What Teachers Need to Know about the Lean Startup Model
Posted on October 28, 2011
Author: Katrina Stevens
This is for any educators out there interested in participating in DC Startup Weekend EDU this weekend or any others in the future! I plan on continuing to add to this Ed Tech Glossary, so please let me know if I’ve missed something or an idea needs clarification.
Though an
experienced teacher and administrator, I was a complete novice when I joined a
founding startup team. I didn’t know lean startup from Lean Cuisine. Customer
validation was making sure to get my parking validated at a restaurant in Inner
Harbor, and an MVP was the “most valuable player.” I suspect that many other
educators interested in entering Ed Tech are coming from a similar place, so
I’m creating a glossary of some Ed Tech terms, starting with the lean startup
concept. For those of you who plan to participate in an EDU Startup Weekend,
the founders and many participants advocate a lean startup approach to creating
a business, so it’s useful to understand the concept.
Lean startup
model: Eric Reis turned his blog
into a recently published book, The Lean Startup, which was #2 on the New York Times
Bestsellers list. (Inc. Magazine featured a condensed version of Reis’s book if
you want further reading.) Essentially, Reis developed a business model that encourages
startups to find out as quickly as possible whether or not the business
idea/product/service is viable. The path to achieving this learning is to
create a rough version of your product that goes into a cycle of testing,
iterating, testing, iterating, testing, and iterating until the product is
viable. An important part of this process is early and frequent customer
validation. The lean startup model came out of a concept in manufacturing
where small batches are created so that there is minimal loss of time and money
if the market isn’t interested in that version of the product. The same lean
process works well applied to technology too. When creating a web-based tool or
an app, you can create a mockup to garner feedback without building the actual
product or feature, for example.
Minimally
viable product or MVP: This is not
the same as a prototype! In the Lean Startup model, the goal is to create a
test the smallest piece of a business to see if there’s a market for it. Reis
defines the MVP as “that version of a new product which allows a team to
collect the maximum amount of validated
learning about customers with the least effort.” Essentially, you’re
looking for the minimum set of features needed to learn from your early
adopters because you want to learn early what users want and don’t want. It
limits spending time and energy on products that no one really wants. Most
teams try to develop a minimally viable product during a startup weekend, not
the whole business. It looks great to judges if you’re able to validate your
idea/product during the weekend. You may be asking, but how do I do that?
Customer
validation or validated learning: There are a number
of ways to learn about your customers and what they like and don’t like about
your product/service. There’s also a big difference between what someone might
say they like and what they’re willing to buy or do. The best validation is
showing that customers/users will in fact want your product/service and be
willing to pay for it.
You first
want to see if there’s any interest. For example, if you already have a free
product but are curious if people would pay for some additional features, you
could add a button to your site that advertises the new version (which you
haven’t built yet!). If a number of users click the button, then you have begun
validating that customers are interested. If no one clicks, then all you’ve
wasted is the time to develop the concept—you haven’t spent excessive money and
time on something no one wants.
During a
Startup Weekend, you’re likely to focus on establishing general interest in
your product or service, and if you’re lucky, getting some users to act.
There’s not a lot of time to build significant traction. One way to
establish initial interest is to create a landing page.
Landing page: To test the viability of an idea, a single
webpage is sometimes created to see if anyone will sign up for the
product/service. There are several pre-built free pages out there. I’ve used
and liked KickoffLabs
as well as Launch Rock.
What’s great about these programs is that they provide data: how many times the
page was visited, how many visitors were unique, how many actually signed up.
(There are some great programs with more bells and whistles for when your
business grows and you need to track more complex user actions. At LessonCast, we use MailChimp).
Here’s an
example: I joined the team TeenStarter at Startup Weekend
EDU in Seattle. The concept for this youth-only site was to provide
both advice on creating a business (how to pitch, how to develop an idea, how
to market) and to provide a platform for students to pitch their ideas to get
seed funding (micro-financing for teens). Our hypothesis was that a student
would post a video pitch and then use social media to send it out to his or her
network. Friends of friends might also contribute, until the student received
the money he or she needed to launch a business or community project.
Here are the
steps we took to validate the concept that weekend:
- We created a landing
page ( http://teenstarter.kickofflabs.com/) and
used social media to blast to contacts of everyone on the team.
(KickoffLabs showed 73 unique views and 17 users signed up.)
- Again using social
media, our team sent out a request for any teenagers who had an idea to
pitch. (One 13-year-old relative of a team member uploaded a video late
Saturday night!)
- Once we had the site minimally functional, we posted the teenager’s video pitch and at uploaded a PayPal donate button. (Our featured teenager needed $60; $40 was raised before final pitches on Sunday night. She had the rest the next day!)
For a Startup
Weekend, this exercise demonstrated a good conversion rate, and was a fairly
solid proof of concept! You shouldn’t expect to get this far on most weekend
projects.
Conversion
rate: It’s one thing to get users to your site; it’s
quite another thing altogether to get them to act/buy/participate. For example,
if you send out an email directing folks to a landing page, the first
conversion rate will be how many viewers actually click on the link to that
landing page. Then the next level of concept validation is how many of these
users actually sign up. It’s possible to have more levels of increased
engagement beyond this, of course. Each increased level of engagement provides
more validated learning about what customers will do. In the Teenstarter
example, one measure of a conversation rate would be that out of 73 people who
viewed the landing page, 17 actually signed up by providing their emails.
There are
other ways to validate what your customers like: interviews are often
used.
Interviews: Interviews are a great way to gather information
during and after a Startup Weekend. Just because you are an educator does
not mean that you should assume that you know what all educators will
want—still take the time to get feedback from other teachers and
administrators. Other participants, organizers and mentors can help you get
in contact with people outside your own educator circle. Asking educators on
other teams is one good method to gather some immediate input. Showing two or
three versions of a product works well to provide you with specific feedback
about features.
Mockups: Remember that you do not have to create a full
product to get feedback. A mockup can provide the same information with much
less time investment. I learned how to use Balsamiq (free trial period!) at one
Startup Weekend—it’s great for creating a design of a website or iPhone app.
Traction: Once you’ve validated your concept, you next want
to build traction, something that’s unlikely to occur during a Startup Weekend
because of the condensed timetable but definitely an area of focus as you move
your business forward. Traction means building a set of early adopters and
being able to get those adopters to do something. For example, if you’re
building a community-based site, then your traction would be connected to how
many users are interacting on your site. If you’re selling a product to
schools, how many schools have signed? If you’re interested in investors, then
they will be interested in your traction.
When you’re
at Startup Weekend, learn as much as you can from other participants and
mentors about other effective ways to develop your concept into a viable
business!
About the author
Katrina (@katrinastevens1),
Community Developer for LessonCast Learning, has over 20 years experience as a
district leader, professional developer, principal, adjunct professor,
consultant, academic dean, department chair-- and throughout all of these
roles—a teacher. She has worked in public and independent schools, from
elementary through higher education. In Katrina’s recent role as ELA STEM
Supervisor for Baltimore County, she led district-wide content literacy and
transdisciplinary instruction initiatives to help prepare the district for the
adoption of the Common Core State Standards (CCSS). She also spent three years
in Bermuda establishing a gifted and talented program through Johns Hopkins
University’s Center for Talented Youth.
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