Why Lean Start-ups Don’t Work?
This guest story is by Guyi Shen, co-founder of lobangclub, he blogs about his experiences at insidestartup.sg.
A quick look at the 52 exhibitors on Echelon 2011′s site and you will realize the majority of the start-ups are primarily relying on network effects as a major part of their product growth.
The current meme in the start-up community (in Singapore, at least) is the “Lean” start-up concept. Unfortunately, the current “Lean” approach doesn’t work for network effects startups.
このゲスト記事はlobangclubの共同創業者であるGuyi Shenによるもので、Guyiはinsidestartup.sgに彼の経験を綴っている。
Echelon 2011のサイトに載っている52の出展者に目を通すと、多くのスタートアップは製品の伸びの大部分をネットワーク効果に頼りすぎている事に気付くだろう。
現在のスタートアップコミュニティー(少なくともシンガポールでは)のミームは「リーン(頼る)」スタートアップというコンセプトだ。不幸にも現在の「リーン」アプローチはネットワーク効果を期待するスタートップにはうまく機能しない。
Lean is a method of testing the assumptions and hypothesis of a business idea in an iterative manner whilst validating your product/market fit before you ship a complete product. The popularity of the method stems from the promise that it “de-risks” the product development/marketing so that significant funding is raised after product/market fit in order to scale the business.
Going Lean
Lean as a philosophy is great – however in practice it is severely lacking right now with respect to network effects startups. Mostly because the user acquisition phase (i.e. scaling) has always been seen as something you do after you achieve product/market fit. My opinion is that scaling is something you must do before you reach product/market fit.
Eric Ries coined the term “Lean”, but the founding father of Lean is Steve Blank and the Lean manifesto is his book - Four Steps to Epiphany. The philosophy of Lean can be described as using the scientific method of hypothesis generation (a creative process), and experimentation (a logical process) to invalidate assumptions. The vast majority of “Lean” practices to product development were designed by entrepreneurs working on software that doesn’t rely on network effects. Current thought leaders in “Lean” methodology include Steve Blank, Ash Maurya, 37 Signals, and Eric Ries. However the majority of current discussion explicitly ignores the unique challenges of products that rely on network effects.
Network vs Non-network effects Start-ups
Because of this fundamental distinction between network effects and non-network effects start-ups, there is now a tendency to apply the wisdom that worked so well for enterprise software to network effects consumer start-ups, which does not necessary translate. Ironically, one of the thought leaders in this space, Eric Ries himself was CTO of a network effects startup, IMVU.
More specifically, let’s bring our discussion around the essence of “Lean” – Customer development. The premise is that by questioning and testing the underlying assumptions of your customer’s problems, your solutions, your business model, and you are more likely to build a product that people will use.
Fantastic premise, however all the case studies, processes, practices currently en vogue in the “Lean” community are based around enterprise/consumer products without strong network effects. The fundamental difference is that for a network effects startup, a large part of the value to the user can only be felt after achieving the network effects. Therefore, the core assumption of your product value can only be tested after attaining a critical mass of users.
At a fundamental level, the value to a user of a network-effects-type start-up has a multiplier effect once critical mass is achieved (how useful would Facebook be if you were the only person on the network?). Given this huge caveat, any sort of “Lean” start-up concept approach for network effects start-ups must take this into account. We must first solve the “Lean scaling” issue first.
We need users before we have a viable product. Sean Ellis first spoke about this at Lean Startup L.A. Instead of finding product market fit and then scaling, we need to scale first and then find product market fit.
実用的な製品を作る前に、ユーザーを獲得するのが先決だ。ショーン・エリスはこのことについてロサンゼルスのリーン・スタートアップにおいて最初に言及した人物である。製品の市場合致を見つけた後スケーリングを行うのではなく、スケーリングを最初に行うことが必要だ。
The poster child for this is Paypal, they spent tens of millions of dollars in its first year in order to acquire users, before finding product market fit. Airbnb spammed the hell out of Craigslist in order to go to critical mass. Myspace spent a ton on emails, ads and parties. YouTube gave away a boatload of prizes to build up their video uploaders. The lone exception, Facebook, other than some minor level blackhatting (scrapping data, spamming emails) grew without spending a ton of money on user acquisition.
So what should we do when you are not Facebook, nor have money for user acquisition before product/market fit?
では、フェイスブックでもなく、ユーザー獲得のためのお金も無い場合、製品・市場合致の前に何をすべきか?