Test Driving The Lean Startup Process

This evening I attended the fourth installment of the NYC Lean Startup Meetup where we discussed the concepts of the Minimum Viable Product (MVP).  Fraser, Kareem, and Greg put together a great presentation about what a MVP is and opened up the discussion to the group.

Incase you don’t know, Eric Ries defines a MVP as follows:

The minimum viable product is that version of a new product which allows a team to collect the maximum amount of validated learning about customers with the least effort.

Validated learning? What’s that? It’s the customer validation process where you make a hypothesis for your “product”, test it, collect data, and learn from your results to tune your understand of what your customers needs are.

At the Meetup we discussed some examples presented about what an MVP is, but at times there seemed to be some confusion about what the purpose the MVP was really supposed to do.  The concept isn’t to just introduce a new product, but also and primarily to create something that allows you to collect data to validate your hypothesis with the minimum amount of effort (time, money, resources).  With that data and your validated learning you build a new product that is (most likely) a derivative of your current MVP.

Since I’ve been very captivated by the concepts of Lean Startup, I wanted to give it a try.  I have a product idea for a problem I’d like to solve for myself.  However, I want to validate my assumptions about the customers who I believe would use my product.

My product idea is a social utility that allows people to manage their casual plans (such as getting together for drinks, attending movies, or meeting up at the gym).

My first hypothesis:

Users do not use twitter, facebook (statuses or events), or evite to plan causal events. Instead they use email, im/chat, and their phones (text or calling) to make plans.

My MVP is a simple survey that asked about what methods users used to communicate casual plans.  You can view it here: http://bit.ly/43GUkf How is a survey an MVP? It is a product that helped me acquire data to validate my hypothesis.

As you can see from the chart above my MVP validated my hypothesis that email, texting, and chat were more likely to be used than facebook, twitter, or evite like services when making casual plans.

Granted I did not have a large sample size and by no means is my survey considered scientific, however it does allow me to identify emergent behavior of my potential customers.

With this data and observation I can apply this to my next MVP which will have another hypothesis (most likely related to email, chat, and texting) and allow me to collect data in which I can validate my hypothesis against.  If my hypothesis is flawed, then I will look to why and reform a new hypothesis and try again.

Yet another update…

Made some more fixes for bugs that you probably didn’t notice were there and also opened up the service for anyone to join.  Check out the nifty new landing page…

I’ll be setting up Google Web Optimizer tonight with a few variations of the landing page.

Oh, and yes (= there’s an iPhone App in the works.

Quick little update…

This morning Mark’O pointed out that I forgot something important with this weekends release.  There was no way to search for people on the site.  I just added a way to search people by name.  You’ll find it under “Find People”.

n’joy!

Tobin

Finishing up a day of work and getting ready to enjoy a pretty sunset as I ride back to Brooklyn!

Finishing up a day of work and getting ready to enjoy a pretty sunset as I ride back to Brooklyn!

Release Update

It’s been a bit of a long and productive week!

  • Got 100+ results for my survey by Monday
  • There was the 2nd Shackshack Next NY event on Tuesday.
  • My birthday on Wednesday
  • Got back on track with a 7 mile run through Brooklyn on Thursday
  • Met with David Rostan of SocialYell.com on Friday
  • Did some work for the “Day Job” on Saturday

Fortunately I’ve been able to get a lot of work done on Buddy Blip!  Here are some notable changes and updates:

  • You can now find & invite members through their AOL, GMail, Hotmail, and Yahoo! Mail accounts.
  • You can now invite people by email address.
  • You can post something to do that is not linked to an existing venue
  • Cleaned up the Inbox & Conversation pages
  • Cleaned up Buddy List
  • Made http URLs in activities, comments, and conversations clickable.
  • You can upload profile photos

I’m really excited about the results from the survey.  It validated a lot of what’s been on my mind as to what people currently do and who my real competition is.  I’ve got a lot of thoughts about that and I’ll be posting my findings a bit later this week.

Thanks!

Tobin

BuddyBlip & Lean Startups

I became an immediate fan of Lean Startups after first reading about the topic. As both a virgo and an engineer the idea of testing hypothesis and making decisions based off of the findings is something that resonates with me a lot.  The thought of not assuming that I know what I’m doing makes me feel like there’s a lot to be learned.  It’s quite a humbling approach.

Over the past few weeks I’ve been talking with “customers” and validating the problem I’m trying to solve.  In the coming week I’ll be rolling out my functional MVP and testing out my hypothesis by conducting user interviews.

My Goals:

  • Create a product I would use on a daily basis
  • Create a product that is useful if only one person uses it, but becomes more useful if it’s used socially.
  • Spend less then $100/month to support the system
  • Build a functional MVP in 4 weeks

Some posts which have inspired me to try this out: