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  • Minimum Viable Product -- Or M - V - P.

  • We've all heard this term being used lately. But a lot of people seem to misunderstand

  • what it really means. Allow me to illustrate….

  • Say you invent a new SUPER DELICIOUS Food concept! You're CONVINCED that the WORLD

  • will love it. Your friends & family certainly did. So you decide to start a business. Your

  • vision: To bring Delight to the mouths of the entire world.

  • But you don't want to get ahead of yourself

  • So you start off with an MVP -- A Minimum Viable Product --

  • Which in your case is A small restaurant in one city.

  • You scope out a good location downtown, sign a one year lease and Now all you have to do

  • is wait for the people to show up... Only problem is -- they don't. People simply

  • don't like what you're selling. And now you're stuck with a one year lease and no

  • revenue. You suffer the losses. But hey, at least you stuck to the MVP (Minimum Viable Product) right?

  • Actually - this is where people get it wrong. To carry out an MVP (Minimum Viable Product) -- You have to first ask

  • yourself -- What is the 'Value' that you are offering? In our example, the value isn't

  • the restaurant -- it's the FOOD CONCEPT... And your MVP (Minimum Viable Product) should set out to VALIDATE if

  • this CONCEPT is something people really care about!

  • ------------------- Did you need an entire restaurant to test

  • your food concept? Perhaps you could have opened up a Food Stall at a near by event?

  • Maybe then you would have learned that it wasn't really your DISH that people loved

  • -- but just the spice you used. This would allow you to ITERATE and instead SELL your

  • spices

  • An MVP (Minimum Viable Product) isn't about simply releasing a reduced version of your final product -- It's about

  • LEARNING -- with the least amount of effort & resources.

  • Lets look at a couple of examples.

  • DropBox -- Before even having a working product -- they released a three minute explainer

  • video that simply showed the value they wanted to offer. The people who watched it -- LOVED

  • what they were seeing -- and Dropboxes waiting list jumped to 75000 customers overnight!

  • Then we have the founder of Zappos -- who had a envisioned a world where people shopped

  • for their shoes on the internet. To validate his thesis ---- He asked the owners of local

  • shoe shops if he could take pictures of their shoes! He then posted these pictures on his

  • website along with their prices.

  • It was only IF & when orders came in -- that he'd go to the store, purchase the shoes

  • and ship them to his customers. ThisMVP” (Minimum Viable Product) was certainly not scalable. But it did it's

  • job to validate that the value he sought to deliver was something people WANT.

  • The GOAL of an MVP (Minimum Viable Product) is to prove that the customer

  • WANTS what your vision will offer.

  • The PROCESS of your vision -- is often irrelevant. I mean, do you care really care about the

  • diodes, cathodes or liquid crystals that makes your computer screen work? Nope. You just

  • care that it offer you that crisp display, and you're willing to pay for it.

Minimum Viable Product -- Or M - V - P.

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