The Lean Entrepreneur. Vlaskovits Patrick
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СКАЧАТЬ href="#n2" type="note">2 You can access them at http://LeanEntrepreneur.co/illustrations or e-mail us at [email protected].

      Our writing style aims to get to the heart of the matter quickly. Experts in specific domains will notice, probably much to their irritation, that we intentionally gloss over some of the finer points we discuss. This is not because we don’t think the details matter; they do, but they don’t matter for the context of this book.

      The “New and Improved” Lean Entrepreneur is divided into seven chapters:

      1. Startup Revolution – A brief redux on what’s going on now that makes lean innovation the right methodology to apply to your business, regardless of size or sector.

      2. Lean into Change – We describe what vision, values, and culture have to do with innovation.

      3. All the Fish in the Sea – We help you figure out what customers fish for.

      4. Wading in the Value Stream – We bring you a framework to establish new value to be created for customers.

      5. Core Lean Entrepreneur – We introduce the 3Es of lean innovation – empathy, experiments, and evidence.

      6. The Lean Journey – We describe how you apply the 3Es over the innovation lifecycle.

      7. The Final Word – We end with a call to action.

      Throughout, we include examples of real companies applying lean startup principles and succeeding. We hope you gain learning and inspiration from these companies, many of whom don’t use the term lean to describe themselves.

      Each chapter also includes exercises and templates you can use to help you think through your business model. Although we don’t believe a step-by-step approach to success exists, we think many will find our exercises beneficial.

      Learn the craft, then make it your own.

      True visionaries relentlessly pursue the change they want to see.

      1

      STARTUP REVOLUTION

      Welcome to the Age of Value Creation. If your organization is not creating value for customers, you are done. If you are focused on wealth creation, if your objective is to profit off fomenting fear or instilling insecurities, or if your business model depends on spoon-feeding solutions, you are done.

      In the value creation economy, the customer has the power. The technological transformation we are witnessing provides both consumers and business buyers with vast amounts of knowledge about markets, products, features, capabilities, and reputation; myriad products and companies to choose from; and the power to more easily switch from one company to another. Knowledge at our fingertips comes from the Internet and computers in our pockets; it is easier than ever for customers to curate, analyze, and share opinions and information. Product and company choice comes from globalization, the rise of entrepreneurs and freelancers, and market-expanding enterprises.

      All this change has created new rules in the economy: The customer has the power, so you must be focused on creating value for and maximizing the experience of the customer.

      Further, we are arguably at the beginning of these trends. The breakthrough technologies of artificial intelligence, robotics, digital fabrication, and open-source hardware will continue to push power to the customer. Customers will increasingly be able to design custom-fit solutions for their individual pains and passions.

      These changes don’t come without costs. These changes disrupt the existing economy, collapsing relatively young enterprises like Blockbuster and Borders, decades-old household names like Kodak, and even century-old stalwarts like Nokia, putting tens of thousands of people out of work.

      Disruption hurts.

      Even in the best of times it’s the worst of times: The very structure of the global economy is changing, forever. Millions are unemployed and suffering worldwide. Manufacturing is not merely being sent offshore; it’s being permanently displaced, even in China. Service jobs are the capitalists’ new “unit of labor.” White-collar jobs are being sent offshore. Online marketplaces are turning college-education skills into commodities. At the online workplace Upwork, customers can get competing bids from onshore and offshore contract freelancers or businesses: engineering, accounting, marketing, sales, website development, design, customer service, technical support, administrative assistance, writing, editing, translating, human resources (HR), legal, recruiting, statistical analysis, and information technology (IT).

      One of Henry Ford’s great insights was that if he could produce a car at a price his workers could afford, he’d have a huge market.

      As entrepreneur and author Seth Godin writes, “The factory – that system where organized labor meets patient capital, productivity-improving devices, and leverage – has fallen apart. Ohio and Michigan have lost their ‘real’ factories, just as the factories of the service industries have crumbled as well. Worse still, the types of low-risk, high-stability jobs that three-quarters of us crave have turned into dead-end traps of dissatisfaction and unfair risk.”3

      What will people do for a living?

      What’s going on? It’s pretty hard to wrap your head around. Economic growth indicators that describe the past to help us plan for the future will be revised backward soon. (Don’t worry; experts will be on hand to explain.)

      It’s not just the economy, either; it’s how we talk about it. Political institutions have never seemed so clueless, having the same arguments they had in the 1950s. The media is equally flummoxed, having given up trying to separate political fact from fiction, science from opinion. Pundits are proven wrong on a daily basis, only to be trotted out before the masses for their opinions again. Economists run models based on assumptions that have no real-world bearing.

      There’s a lot of doom-and-gloom prophecy reminiscent of the eighteenth-century cleric Thomas Malthus, who wrote that “the power of population is so superior to the power in the earth to produce subsistence for man, that premature death must in some shape or other visit the human race.”4

      Yet, tech hubs of entrepreneurial activity are thriving not only in Silicon Valley, Manhattan, Santa Monica, and Boston, but in Boulder, Grand Rapids, and San Diego.

      We find ourselves amid a tremendous storm of economic, technological, and cultural transformation. We are experiencing massive waves of change, high tides of anxiety, and a tumultuous backwash of resistance. This disruption has created an odd mixture of extraordinary market efficiency and entrepreneurial innovation, coupled with volatility and uncertainty at unprecedented levels.

      How do you face uncertainty?

      To survive and indeed to prosper through these changes, whether as an individual, a startup, or a large enterprise, you must be fast, efficient, and value-creating. You must be close to your customer, be optimized for learning, and use data to help inform decisions. You have to be lean.

      BYTES EATING THE WORLD

      In 2011, famed Internet-entrepreneur-turned-venture-capitalist Marc Andreessen described how technology companies are disrupting entire industries. He called this phenomenon “software eating СКАЧАТЬ



<p>4</p>

Thomas Malthus, An Essay on the Principle of Population, 1st ed., unrevised (1798).