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A practical guide to effective business model testing 7 out of 10 new products fail to deliver on expectations. Testing Business Ideas aims to reverse that statistic. In the tradition of Alex Osterwalder’s global bestseller Business Model Generation , this practical guide contains a library of hands-on techniques for rapidly testing new business ideas. Testing Business Ideas explains how systematically testing business ideas dramatically reduces the risk and increases the likelihood of success for any new venture or business project. It builds on the internationally popular Business Model Canvas and Value Proposition Canvas by integrating Assumptions Mapping and other powerful lean startup-style experiments. Testing Business Ideas uses an engaging 4-color format to: Increase the success of any venture and decrease the risk of wasting time, money, and resources on bad ideas Close the knowledge gap between strategy and experimentation/validation Identify and test your key business assumptions with the Business Model Canvas and Value Proposition Canvas A definitive field guide to business model testing, this book features practical tips for making major decisions that are not based on intuition and guesses. Testing Business Ideas shows leaders how to encourage an experimentation mindset within their organization and make experimentation a continuous, repeatable process. Review: Practical Testing of Business Ideas - As expected Bland & Osterwalder did an excellent job explaining their Testing Framework, identify who could benefit from it and where each set of questions applies to previous Business Model Canvas framework. They divide testing ideas into three main categories: Desirability, Feasibility, and Viability. These are not arbitrary classifications and should be the concern of every entrepreneur, architect and business executive. What I haven't seen is coverage outside the core BMC elements. Those of you that have read Business Model Generation rather than the summaries many people give will note that the external forces that a business model operates within are significantly important and have influences on the core model. My assumption is the hypothesis behind the Testing Framework is to discover those interactions with those external factors. I'm not sure however, unless focused to do so the framework will not yield such situational awareness. Like SAFe Agile it may have to grow to be a more comprehensive Enterprise Class tool. From just this snapshot I'd would rate it an desertcart 5 Star. The gaps I see may be more scope decisions that Strategyzer made keeping the context on rapid testing around the internal factors of the business model. However, the topic of testing business ideas is well represented here in a practical manner. Review: Calling all Corporate Innovators, Startup Entrepreneurs, and Solopreneurs!!! - Got an idea and unsure how to get a better understanding of its viability, feasibility, desirability? This book delivers on how best to approach your (and possibly your team or company's) learning journey! The book is divided into 4 sections: Design, Test, Experiments, and Mindset. The first two sections are about setting yourself up for success before you get an experiment underway (e.g. team design, identifying your hypothesis). The Experiments section helps you pick the right experiment (out of 44) by asking questions around level of uncertainty and urgency along with some rules of thumb. The book closes with Mindset and shares with the reader many pitfalls that can be encountered (and how to avoid them) as well as the role of leadership along the journey. Be sure to check out the Precoil website where the primary author, David Bland, has supplementary resources, videos, etc. along with workshop offerings to further develop your knowledge and skills. As of the time of this review, conducting workshops remotely is essentially a requirement and David has already proven to be highly skilled in promoting personal and group engagement in this delivery format. Last note: the other books in the Strategyzer series (Business Model Generation, Value Proposition Design, and The Invincible Company) are a complementary wealth of guidance.










| Best Sellers Rank | #71,576 in Books ( See Top 100 in Books ) #23 in Market Research Business (Books) #92 in Systems & Planning #377 in Entrepreneurship (Books) |
| Customer Reviews | 4.6 out of 5 stars 1,295 Reviews |
B**Z
Practical Testing of Business Ideas
As expected Bland & Osterwalder did an excellent job explaining their Testing Framework, identify who could benefit from it and where each set of questions applies to previous Business Model Canvas framework. They divide testing ideas into three main categories: Desirability, Feasibility, and Viability. These are not arbitrary classifications and should be the concern of every entrepreneur, architect and business executive. What I haven't seen is coverage outside the core BMC elements. Those of you that have read Business Model Generation rather than the summaries many people give will note that the external forces that a business model operates within are significantly important and have influences on the core model. My assumption is the hypothesis behind the Testing Framework is to discover those interactions with those external factors. I'm not sure however, unless focused to do so the framework will not yield such situational awareness. Like SAFe Agile it may have to grow to be a more comprehensive Enterprise Class tool. From just this snapshot I'd would rate it an Amazon 5 Star. The gaps I see may be more scope decisions that Strategyzer made keeping the context on rapid testing around the internal factors of the business model. However, the topic of testing business ideas is well represented here in a practical manner.
T**R
Calling all Corporate Innovators, Startup Entrepreneurs, and Solopreneurs!!!
Got an idea and unsure how to get a better understanding of its viability, feasibility, desirability? This book delivers on how best to approach your (and possibly your team or company's) learning journey! The book is divided into 4 sections: Design, Test, Experiments, and Mindset. The first two sections are about setting yourself up for success before you get an experiment underway (e.g. team design, identifying your hypothesis). The Experiments section helps you pick the right experiment (out of 44) by asking questions around level of uncertainty and urgency along with some rules of thumb. The book closes with Mindset and shares with the reader many pitfalls that can be encountered (and how to avoid them) as well as the role of leadership along the journey. Be sure to check out the Precoil website where the primary author, David Bland, has supplementary resources, videos, etc. along with workshop offerings to further develop your knowledge and skills. As of the time of this review, conducting workshops remotely is essentially a requirement and David has already proven to be highly skilled in promoting personal and group engagement in this delivery format. Last note: the other books in the Strategyzer series (Business Model Generation, Value Proposition Design, and The Invincible Company) are a complementary wealth of guidance.
J**Y
A Tool-Rich Resource -- keep it close by if you are launching an idea, a product, or a venture
The notion of "experiments" gives rise to an interesting phenomenon in the world of innovation and entrepreneurship. Because our assumptions about the future are so ironclad and 'obvious,' most founders, innovators, and leaders think of experiments as a luxury, something to be done when we have more time. What they fail to grasp is that *every* initiative is an experiment, consciously or not. The beauty of this work is that David and Alex provide a broad set of methods for *consciously* experimenting in order to dramatically reduce risk and elevate odds of success. This is one of those works that represents decades of accumulated knowledge, immediately applicable and valuable. This is not only a beautifully rendered book, but a resource that will be dog-eared over time for anyone aspiring to build viable, profitable products and businesses.
J**O
This has all the tools - a true must have business startup survival guide!
The reasoning Bland and Osterwalder give for testing the business idea’s are genius. The models are easy to follow and made it simple to create a visual business canvas that anyone can understand. This not only helped me organize my new startup but helped me realize where I could strengthen my other two companies. I spent 3 months staring at notes to start a multi-level complicated company. The day I received his book and watched a couple of YouTube video’s - was the day I organized everything. The only complication of reading this book was all the new ideas it gave me. I could go on but thank you for this guide.
P**S
Simple clear explanations
It is a small oddly-shaped book filled with simple useful explanations for the basic concepts necessary to test business ideas. It does not go too much in-depth on the topic, so it is a good start and also a good reminder of the concepts.
R**M
No one should start a business before reading this book...
David Bland takes the reader through 44 real case studies on how to test your business idea before you spend too much time, money, or energy on it... save yourself possibly a lot of grief by reading this book before developing your business. These real-life tests work whether your business is a product, a service, is web-based, or Brick & Mortar. And the same goes for whether you are a sole proprietor, a small business owner, or part of a large business...Bland has got you covered. (And if you really want to get your game on, get a copy of Steven Blank's "The Startup Owner's Manual" as well...!)
C**V
Provided a framework to help me organize all our new projects
I like how the book breaks down the process for new ideas based on the scientific method: 1. Brainstorm all the hypotheses related to your new business idea 2. Map them onto a 2x2 matrix to prioritize them (the axes are: Importance and Evidence) 3. Systematically test the important hypothesis one at a time. Section 3 lists dozens of possible tests to choose from I work in the digital innovation department for a big company. This book has helped provide a framework to organize all our new ideas that might become projects, and systematically test them in smart ways that make sense.
S**T
Best Business & Startup Book
We've only had this book a few weeks-I say we, as I bought it for myself but have shared it with my team. The core concepts are here to help anyone in innovation or new product and business development. Unlike a lot of books in this category, you just nice to read in theory, but ways to really take action and test yourself. The visuals/designs make the book fun to read and easy to understand.
T**.
da leggere!
da leggere!
V**K
A go-to guide of business idea testing tools
Testing business ideas thoroughly before fully executing them helps to reduce risk and uncertainty. This book presents around 40 testing tools you can use to discover not only whether your general direction is right but also validate whether the direction you have taken is right. The cost, setup time, run time, evidence strength, capabilities and requirements of all testing tools/experiments are discussed in gist to help you evaluate if the tools are suitable to your needs.
B**S
Great book on business validation
This is another great book from the strategyzer team. A very visual & practical guide on how to test business ideas. If you're a fan of the lean startup method, agile development, noah kagan or tim ferris - this book is for you!
J**I
THE approach to validate new ideas
This is a great book, a book that can really change the way you see the world. At least that happened to me when I first read it. Today the book is always on top of my desk. What I like so much about the book is that is a confluence of strategy, methodology and practical guide to test new business ideas. If you have a role in innovation or if you are an entrepreneur, this book is a must. This is THE approach you need to have if you want to know as fast as possible if you have something that is worth it. If you believe in Lean Startup, but you don't understand exactly how you can put it in practice, this book shows you the way.
V**O
Practical and useful
Easy to follow, good examples and templates, light to read in terms of language and layout
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