{"id":1326,"date":"2017-05-10T17:59:15","date_gmt":"2017-05-10T15:59:15","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/leanmagazine.net\/?p=1326"},"modified":"2024-03-15T15:18:49","modified_gmt":"2024-03-15T14:18:49","slug":"lean-startup-a-dynamic-formula-for-bringing-ideas-to-market","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/leanmagazine.net\/issues\/issue14\/lean-startup-a-dynamic-formula-for-bringing-ideas-to-market\/","title":{"rendered":"Lean Startup \u2013 A dynamic formula for bringing ideas to market"},"content":{"rendered":"
As academics, Nathan Furr and Jeff Dyer has studied the inner workings of both corporations and start-ups and analyzed the factors which make the difference between success and failure. They both observed that big companies often need better tools to manage innovation, while start-ups generally have access to such tools. A couple of year ago, Jeff Dyer was a co-author of a highly popular book which provides a framework for generating ideas: <\/span>The Innovator’s DNA<\/span><\/i>. In the current book \u2013 which can be considered a follow-up \u2013 Nathan Furr and Jeff Dyer demonstrate how to proceed to turn those ideas into reality through a successful commercialization process. The Innovator\u2019s Method, developed on the basis on their research, is an end-to-end process for creating, refining, and bringing ideas to market for both startups and established companies.<\/span><\/p>\n Lean Magazine <\/span><\/i>got in touch with Nathan Furr for some email questions<\/span>.<\/span><\/i><\/p>\n The Innovator\u2019s Method<\/span><\/i> is about how to manage the uncertainty of innovation more effectively and efficiently. This is to improve your chances of successful innovation while reducing the amount of time and money invested in the process. It comes from two sources:<\/span><\/p>\n The first step in applying these ideas is to recognize that the tools of traditional management are built for conditions of relative certainty, where managers are trying to capture the value of a known opportunity. Traditional management tools work very well in a value capture context. But they work very poorly under conditions of uncertainty when you are trying to create value rather than capture it. Accordingly, you need to apply a different set of tools to manage the uncertainty of innovation. After that initial recognition we describe a series of steps:<\/span><\/p>\n 1) Generate new ideas \u201cIt all sounds quite simple, and in a sense it is. What we tried to do is help identify the traps that catch most people and try to provide some tools to overcome them.\u201d<\/div>\n The tools can absolutely be used by large corporations, and are also being used in this way. The main difference, or change that needs to occur to apply them, is in the leadership and culture of the organization. We describe this change in the book as a shift from seeing yourself as the chief decision maker to seeing yourself as the chief experimenter.<\/span>Hi Nathan! How did you and Jeff Dyer get the idea for your book<\/b> and why did you <\/b>select Lean Start-up as the model for innovation within companies?<\/b><\/h4>\n
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Could you give a short summary of the method in your book?<\/b><\/h4>\n
\n2) Make sure you have a full understanding of the real problem to be solved, or the job to be done
\n3) Use radically cheap and rapid prototypes to validate that need.
\n4) Iterate, or innovate, on the existing business model.
\n5) Scale the ideas.<\/p>\nWhat would be the main difference if one tries to implement the method described in the book in a larger, more traditional company?<\/b><\/h4>\n
\n<\/span><\/p>\nWhich parts of Lean and Agile methodology do you think are the most beneficial here?<\/b><\/h4>\n