The Simple Cycle to Validate Your Business Ideas

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    Picture of Vaughan Broderick

    Vaughan Broderick


    Community Focus

    Each week I’ll bring you organisations and experts doing great work to support entrepreneurs, innovators and leaders.

    1. Want to learn about real growth, not hacks! Try my friend Adriana Tica’s newsletter where you’ll get weekly strategy advice, in-depth trend analyses, and ideas to help you build a resilient business. Subscribe to my favorite marketing & growth newsletter, Ideas to Power Your Future.
    2. Are you starting a business? You need a client acquisition system that works for you 24/7. Gabe Marusca from Digital Finest is a nomad solopreneur and will transform your audience into clients by creating an automated marketing funnel, that works while you’re asleep.

    👋 Hi Reader,

    Today, we delve into a simple cycle to test any business idea.

    Any founder, corporate innovator or leader can use the concept to de-risk and gain confidence about whether to pursue an idea.

    If you find this helpful, please share it with your network.

    Let’s dive in.

    Read time: 2.5 minutes

    I recently wrote about how 94% of executives are unhappy with their innovation programme.

    HBR discuss why in ​this article​, but it comes down to behaviours and blockers.

    The five behaviours are:

    1. Taking the view that there is always a better way to do things – being curious.
    2. Deeply understanding customers’ stated and unstated needs and desires.
    3. Collaborating across and beyond the organisation and actively cross-pollinating.
    4. Using experimentation, rapid iteration, and frequent failure as a way to learn.
    5. Empowering and enabling people to take intelligent risks, share different opinions, and go after what they need.

    We’ll focus on the experimentation side of things. However, all five behaviours must work together to give ourselves the best chance of realising new value.

    Click ​here​ to go to this social media post.


    Step One: Identify Your ‘Leap of Faith Assumptions’

    ‘Leap of Faith Assumptions’ are the key things that must be true for your business idea.

    Use the business model canvas to quickly map out how your idea will create, deliver and capture value.

    You can use other inputs, like backlogs, roadmaps and user stories. However, the business model canvas is a ‘must use’ tool that you should utilise to prototype and develop any idea.

    Making the idea visual helps with collaboration and understanding how each building block relates to and impacts another.

    Learn more about the business model canvas ​here​.


    Step Two: Extract, Map and Prioritise

    Next, create a two-by-two matrix with ‘important’ and ‘unimportant’ on the vertical axis and ‘evidence’ to ‘no evidence’ on the horizontal axis.

    Then, copy each assumption and place each assumption where it sits on the ‘importance’ scale, then move it to the ‘evidence’ scale.

    You must critique each assumption rigorously because often, we have more confidence about the evidence for the idea than is reality, and we may consider many assumptions to be necessary.

    In reality, there will only be a few assumptions that are really important.

    Want to dive deeper? Read ​this article​.


    Source: David J Bland

    Step Three: Run Rapid Experiments

    Experiments intend to de-risk and learn before you go all in on an idea.

    But what experiments should you run?

    That’s the challenge.

    The type of experiments depends on factors like what zone of the business (desirability, feasibility or viability), your budget, the time constraints, what resources you have, etc.

    However, if your idea is new, we will likely need to know if people are interested in the idea and will pay you for it.

    This is where having a mindset of “what is the minimum I can do to gain insight” comes into play.

    Most people think you must make high-fidelity versions of your product or service.

    The reality is starting low-fidelity and increasing your investment as you learn more is a more thoughtful way to go.

    For example, if I have an idea for a window cleaning business, I could run these experiments:

    • Ask my neighbours directly.
    • Post on community forums to gauge response.
    • Direct people to a simple landing page to see how many sign up.

    All before, creating a business plan or investing in equipment.

    “A spreadsheet is just a fantasy made explicit until you have evidence” – Alex Osterwalder

    Here’s some of my favourite experiments:


    And, a link to my free experiment vault. Copy and use them for yourself.

    ⚡️ Call to Action

    The next time you have a business idea, try this:

    1) Map out the business idea

    2) Extract, map and prioritise your critical assumptions

    3) Run rapid experiments to learn

    What are you waiting for?

    Try it today.

    Did you enjoy this week’s newsletter?

    🥳 Loved it 😃 Liked it 😐 Meh

    Why not forward it with your network?

    That’s all for today friends 👋

    If you have an idea for a future issue, I’d love to know. Just reply to this email.

    Thanks for being here,

    Vaughan


    PS. ​See you in next Wednesday 6:45am NZ

    When you’re ready, there are a few ways I can help:

    1) Build your innovation skills. Take the free 7-day course.

    2) Master innovation. Register for the bootcamp.

    3) Book a 1 hour clarity call. Unlock your progress in 60 minutes!

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