7 Keys To Making A Business Out Of Your Great Product - Printable Version +- Sup Startup (https://supstartup.com) +-- Forum: Startup Forum (https://supstartup.com/forumdisplay.php?fid=3) +--- Forum: Web Talk (https://supstartup.com/forumdisplay.php?fid=8) +--- Thread: 7 Keys To Making A Business Out Of Your Great Product (/showthread.php?tid=3509) |
7 Keys To Making A Business Out Of Your Great Product - AnthonyKic - 02-02-2021 7 Keys To Making A Business Out Of Your Great Product Most technical entrepreneurs focus hard on building an innovative product, but forget that an elegant solution doesn’t automatically translate into a successful business. Businesses require an equally elegant business model, with the right price, messaging and delivery channel to the right target customers to keep the dream alive and growing. Defining the right business model requires the same diligence as designing the right product, but the approach and skills required are different. That’s why investors acknowledge that two co-founders are often better than one -- with one focusing on the technical solution, and the other focusing on defining and building the business model. These two jobs need to be done in parallel. This dual-leadership approach would have avoided the frustration I felt in a startup a few years ago where beta customers loved our software solution as a free prototype, but we couldn’t sell one in the first few months for a price that seemed reasonable for all our work and innovation. The founder had simply not done the work to validate a price and customer segment. In the investment community, this work is called proving the business model. It starts with validating a business opportunity (a large customer segment willing to pay money to solve a real problem), in much the same way as your proof of concept or prototype validates your technical solution. Here are seven steps I recommend for establishing the right business model:
Your business model can be a better sustainable competitive advantage than your product features, or it can be your biggest risk exposure. Too many of the business plans I see are heavy on competitive product features, but light on business model details and innovations. If you or someone on your team hasn’t spent at least the same effort on the business model as on the product or service, you are only half prepared for the real world of business today. It’s hard to win by doing half the job, especially if that is the easier half. Marty Zwilling https://blog.startupprofessionals.com/2021/01/7-keys-to-making-business-out-of-your.html |