience you get, you should decide whether to keep it in your life or not (pivot or presevere). Every new experience should also give you ideas and insights into what to try next. The difference between what you think is valuable to you and what really is valuable for your life creates waste.

    Don’t assume anything, try and test everything.

    The best thing ever is that today, it’s so easy to test and try everything. You have so many options, access to knowledge and many different disciplines in sports, arts, business and other areas in life you can try and test. You can really have a lot of fun testing and trying in today’s times. The world is basically an endless pool of possibilities.

    At the end of the day, you must find your best fits and have your dream life composed like a beautiful mosaic – perfect diet, best exercise, best-fitting career, investments best suited to your character, perfect partner etc. The problem, of course, is that you only have one life and every experiment takes quite a lot of time. That’s why you need to use the MVP philosophy. You need to invest the minimum amount of effort possible into learning if something is your fit or not.

    MVE Concept

    Minimum viable experience and emotional accounting

    Instead of calling it Minimum Viable Product, let’s call it Minimum Viable Experience. The idea is that you try as many things as possible in life (your vision list), and based on your physical, emotional and intellectual response, you decide whether you should keep something in your life or pivot to something else.

    To really use the MVP or MVE concept, you of course need to try something new in life, but you also need a system to measure feedback. The system for measuring feedback and your progress is called emotional accounting. The simple metric is that if you like something, if you enjoy a thing, activity or person, then keep it. If you like and enjoy something, then that thing probably fits you well. You can also set more complex metrics based on your goals, values and what matters to you.

    Here are two examples from the Agile and Lean Life Manifesto:

    There’s plenty of advice on fitness and diet. You can even find contradictory advice. But you can test what works and what doesn’t work for you as an individual. For someone, being vegetarian is the optimal diet. For others, far from it. There is no single formula for success. You can only try vegetarian, vegan, fruitarian, paleo and other verified diets until you find the one that suits you best. It doesn’t make sense to only read about it or argue about it, you have to try it for yourself and see. With no expectations and by keeping an open mind. After the search phase and finding what works for you best, you can execute (keep, set goals, measurements…) by optimizing details.

    In this case, an MVP would be the new diet plan that you stick to for a few weeks. In addition to that, you also need a measuring system. That can be your weight, fat percentage, energy level and so on. Smart scale can be a great help with that. You can record what you eat, how you feel after a certain food and the kind of results you’re getting. You must also take into account that every change brings new stress into your life, so the first few days shouldn’t count as relevant feedback; but after a few months, you should definitely have a clear picture of what works for you and what doesn’t, where to persevere and where to pivot.

    The second example would be looking for a new career. Your emotions mirror your complete dissatisfaction in your current career. Here’s how you would tackle this challenge in the first phase of an Agile and Lean Life. In your free time, you write down assumptions for careers you think you could blossom in. You start testing how much passion awakens in you when reading about specific industries, you join forums and attend online courses etc. You take some part-time projects, even for no payment, just to see how engaged you become. You continue experimenting until you find the new perfect fit for you. Then you go into the execution phase. At the end, you may find that design is your thing after trying to prepare an outstanding CV for a completely different industry.

    An MVP in this case would be to execute a small project in your free time or do some additional work as a sole proprietor or whatever, just to learn about the industry and the new career you want to undertake. First you have to learn and only then can you fully commit.

    Here are some other ideas and examples:

    • You can try dozens of sports before you commit to any of them.
    • You can do the same to discover your perfect investment profile, the competences you should develop, the things you enjoy in life, the technology you should use and maybe even a religion or life philosophy you should follow.

    Here, you can find many ideas for the areas you should test and experiment in: Your life strategy

    Minimum Viable Partner

    Minimum viable partner

    The same concept also applies to relationships. You can’t just commit forever when you meet someone for the first time. It should be a process of milestones and small commitments that get bigger with time, much like the definition of an MVP states that it’s not about the product, but about the process.

    There are around 7 billion people in the world. Most of them aren’t even close to being your fit, but a few are – in business and personal life. And you have to find them. Of course people who fit you best are people who have values and beliefs similar to yours, but are at the same time different enough that they can enable you to grow and learn. But how can you find them?

    The key idea is that you first know what you want in relationships. Making personas and then testing your assumptions can help you with that a lot. Soon after experiencing a few relationships, you should know very well what your minimum viable partner is like, what are the mandatory characteristics a person must have in order for you to have a deep relationship with them.

    When you know what you like and what you don’t, and what the deal breakers are, you can further explore what the purpose of every relationship in your life is, which relationships you should persevere in and which people you should remove from your life. You should date, meet and engage with as many people as possible. Again, you should have personal metrics to measure whether a relationship is giving you what you expect, be it emotionally, time-wise or however.

    Another key point is to commit to relationships gradually. You don’t get married after the first date and you don’t form a joint venture after the first meeting. You can perform little relationship tests to see if a relationship is something you want. Usually that happens spontaneously (talking, first kiss, sex, taking a trip together etc.), but people often commit themselves to relationships too soon; and even more often, people stay stuck in relationships they don’t like (forever).

    Since you don’t want to become a zombie, you have to constantly measure the quality of your relationships – what you give and what you get. Even after passing all the minimum viable experiences and fully committing to someone, you should somehow measure if you’re surrounded by people who empower you and make you happy. If not, you’re doing big damage to yourself and others.

    Interested versus committed

    Being interested in something definitely doesn’t mean being committed. Although interested isn’t being committed, you should only be interested at first. You should be curious, playful, and eager to discover. You should not think about commitment, but only learn and try new things.

    But at one point, when you find the right thing, the right person, when you find your fit, you should commit. Really commit; and it shouldn’t be hard. Because when you find your fit, you know that this is exactly what you want and if you really want something, you’ll find a way; if you don’t, you’ll find an excuse. Now go play with the MVEs in your life.

  • Pivots in personal life

    To really understand pivots in personal life, we first have to define and understand what pivots in business are or, to be even more exact, what they are in the startup world. In the lean startup methodology, “pivot” is defined as a fundamental change in a business strategy. The idea of a pivot is changing the direction of your startup while staying grounded in your vision and learned facts. It’s very important to understand that a pivot doesn’t only mean a change or a shift to a new business idea, but a systematic change in strategy while deeply considering all the facts that you’ve learned along the way, especially those about markets, and keeping your business vision as a compass.

    When leading a startup, the most important question in this context is when you should make a pivot. A little complicated scientific answer is that you should make a pivot when each additional experiment you do leads to less progress. That basically means that you hit a local maximum. If you aren’t satisfied with the local maximum, you have to pivot to find a new, higher maximum; the highest possible maximum is called the global maximum and if you manage to hit that, you usually become one of the market leaders.

    Even if you don’t hit the global maximum, you can probably be satisfied with one of the local maximums. There are many companies that aren’t global market leaders and are doing just fine. If you’re making enough money and you enjoy the kind of business you have, the local maximum is okay.

    Nevertheless, there is one more angle to consider as a phenomenon of creative capitalism. In many cases, there’s no normal distribution on the market, but a distribution based on the Pareto principle where a few players take the majority of the rewards. In the past decade, we’ve been able to see an even more tense concentration. It’s basically that 10 % or even fewer players take 90 % or even more rewards. You can see that kind of concentration in almost every industry, from technology to arts and sports. That’s why your ambition must be to hit the global maximum. You will see later why this concept is important for pivots in personal life.

    Local maximum
    Achieving local maximum. But is there a higher hill to climb?

    However, there’s a situation much worse than not hitting a global maximum that can happen in the business world and is actually often even worse than going bankrupt (as the other extreme to hitting a global maximum). It’s called becoming a zombie company. A zombie company is a company that finds itself in a situation where there’s no death, no growth, no progress and no moving ahead. It’s consuming an enormous amount of resources and is a terrible drain on human energy. A zombie company is a company stuck in the land of the living death, a company stuck in some very low local maximum that’s far from the company’s vision, but the founders don’t want to pivot because of fear, ego or whichever reason.

    To be fair, it’s not easy to pivot in business or in personal life. It means that you were wrong and it hurts. It means that you have to make a change and we all genetically hate changes. But being agile and lean is about being wrong before you are right.

    Good decisions come from experience. Experience comes from bad decisions.

    To continue, there must be several factors fulfilled to make a successful pivot in business. You need to stay faithful and passionate about your vision. You need to have a deep understanding of the problem you’re trying to solve with your business idea, especially based on past validated learning. You need to know your wrong assumptions, actual falsifiable hypotheses and, on the other hand, you of course need new metrics and targets. Last but not least, you also need resources, energy and passion to make a pivot.

    There are ten potential pivots you can make as a startup:

    1. Zoom-in pivot
    2. Zoom-out pivot
    3. Customer segment pivot
    4. Customer need pivot
    5. Platform pivot
    6. Business architecture pivot
    7. Value capture pivot
    8. Engine of growth pivot
    9. Channel pivot
    10. Technology pivot

    Most successful startups today pivoted a few times (Dropbox, Groupon, AirBnB etc.) before finding the right product/market fit. They started with the initial idea, created a vision, built several minimum viable products, and then gathered feedback from the market. They made a pivot in their business strategy (or several of them) with superior market insights while keeping the vision and staying passionate about it. They pivoted all the way to product/market fit and customer validation. Afterwards, they started scaling their business. Pivoting in personal life is basically no different.

    Pivots in personal life

    Much like there’s almost no startup today that didn’t make a pivot or two or even dozens (if founders were passionate enough) before really succeeding, so you have to make pivots in different areas of your personal life sooner or later. Making a pivot in your personal life is basically no different from making a pivot in business. In personal life, you often don’t even have a choice and are forced to make a pivot (your partner breaks up with you, you get fired etc.).

    To go back to basics: a pivot in personal life is a fundamental change in your life strategy. You change your direction in life, but you still keep the same life vision and you consider the facts you learned about yourself and your environment. The time for a pivot in personal life comes when you hit the local maximum and aren’t satisfied with the result. You try harder to improve and in different ways, but none of the experiments and new ideas lead to any progress. You feel like you’re emotionally stuck.

    Basically the solution (that in reality isn’t easy at all) is to make pivots as many times as necessary until you find the perfectly right fit for you. That’s how you get unstuck. The only downside of an action like this is that it gets worse before it gets better. You must go through a before finding fit apathy.

    Potential pivots in your personal life

    Few people in this world are lucky enough to find their perfect fit right away. They marry and live happily ever after with their first love. They practice a sport that’s written in their genes from a very young age or whatever. Even when that happens, it’s usually only in one or, if you’re super lucky, in a few areas of life. But to live a happy and successful life, you must manage and juggle several areas of life, so nobody is spared changes in life. The point I am trying to make is that all of us have to make a pivot in our personal lives sooner or later.

    Here are some major potential pivots you can make (or are forced to make) in your personal life:

    • Your mindset, beliefs and values
    • Your spouse
    • How often you see your family
    • Relationships with your kids, if you have them, and how you bring them up (but that is the one you should not fu*k up in the first place)
    • Your social circles and friends
    • The type of sports you do regularly and your diet
    • Your career and industry
    • Revenue sources and investment strategy
    • Formal education and skill development
    • Your sex life
    • Country and home and other environments you operate in
    • The technology you use
    • Religion etc.

    The important thing is that you try to make a pivot as scientifically as possible, with the purpose of getting to your perfect fit as fast as possible. That means that no matter how hard a pivot is, you consider what you’ve learned about yourself and your environment. Before making a pivot and starting to look for a new fit, you should carefully analyze all the learned facts. You must be very well aware of how you know yourself better and what you want and you must have superior insights into your environment and what your wrong assumptions were. Every pivot should be a conscious and proactive change in your life strategy.

    Your life strategy – read this blog post to get many new ideas for potential pivots in personal life.

    How do you know it’s time to pivot in personal life?

    There’s a very easy exercise that can be an indicator of whether you should maybe do a pivot in your personal life. The exercise is also a very good way to start with self-reflection. The idea is to make a life-satisfaction chart and assess all the chosen areas of life. All you have to do is first draw a scale from 1 to 10 horizontally, and vertically list the key areas of life or the areas you’ve chosen to assess. You assess every area or category of life from 1 to 10. Below, you can find an example of the chart.

    1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
    Health X
    Relationships X
    Money X
    Career X
    Emotions X
    Competences X
    Fun X
    Spirituality X
    Technology skills X

    Made-up case as an example, Part I

    In the second step, you take another look at all areas you assessed with 4, 5, 6 or 7. These are the areas where you’re averagely satisfied, are indecisive about or for which you haven’t taken enough time to make a sound assessment. Not knowing where you are and what you want does no good. The truth is that life areas either work or they don’t, you’re either satisfied or you aren’t, there are no middle paths.

    Remember the Pareto principle and concentration I mentioned in the beginning. It applies to this very well. Averages don’t help you in managing life much, same as markets don’t acknowledge average. You want to really excel in as many areas of life as possible. You want to be in the top 20 % (shape, for example) to reap all 80 % of the rewards (energy, good looks, positive self-image, stamina etc.). Your ambition must be to hit your global maximum and nothing less.

    You can’t be in good and bad shape at the same time. You can’t follow an average diet and the perfect diet for you specifically at the same time. You can’t have money problems and be happy with your financial situation. You can’t be depressed and positive at the same time. The idea is that you deserve the best in all areas of life.

    You either rock or you suck in different areas of life. Therefore, assess life areas again, but now by using only the numbers 1, 2, 3, 8, 9 and 10. Take more time to really think about the areas you’re satisfied with and the ones you aren’t. Dedicate a few minutes to every area of life, analyze it extensively and then do a realistic evaluation. Listen to your inner voice and facts, but also pay attention to your emotions when deciding on the number to assign to a specific area of life.

    Also be careful about cognitive distortions when making an assessment of your life areas. If you’re a perfectionist and aren’t satisfied with anything and have impossible standards, it may look like all your areas of life are miserable. If you put 1 – 3 to most of the areas of life, change your perspective. Rate how much you’ve improved since last year. It may help you to see progress in your life and get a more realistic evaluation compared to your impossible standards. In the same way, your assessment should be adjusted to your starting point in life and the fact that you compete with yourself, not others.

    In the last step, highlight every 1, 2 and 3 with red, and every 8, 9 and 10 with green. Now you have a clearer picture of the areas of life you should potentially make a pivot in and make priorities for personal improvement.

    • Career
    • Emotions
    • Technology

    The second, superior way to make a pivot is to go immediately from observation to action. You constantly gather feedback from yourself (body, emotions and mind) and your environment (social circles), and adjust your life strategy accordingly. That means that you’re really lean and agile.

    1 2 3 8 9 10
    Health X
    Relationships X
    Money X
    Career X
    Emotions X
    Competences X
    Fun X
    Spirituality X
    Technology skills X

    Made-up case as an example, Part II

    Download a free template of the life-satisfaction chart (table above) that will help you to analyze and assess all the key areas of your life. With performing this exercise you will be able to decide easier on which areas to pivot and also to make sure you don’t become a zombie.

    Making a pivot

    If you’re very unsatisfied with a certain area of your life, things will probably only get worse with time. Problems only grow if you ignore them. You really can get stuck in the land of the living dead, being completely unhappy and miserable, it doesn’t only happen in horror movies. The sad thing is that in most cases, being miserable in one area of life negatively influences all other areas. Being a zombie is a terrible drain on your life energy, with no personal growth, no end to the agony, consuming your emotional, mental and physical resources without moving ahead. You’re stuck and it sucks.

    To make a successful pivot in personal life, several factors must be present, same as in a startup company. You need to be passionate about the pivot, there must be a strong and deep desire to make a change in your life. You need metrics and targets, what you really want. You need to have a strong vision that fuels your passion or vice versa. You must be able to answer your why really passionately. You need to really know yourself and your environment based on your previous actions and you have to be aware of what you have done wrong, what your wrong assumptions were. There must be validated learning and you have to see your current situation as only a temporary state – that you’re wrong before you’re right and that you’ll find a new fit for you. It’s the same like being broke is a temporary financial situation, but being poor is a state of mind.

    Let’s say you decided to make a pivot in your career– you decided to change your job or even industry. First you must have the passion to make a change, no matter how miserable your situation is. You can’t change things with a victim mindset and by feeling sorry for yourself. Then you need a deep understanding of the problem – yourself and your environment. Do you work at a company and your values mismatch, are industry trends going down, maybe your attitude and competences aren’t sufficient or there’s a complex combination of factors.

    Based on your past actions and happenings in your environment, you have to know what you’ve learned. Maybe you’ve realized that working in a startup company is not for you. Nothing wrong with that. Maybe your assumption was that it’s going to be cool and exciting, but you were dead wrong. Maybe you learned that you need a more stable environment – in a corporation or an NGO. Good. Now you need a new set of assumptions, metrics and targets. You need a list of companies you want to work in, you need an outstanding CV, maybe develop some of your competences etc.

    It’s just an example. There can be a thousand reasons why you’re unhappy in your career, and you have to know what it is in order to make a successful pivot. Just changing your job won’t do it. You have to do it more systematically and scientifically, by analytically considering all the facts.

    Pivot to antoher man

     

    Much like there are several different types of pivots you can make in business, so there are different types of pivots you can make in personal life:

    • A zoom-in pivot would mean dedicating yourself more to something or approaching it from a different angle. Maybe you take more time for your kids or sports, and cancel some other activities and commitments in your life on the other hand.
    • A zoom-out pivot would mean doing exactly the opposite, for example including new social circles in your life and disinvesting from some other relationships and activities. Here’s another example for both pivots: focusing more on one type of investments (technology stocks) would be a zoom-in pivot, diversifying your personal portfolio would be a zoom-out pivot.
    • A relationship pivot would mean changing your spouse or business partner or any other important relationship in your life that you can change. This pivot also includes changing your diet or a sport you do. If you believe it or not, you also have some kind of relationship attitude towards food and your body.
    • A personal need pivot could mean starting to dedicate your time to something new that’s important to you, but that you were neglecting or weren’t even aware you needed until you had an epiphany. It could be hobbies, social causes, travel, sexual needs or whatever. Another fact is that by growing up and getting old, our needs change and so we have to pivot.
    • A life architecture pivot could mean a change in your beliefs and values, be it setting new priorities or changing religions, political or any other beliefs.
    • A platform pivot could mean changing your country, the industry you work in, your home or any other of your environemnts.
    • An engine of personal growth pivot would mean changing the things you read and listen to, your role-models and everything else that has an influence on your personal growth and who you ideally want to become.
    • A value-capture pivot would mean changing your mindset, going from employed to self-employed or from employed to entrepreneur or investor.
    • A technology pivot could be changing the hardware and software you’re using, or developing new technological skills. Maybe you could start using or discard different social networks and so on.

    There are definitely many other pivots you can make in life, the ones listed above are just ideas and examples so you can get a clearer picture of what a pivot really means. What’s important, one more time, is that you consider the learned facts before making a pivot. If you decide to pivot to another spouse, make sure you know what you liked and what the deal-breakers of your relationship were. Doing a change without any validated learning is not a pivot, but just a shift or a change. Without doing it systematically, it may take decades before you really find your fit or you may even never will.

    The emotional challenges of a pivot

    The hardest part of any pivot is usually of an emotional nature. First of all, when you’re in the position to make a pivot, you probably had great expectations for something, you were sure of something beautiful that would have happened in your life, but it went rough. It’s not easy when your dreams collapse. The second thing that hurts, besides the painful gap between expectations and reality, is that you were wrong. Ego gets damaged when you’re wrong. It’s not easy to be wrong. Last but not least, if there are relationships involved, which there usually are, there’s additional pain from a breakup that’s always present, no matter how tough you are. Pain, pain and pain.

    No matter how painful the situation, there’s a positive side to it and usually you only see that positive side with time. Time heals emotional pain and when the pain goes away, you have to take a few things out of that pain. You have to become aware of what you learned about yourself, what you really want, how the world and the environment you operate in work. You’re always wrong before you’re right. The idea of several pivots is to really find your perfect fit so you can be happy and shine bright like a diamond. If it’s time for a pivot, you aren’t sticking to the right thing or its expiration date has come. Nothing in life lasts forever, everything changes, and that’s why you have to stay lean and agile.

    Pivot or persevere, that is the question?

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