How to Read This Book viiPreface xiiiWho is This Book For? xviiIntroduction xxiA Repeatable Path xxiiWhy a Second Decade? xxivThe Four Steps: A New Path xxixGetting StartedChapter 1: The Path to Disaster: A Startup is Not a Small Version of a Big Company 1Chapter 2: The Path to the Epiphany: The Customer Development Model 19The Customer Development Manifesto 31Step One: Customer DiscoveryChapter 3: An Introduction to Customer Discovery 53Chapter 4: Customer Discovery, Phase One: State Your Business Model Hypotheses 69Chapter 5: Customer Discovery, Phase Two: "Get Out of the Building" to Test the Problem: "Do People Care?" 189Chapter 6: Customer Discovery, Phase Three: "Get Out of the Building" and Test the Product Solution 227Chapter 7: Customer Discovery, Phase Four: Verify the Business Model and Pivot or Proceed 257Step Two: Customer ValidationChapter 8: Introduction to Customer Validation 277Chapter 9: Customer Validation, Phase One: "Get Ready to Sell" 291Chapter 10: Customer Validation, Phase Two: "Get Out of the Building and Sell!" 357Chapter 11: Customer Validation, Phase Three: Develop Product and Company Positioning 413Chapter 12: Customer Validation, Phase Four: The Toughest Question of All: Pivot or Proceed? 429The Startup Owner's Manual "Site" Map 465Appendix A: Customer Development Checklists 469Appendix B: Glossary 531Appendix C: How to Build a Web Startup: A Simple Overview 541Acknowledgements 549About the Authors 553Index 557
Steve Blank is a driving force in innovation, helping to radically reshape how startups are built and how entrepreneurship is taught. His new Startup Owner's Manual is his latest addition for entrepreneurial practitioners.Steve created the Customer Development methodology that spawned the Lean Startup movement. He teaches entrepreneurship at Stanford University, U.C. and Columbia. His blog, www.steveblank.com, is "must" reading among entrepreneurs. In 2011, Steve created the Lean LaunchPad, a hands-on class using Customer Development to train students as well as elite teams of scientists selected by the U.S. National Science Foundation.Steve arrived in Silicon Valley in 1978, as boom times began, joining his first of eight startups. After 21 years the results were two deep craters, several "base hits," one massive "dot-com bubble" home run, and immense experiential learning that resulted in his first break-through book, The Four Steps to the Epiphany.Bob Dorf is a serial entrepreneur, founding his first success at age 22 and, since then, six more-"two homeruns, two base hits, and three great tax losses," as he puts it. He's advised and/or invested in a score since. Dorf is often called the "midwife of Customer Development," having critiqued early drafts of The Four Steps to the Epiphany; he and Steve have been friends and colleagues ever since.Entrepreneurial from his teens, Bob received his last W-2 almost 40 years ago, when he quit his editor's job at New York's WINS Radio to launch his first successful startup. In his "spare" time, he teaches "Introduction to Venturing," on Customer Development and getting startups right, at Columbia Business School.For tons more insight and helpful tools for entrepreneurs and educators: www.steveblank.com