terça-feira, 30 de julho de 2013

Lean Entrepreneurship and Emotional Intelligence

The view that start-ups are about learning and discovery, in search of a business model, was pioneered by
- Steve Blank, author of The Four Steps to the Epiphany: Successful Strategies for Products that Win, a serial entrepreneur in the United States and consulting professor at Stanford University, and
- Eric Ries, author of The Lean Start-up: How Today’s Entrepreneurs Use Continuous Innovation to Create Radically Successful Businesses, and an entrepreneur-in-residence at Harvard Business School.

The key insight in lean entrepreneurship is that start-ups are not small versions of larger companies.

This might seem obvious, but traditional business thinking tends to apply management concepts designed for large organisations to start-ups.
Most business schools, for example, teach students how to spend months researching ideas, forming business plans and raising capital.
That may be the wrong approach for ventures with an uncertain business model and target market.

The start-up founder has to apply a different type of management style that recognises
- the uncertainty of entrepreneurship, and
- the need to change and adapt and develop a stream of constant innovation within the start-up.

This style of management requires high emotional intelligence (MINDFULNESS) in order to be able to deal with uncertainty and the need to “pivot and persevere”:
=> Self-Awareness - consciousness (no ignorance / emotional confusion / auto-pilot)
=> Self-Esteem - open heart (no expectation)
=> Self-Confidence - open mind (no fear)

Being able to open our heart allows us to open our mind (and vice-versa):
observe without judgment:
no stereotypes, no concepts, no separation in terms of subject/object.


1) Self-esteem will give you two crucial skills for lean entrepreneurship:
- empathy (to love our customers), and
- freedom to choose (powers divergent thinking).

2) Self-confidence will give you two crucial skills for lean entrepreneurship:
- wisdom (to understand our customers), and
- power to decide (powers convergent thinking).

Such personal traits can be developed.

The question is: are u coachable?

segunda-feira, 15 de julho de 2013

COMING SOON Landing Pages - Teaser Effectiveness Analysis Matrix™

If you are planning to create an application, or any other website, you should really consider having a coming soon page.

On that splash page, you should have an email signup form and some sort of social media links. This will generate hype and curiosity in others.

Humans are naturally curious, so if there is a really beautiful splash page a for website, they wonder what it will be like, and how will it look.

With a coming soon page you want the user to know they’ll be missing out on the next big thing if they don’t sign up. These characteristic lets you take advantage and start your mailing list early, before your finished product is even live. Once the product does go live, you already have a hefty list of email’s that you can announce your launch to.

With a coming soon page you are basically telling users that you are working on something. The main goal is of course to give at least a hint on what the product/website will be meanwhile having an irresistible sexy design.

Once you finished designing the splash page, be sure to submit it to CSS Galleries. This will help you build SEO, Page-Rank, and Exposure. 

Source: See 10 free coming soon WordPress themes (here)!


This designer Sacha Greif developed the  Teaser Effectiveness Analysis Matrix™, consisting of four elements. The perfect teaser page must score high on all four axis of the following:
  • Memorability,
  • Virality,
  • Desirability,
  • Data collection-ability.
Study the following "Teaser Page Strategies".

Fundamentals of the Viral Launch

The first rule of viral is of course that you must build something that other people would actually be interested in for one reason or another.

Normally, you’ll want to
(1) let visitors know what you’re doing, then
(2) spark some interest, finally
3) make use of that interest by giving them a chance to subscribe to your news updates, doing so with a bright call-to-action button.

Lately, so-called stealth start-ups have become quite popular because of the interest they are able to generate. They typically won’t tell you what they’re doing, which means they’re ignoring step (1), but somehow they still manage to grab your attention.

Here are the basic elements a launch page should have:
  1. A clear value proposition that interests people. (What problem will you be solving?)
  2. If your strategy is stealth, then why should people care?
  3. A notification form, with a bright call-to-action button.

Additional Elements That Can Make A Launch Page Go Viral
In addition to the basic elements covered above, start-ups have recently been using some of the following elements to make their landing pages more enticing:
  • Viral loop,
  • Exclusivity and scarcity,
  • Glimpses of the beta,
  • Social proof,
  • Viral content.
You will find all of these in the examples below. Many of the elements are often combined in meaningful ways.

On-Line Marketing Funnel

6 Parts of Your Marketing You Should Always Be Optimizing:
 
1) Your Landing Pages
2) Your Website's Conversion Path
3) Your Value Proposition
4) Your Marketing Content
5) Your Homepage
6) Your Marketing Emails
 
Read full post at HubSpot (link).
 
 
 
 




 

 

quarta-feira, 10 de julho de 2013

Testimonials on landing pages

Tip by Unbounce (Chapter 2: Trust & Security)

With the proliferation of spam, pyramid and get-rich-quick schemes found in online marketing, becoming a leader with regard to trust can give your pages an instant leg up.

The first key to success here is simply to care. Donʼt pay lip service to this area as itʼs more important to people than you may think.

Testimonials work to create trust on your landing pages. But resist the urge to use false or made up ones. If you invent over enthusiastic statements by caricatures of stereotypical personas, and position them with images grabbed from stock photo sites you will look disingenuous.

Authentic Business Practices Produce Authentic Testimonials
If you have a great product or service and you treat your customers well, testimonials will either come to you or you’ll have established the relationships where you can go and ask for them.

Wait for that great personal story that could be the tipping point in making people believe your landing page message, something that shows you have affected someone’s life or business.

If you don’t have one yet, increase the feedback mechanisms on your website to allow your customers to provide the information you need.

Perform A/B Testing on Your Landing Page
To measure the effect testimonials have on your landing page conversion rate, consider running an A/B split test. You could run tests to compare the following things:
  • With and without testimonials
  • With and without photos
  • With short or full quotes
  • With few or many testimonials
If you find that less testimonials work better, you could then try using only 1, but test each testimonial in turn to see which people respond best to.

Before you push the “Go Live” Button ... do Usability Tests

Tip from Unbounce (chapter 6)

Itʼs tempting to be impatient and “get it out the door” as soon as you can, but it pays to take a few deep breaths and do some final checks and balances before you publish your landing pages.

Have a checklist: The next few items will explain some of the tasks you should perform as part of this checklist. If you can establish a checklist and incorporate it into your process, you will soon start to develop good habits that produce better, more effective landing pages.


1. The 5-second rule
Do some simple usability and page goal testing using people in your office (or friends & family).
A good rule of thumb is to follow the 5-second rule. Sit your subject in front of a computer screen and show them the page for 5 seconds. Then hide it and ask them what the purpose of the page was.

If they are unclear, you may need to re-address the communication of the primary message and call to action. You can also crowdsource this activity through a service like Five Second Test.


2. Many sets of eyes
Print your landing page out and pin it to the wall so that people can see it. This will open up discussion about your design. Often, an objective set of eyeballs will spot simple things that can help refine the page before you push it live. This is also a good way to increase collaboration and youʼll be surprised at some of the skills or insights your co-workers can provide.

3. Quality Assurance
Some companies have this built into their process, others are too small and rely on the owner/creator to do everything. Even in large companies, small marketing campaigns often get the short end of the stick and donʼt have a dedicated person for quality assurance.

To be viewed as professional you cannot afford to have any typos or errors on your landing pages. With such a short time to convince a visitor that you have something of value, even minor slip-ups can cost you a sale. Make sure it looks good in the major web browsers your target market uses. Fortunately, most landing pages are relatively simple, but donʼt forget to check.

Before Creating a Landing Page you should KNOW…

Tips from Unbouce (Chapter 4)

Business Objectives
The business objective of the campaign and in particular the page.
What problem are you trying to solve?

Know Your Audience
Understand the goals and motivations of the users who will be arriving at your landing page. What are the main questions that a potential visitor will have?
Knowing this will allow you to design an experience that answers these questions in priority sequence on the page.

Visitor Action
The desired action of the visitor (primary CTA - Call To Action).
Sounds simple, but if you don’t have a very specific idea in mind, your page can lose focus.

Entry Points
Take note of all campaign entry points (email, organic, PPC, social media) and any existing collateral materials to ensure you maintain a consistent brand experience and design.

If your landing page doesnʼt match the aesthetic (eg. of the banner ad) then people will often rightfully assume they are in the wrong place and leave.

Technical limitations of your target audience
Are they iPhone users? Are they business people with laptops that still view everything on 1024×780? Or are they designers with big 24” iMacs?

Creative brief
Ideally there will be a well defined concept that ties business and user goals together into a simple and implementable idea. This will help you to design something that doesnʼt stray from the core goals of the campaign.

If you are a small business or entrepreneur then this might seem like a bit of a luxury (or an extreme waste of time). It can be really useful to go through the process of creating a simple half page brief  (see example  below) just to get the idea down on paper before you commit it to digital realm.

Creative Brief (source: Mel Henson, Smart Insights)
 
 
 

terça-feira, 9 de julho de 2013

The anatomy of a perfect landing page, by Dainis Graveris


Read this extensive article by Dainis Graveris:

Optimization of landing pages - AIDA principle

How make sure visitors to your web sites don't leave seconds later?
(source: FRII Creative)

Landing page optimization using the AIDA technique can help you keep visitors on the site, get them to buy your product, support your cause, or attend your event.

What is Landing Page Optimization?

A landing page is the first page that a visitor sees on your web site. This may be your home page, a custom-built page tailored to an ad campaign, or – thanks to search engines – almost any page on the site. That page is the first, and often only, chance you have to grab a visitor’s attention and get them to take action. Each desired action a user takes is called a conversion.

Landing page optimization is the methodical process of modifying a page, monitoring its conversion rate, then repeating the process till the page is performing the best it can. It’s not uncommon to increase the number of conversions your site receives by 50% or more through basic optimization techniques.

What is AIDA?

AIDA was coined in 1898 by Elias St. Elmo Lewis to describe the process we all go through as consumers. It stands for:
  • Awareness
  • Interest
  • Desire
  • Action
Each of us take these four steps every time we take a non-trivial action like making a purchase. Examining your landing pages using AIDA is an effective and intuitive way to optimize your visitor’s experience.

Awareness

Attention and awareness are in short supply in the modern world. Most site visitors will only dedicate a few seconds to you before they move on. Unless your landing page can answer the question "Do you have what I want?" within that brief span, you will lose the visitor.
A successful landing page can almost always be summed up with a single sentence:
  • "We sell high pressure hydraulic valves."
  • "We help parents find affordable child care."
  • "We provide building permits for the town of Smallsville."
That short message tells your visitor that they’re in the right place, and should stick around.
Ask yourself these questions about your landing page:
  • Does the page have a concise message about what it offers?
  • Are you distracting the visitor with unrelated items – ads, other offers, motion, unnecessarily bright colors or images?
  • Are you providing too many choices up front?

Interest

Your visitor is now aware of what you do or offer. To keep them you have to interest them in it. Generating interest in your visitor depends on a narrow and accurate focus on their needs.
We expect the world to be tailored to us, and to our exact needs that instant. Your page has to oblige. The two most effective ways to do this are to let the visitor tailor it themselves by letting them choose the need they’re trying to fill, or the group they fit into:
  • "Browse valves for Caterpillar tractors."
  • "Subsidized child care providers in Colorado."
  • "I am a homeowner."
  • "I am a contractor."
These tailoring opportunities can be links to other pages, or sections within the landing page.
Ask yourself these questions about your landing page:
  • Is it immediately clear which audience(s) this page is for?
  • Are the available options clear and prominent?
  • Do the options accurately line up with the needs of your audience?
  • Is the list of options short enough that visitors will be willing to read through it?

Desire

A better name for this step might be "Decision." The visitor knows that you offer what they want (at least at a general level) and now they have to decide if they’re going to pursue it.
A visitor’s goals and mindset change dramatically once they make it to the desire stage. They’ve now more willing to put in the time to learn about you. It’s your job to keep them happy, well fed, and comfortable.
The web has radically changed how we optimize the desire stage. "Sell the sizzle not the steak" worked in the 1950s, but now people want to know more about what they’re buying (or eating.)

You have to give them all the information they need to make a decision. If you don’t – or if you try to pressure them – they’ll just click to the next web site. "Call for details" or a pushy "Buy Now!" can be a death warrant.

Ask yourself these questions about your landing page:
  • Does it accurately and concisely outline what features my product or service offers, without any useless puffery? ("Greatest ever," "Award winning," etc.)
  • Can the visitor easily compare my product with their other options?
  • Is it clear what they’re getting?

Action

The Action step turns "I want it" into "I want to get it from you." This final decision is based almost entirely on trust in your company or organization. The visitor has already decided that they want to get the product, service, or information from someone. It’s your job to show them that it’s safe for that someone to be you.

Some organizations are lucky enough to have a strong brand identity that can create trust on its own. This includes well-know federal, state, and local governments, large non-profits, and a handful of private industries. The rest of us have to build that trust on the fly.

Online trust can come from two sources: credibility and risk reduction.

Credibility tells your visitors that they can trust what you’ve told them, and that you’ll be around to support the product or service you’re offering. Credibility builders include:
  • Clean professional pages
  • Customer testimonials
  • Industry awards
  • Reviews
  • Partnerships with well-known companies
  • Case studies
Risk reduction techniques convince the visitor that they are safe, and have recourse if the transaction does not go well. These methods include:
  • Secure pages (SSL/TLS)
  • Clear privacy policies
  • Third-party security verification
  • Guarantees
  • Lenient return policies
  • Free trials
  • Clear contact information including a phone number and physical address.
Finally, the landing page has to make taking the final conversion action easy. Avoid complex checkout processes, unnecessary information collection, and unwanted up-sell/cross-sell interruptions.

Ask yourself these questions about your landing page:
  • Does my page make it clear who the visitor is dealing with?
  • Am I asking for any information or commitment from the visitor that I don’t absolutely need?
  • Have I referenced third-party sources of credibility?
  • Is it perfectly clear what the desired action is?

 

Summary

AIDA is a great technique for examining your landing pages, but it’s just a part of a successful page optimization program. Other critical components include:
  • Conversion tracking: You have to know how successful your page is, and how your changes affect it.
  • Iterative testing: You will not hit on the right page design the first time. You have to tweak, test, and repeat.
  • Audience segmentation: There is no such thing as an optimal landing page for everyone. Your site will need many different landing pages for different audience segments.
Finally, you have to view landing page optimization as an ongoing process, rather than as a one-time project. Audiences change, products get updated, and competitors change their tactics. A page that performed well six months ago may be ineffective now. Make optimization part of your regular site routine.

Example of a landing page - Go Bee (Beta) - Go Bee an Entrepreneur

I just came across an interesting example of how to attract customers (hopefully early adopters) to my website: I came across this post over LinkedIn - in one of the start-up groups:
 
 
I clicked on the link and saw the Go Bee (Beta) landing page.


Bootstrap Landing Page for Go Bee 
 
They offer the "8 low cost marketing Tips for Small Business" - for free.
In return they have request your name, email and country.
 
 
HOMEWORK
Study the Bo Bee landing page under the AIDA principle (Awareness, Interest, Desire, Action).

sábado, 6 de julho de 2013

L#6 – The goal of talking to advisors is identifying your riskiest assumptions

I. SUMMARY

By now you should have taken your business model as far as you can or should on paper.

Yes, I know you can continue brainstorming possibilities. But endlessly brainstorming possibilities grounded in uncertainty is a recipe for failure.

It's time to get outside the building and gather empirical evidence from people other than yourself.

The first conversations I recommend you have aren't with customers. That will come shortly. But with trusted advisors.

These don't have to be "professional" advisors. They can be a prototypical customer, a potential investor, or another fellow entrepreneur with specific expertise, domain knowledge, or experiential knowledge that applies to you.

The goal for these conversations is identifying your riskiest assumptions.

Remember your business model is "the product" you are building. When building a complicated product under a deadline, you wouldn't start with what's easiest, but what's riskiest.

The same principle applies here. Incorrect prioritization of risk is one of the top contributors of waste.

But before you can correctly prioritize risks, you have to first understand the difference between risk and uncertainty.

Things on your canvas have varying levels of uncertainty. But high uncertainty does not necessarily mean high risk.

II. WATCH THIS VIDEO - This video will:
* start with a definition of risk,
* show you how to prioritize risk, and then
* walk you through techniques for honing in on what's riskiest in your model.

 III: LESSON - Startups Are Risky Business.
A key message is recognizing your business model, not your product, as the true product of your startup.
Thinking this way is quite empowering as it allows you to apply similar techniques for building and testing your business model as you would to any product.

One of these is tackling the riskiest parts of your business model first.

Building a successful startup is fundamentally about risk mitigation or in marketing speak: “removing all objections”.

How to Prioritize Risk

A critical first step is prioritizing what’s riskiest on your business model right now.
Otherwise, it’s easy to fall into the trap of making marginal progress only to get stuck later.
Incorrect prioritization of risk is one of the top contributors of waste.

For instance, I used to advocate jumping right into customer interviews after “Documenting your Plan A” (Generating the Business Model) but customers don’t always have all the answers and/or getting these answers can take too long. Not to mention, you might be targeting too broad a customer segment, too small a customer segment, or the wrong customer segment all together.

Instead, I recommend spending a little more time upfront prioritizing risks and brainstorming alternative models with people other than customers – aka advisors. Advisors help you identify risks on the “total plan”, while customers mostly care about their problems only.

Note: These advisors may be potential customers but they tend to fall into the “visionary customer” camp. For example, they might be startup founders themselves.

 Top 3 Universal Risks

While what is riskiest on your model will vary by the type of product you’re building, I’ve found some risks to be universal. Whenever I’m evaluating a new product idea or advising another startup, I always start by evaluating their business model against these three risks:



1. Problem
Top on the list is the risk of building something nobody wants. You not only have to be able to clearly articulate the top problems from a customer viewpoint, but you also need to have a clear definition of who the early adopters are and how they solve these problems today (existing alternatives).

2. Channels
Failing to build a significant path to customers is what kills most products. The more specific your early adopter definition, the easier it is to define channels to reach those customers. I usually find startups in the opposite camp – too broad a segment and no clear way to reach them.

3. Revenue Streams
And finally a business model without revenue is not a business. Even though you may choose to defer charging out of the gate, you need to be able to articulate how you intend to build a business over time. Whatever your revenue model, you HAVE to know how you will sustain your product development effort until then – through customer revenues, savings, external funding, etc.

What About Solution Risk?
Unless you are trying to solve a particularly hard technical problem (like finding a cure for cancer, or building the next big search algorithm), you will be able to build your product given enough time, money, and effort. The bigger risk is building something nobody wants. I focus on “finding problems worth solving” before worrying too much over feasibility.

How to Tackle Risk
Because the terrain before Product/Market Fit is riddled with qualitative learning, you may be able to mitigate but never completely eliminate any of these risks through a single experiment alone. Instead you need to consciously string together a series of experiments (into an iteration) and systematically eliminate these risks over time.

 

L#5 - Going out of the building - where to start first? Advisors to validate your initial Business Model


First remember: the “business model” is the real product of a startup.

As entrepreneurs, we’ve got the solution covered but need help with the rest of the business model to avoid chasing after solutions no one cares about which is a form of waste.



You build your Business Model through a series of conversations with other people that complement your own worldview – advisors, customers, partners, investors, even competitors.

“Customers don’t care about your solution.
They care about their problems.”
- Dave McClure
, 500 Startups

Customer Development is one such conversation where customers complement your worldview on Problem and Solution. Validating you have a problem worth solving (Problem/Solution Fit) is one of the riskier parts of the model you need to tackle early.

Right Action, Right Time

Too often though, entrepreneurs engage in the wrong conversation at the wrong time which also leads to waste. Like talking to investors before customers, prematurely seeking distribution partners, or paying too much attention to competitors.

Investors don’t care about your solution or your customers.
They care about the scalability of your business model.

The order of these conversations is largely driven by the stage of your startup. Before Product/Market Fit, the focus should be centered around learning. During this stage, I find it most productive to surround myself with customers and advisors.

After Product/Market Fit, the focus then shifts to growth. That’s when you stand to reap the biggest impact with investors and partners – especially if you’re converting them from existing customers and/or advisors.

Customer Discovery can still lead to waste

I used to advocate jumping right into customer interviews after “Step 1: Document your Plan A” (generate your Business Model – Lean Canvas) but customers don’t always have all the answers or finding the answers can take too long. Remember, they mostly care about their problems.

While I agree that Customer Discovery should be among the first conversations to initiate, prematurely jumping into customer interviews can still lead to waste for the following reasons:

1. There are many possible Customer Segments to tackle

For a given problem/solution, there may be a large number of possible customer segments, each representing different business models with varying suitability given your unique perspective and resources.

One of my earlier products, BoxCloud, was built around solving the large file sharing problem. This could easily have been targeted at graphic designers, accountants, lawyers, doctors, architects, etc. Each of these could be a startup of it’s own. One approach to vetting early models is taking a broad sweep first but that still takes time to do and time is your most valuable asset.

2. Waiting is the biggest source of waste

Apart from the time it takes to conduct the actual interviews, a lot of time is spent finding prospects and coordinating these interviews. The biggest contributor of waste during this stage is simply waiting for scheduling responses.

Tip: Consider outsourcing interview scheduling and batching them together.

3. Qualitative learning is not perfect

Ironically, qualitative feedback is most effective when it’s overwhelmingly negative. A strong negative signal indicates that your assumptions most likely won’t work and lets you quickly abandon or refine it. If 5 out 5 customers tell you they don’t have a problem, that’s pretty significant!

On the other hand, a strong positive signal doesn’t necessarily mean it will scale or that the customer isn’t lying. All it does is give you permission to move forward until that can be verified later through quantitative data.

Most of the learning during this stage, however, falls somewhere in the middle.

When following a Customer Discovery process, it’s quite possible to interview 30-50 people, get a strong must-have problem signal, build a MVP, refine first user experience, even get some happy paying customers, and still hit a wall because you can’t effectively reach more customers after that.

While Customer Discovery can help you build the right solution for a given customer segment, you may not be addressing other risks in your model.

Business Model Discovery

A lot of these problems can be alleviated by adding another step before Customer Discovery. Rather than jumping into customer interviews, which can take about 4-10 weeks to complete, I now spend a little more time brainstorming and prioritizing the best “possible models” with advisors first – a process I’ll fittingly call “Business Model Discovery”.

I use the term advisor rather loosely. An early advisor might be a prototypical customer/entrepreneur, potential investor, other entrepreneur, even your spouse or significant other. Even though these models are a collection of untested assumptions, they should at least “work on paper” and be something you can clearly articulate to someone (anyone) other than yourself.

Reasonably smart people can rationalize anything but entrepreneurs are especially gifted at this.

Unlike Customer Discovery, where you systematically start testing parts of the business model – notably Problems and Customer Segments, Business Model Discovery is about tackling the entire business model. The goal of both is learning and not pitching.

The first objective is taking a reality check on your possible models. After I made a declaration to follow a Lean Startup/Customer Development process with my last product, CloudFire, I spent a day filling out the first three hypotheses worksheets at end of Steve Blank’s book. I then sat down to review them with my wife, Sasha, who was also going to be customer #1. I scheduled only an hour because I had anticipated breezing through these worksheets. It took us 2 hours just to get through the first worksheet.

What seemed obvious to me represented “leaps of faith” that weren’t obvious to her. Worse, I had nothing to back them up other than “I just know them to be true”. You need someone on your side who isn’t afraid to call bullshit.

Beyond these early “reality-check” advisors, also seek out advisors that bring specific perspective through domain knowledge and/or experience. For instance, before doing any customer interviews on my latest product initiative USERcycle (“KISSmetrics meets MailChimp”), I met with Hiten Shah, Jason Cohen, Joshua Baer, Manuel Rosso, and Eric Ries. Their collective feedback helped inform my decision to pursue a very specific business model over others.

The Goal is Learning

Much like customer interviews aren’t about asking customers what they want, these interviews aren’t about asking advisors what to do.

The Advisor Paradox: Hire advisors for good advice but don’t follow it, apply it.
- Venture Hacks

After documenting your Plan A, Step 2 is identifying the riskiest parts of the model. This is what you need to learn at this stage. We are good at identifying technical risk but need help doing the same with other components of the business model.

The key is not taking this feedback as “judgement or validation” but as a way to identify and prioritize risk. Then move on to Step 3 and tackle that risk through experiments.

Success is unlocked at the intersection of these conversations and it’s your job as the entrepreneur to synthesize it into a coherent whole.

Lesson #4 - Customer Development Adapted for Web Apps, by Ash Maurya


In order to build a successful product, you have to eventually find a scalable and repeatable way to reach customers.
 
There is an implicit expectation that customer development will uncover that path to customers.
 
My experience (with web based products) has been that it’s not as much the uncovering of the path but the building of the path that is troublesome.
 
Some paths are obvious but hard, such as those built on referrals (word of mouth), SEO, etc.
 
It’s comparatively a lot easier to find 30-50 people, validate you have a problem worth solving, build a MVP, even get them to pay you – all of which is a false positive if it was predicated on a customer acquisition approach that won’t scale or more importantly be applicable to how you acquire customers in the future.

Customer Development needs to be a continuous learning process

Customer Development is about establishing a continuous feedback loop throughout the product development cycle. Enterprise selling necessitates constant contact with customers throughout the customer lifecycle.
 
This is NOT the case with web software. To fix this, you have to build appropriate customer touch points in the form of ongoing usability tests, customer feedback calls, interviews, etc.

Start building and testing a path to customers from day one

Seasoned entrepreneurs know that building a significant enough path to customers is one of the hardest aspects of building a successful product.
I always get at least one question from the audience during my talks/workshops on “finding prospects”. I used to answer this question with the canned response of “make a list of people you know, start there, ask for referrals, interviews will reveal the path to customers”.
 
Now, I slant my response more heavily towards finding prospects by way of testing the actual channels you intend to use for reaching your future customers.

Don’t get me wrong. Talking to anyone is still way better than talking to no one. If you have no idea how to reach early prospects or if the channel takes time to build, start with your 1-degree network.

But, don’t declare Problem/Solution Fit unless you’re able to recruit a fair number of your interviewees using an actual channel you will use.

It’s also equally important to point out not to fall in the trap of prematurely optimizing this channel. You may not have a problem worth solving or have to pivot to a different customer segment. Premature optimization is a form of waste. Your first objective should be driving just enough traffic to support learning. During Customer Discovery, that means enough traffic to yield 30-50 interviews.

Some examples –
1. Write a blog post that ends with a call for participation in an interview
2. Create a landing page and drive SEM traffic with a call-to-action ending in an interview (not a survey).

Start building and testing your selling process as soon as possible

While Customer Development does NOT magically scale even for Enterprise software, the learning from the interviews can more easily be applied towards building a repeatable and scalable direct sales process.

Selling a product over 15-20 minutes in an interview is very different from selling a product in 5-8 seconds on a landing page.

Again early interviews are helpful in identifying what’s important (your unique value proposition) but you need to start testing that in the right format (e.g. landing page) as soon as possible.

Some examples –
Run customer interviews in a usability test format.
1. Instead of verbalizing the unique value proposition, show them a landing page and test positioning.
2. Instead of getting a letter of intent, watch them sign-up to your service and note where they get stuck.

Retention, not Revenue is the Ultimate Validation

Getting paid is only the first form of validation. Providing ongoing value (as measured by customer retention) is the ultimate validation. While this is true for both Enterprise and web businesses, early revenue plays a bigger role towards customer validation in Enterprise software than web software. For one, the purchase order is a lot bigger. Also, because the sales process is a lot harder to close, the barriers to loosing a customer are higher compared to web based software that can be canceled at any time.

Here again, Enterprise Software has a natural customer feedback loop built-in – in the form of account managers whose job is to periodically ensure customer engagement and retention are healthy. In a web based business, you have to build and monitor that feedback loop yourself with potentially thousands of users.