Studying History: How Westward Expansion Still Inspires Small Businesses
How the Legacy of Westward Expansion Continues to Inspire Small Business Owners
Read more...One of the problems they run into is building a web site.
If you’re an experienced coder and user interface designer you think nothing is easier than diving into Ruby on Rails, Nodes.js and Balsamiq and throwing together a web site. (Heck, in Silicon Valley even the waiters can do it.)
But for the rest of us mortals whose eyes glaze over at the buzzwords, the questions are, “How do I get my great idea on the web? What are the steps in building a web site?” And the most important question is, “How do I use the business model canvas and Customer Development to test whether this is a real business?”
My first attempt at helping my students answer these questions was by putting together the Startup Tools Page - a compilation of available web development tools. While it was a handy reference, it still didn’t help the novice.
So today, I offer my next attempt.
How To Build a Web Startup – The Lean LaunchPad Edition
Here’s the step-by-step process we suggest our students use in our Lean LaunchPad classes.
(Use the Startup Tools Page as the resource for tool choices)
Step 1: Set Up Team Logistics
Step 2. Craft Your Company Hypotheses (use the Lean LaunchLab)
Step 3: Website Logistics
For coders: set up a web host
BTW: You can see the hosting choices of YCombinator startups here
Step 4: Build a Low-Fidelity Web Site
For non-coders:
For coders: build the User Interface
Step 5: Customer Engagement (drive traffic to your preliminary website)
Step 6: Build a more complete solution (Connect the U/I to code)
Step 7: Track your progress in driving traffic – Test the “Customer Problem” by collecting Customer Data
Step 8: Test the “Customer Solution” by building a full featured High Fidelity version of your website
For all Steps: Monitor and record changes week by week using the Lean LaunchLab
For Class: Use the Lean LaunchLab to produce a 7-minute weekly progress presentation
If you’re Building a Company Rather Than a Class Project
Comments, suggestions, corrections, additions and brickbats welcomed.
(Image source: Blocksand3puzzlesblog)
How the Legacy of Westward Expansion Continues to Inspire Small Business Owners
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