customer identification and development

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Customer identification and development Courtesy of Spikelab.org

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Customer identification and development. Courtesy of Spikelab.org. How to spot an early adopter and jumpstart your business. http://www.spikelab.org/blog/early-adopters-definition.html. It's all about learning. If you are a startup then by definition your goal is learning . - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Customer identification and development

Customer identification and development

Courtesy of Spikelab.org

Page 2: Customer identification and development

How to spot an early adopter and jumpstart your business

http://www.spikelab.org/blog/early-adopters-definition.html

Page 3: Customer identification and development

It's all about learning

• If you are a startup then by definition your goal is learning.

• When you're just starting you have one main priority: validating that the problem you are trying to solve is in fact real and someone is ready to pay to have it solved.

• The best way to confirm the existence of a problem, especially early on, is to go talking to people. So who do you go talking to?http://www.spikelab.org/blog/early-adopters-definition.html

Page 4: Customer identification and development

…but also market penetration

• Most people won't ever consider your solution unless someone else has been using it for a while and you can show them the benefits.

http://www.spikelab.org/blog/early-adopters-definition.html

Page 5: Customer identification and development

“Crossing the chasm”

You are here: The innovator

You want to eventually sell to this group over the life cycle of your innovation

This is the entire addressable market for your innovation

You want to sell here to your first customers

You need enough early adopters to cross the chasm to early majority

http://www.spikelab.org/blog/early-adopters-definition.html

Page 6: Customer identification and development

Sport the early adopter

• Has a problem• Is aware of having a problem• Has been actively seeking a solution• Has cobbled together an incomplete, imperfect

solution of parts• Has or can acquire a budgetOften we have the temptation of stopping at 1. even when we know about the other 4, but it's a huge mistake.

http://www.spikelab.org/blog/early-adopters-definition.html

Page 7: Customer identification and development

Embrace your “earlyvangelists”

• Early adopters are awesome in many ways: they put up with your initial broken product, they help you refine it and in general want to see you succeed.

• If you make them happy, some of them will become your early evangelist, the ones that will talk to every single friend, Facebook friend, and any living soul really, about your product.

• They are your single best chance to get out of a niche without having to spend thousands of dollars on marketinghttp://www.spikelab.org/blog/early-adopters-definition.html

Page 8: Customer identification and development

Persona development

• a set of exercises centered around the description of their customer, in this case of an early adopter

• describe as accurately as possible some demographics, behaviors and needs of your ideal first customer

• The more specific the better as this is someone you need to talk to. The reason for the specificity is two-fold:1. identify the person2. make sense of the data

http://www.spikelab.org/blog/early-adopters-definition.html

Page 9: Customer identification and development

But don’t forget about the forest

• Remember what the larger vision is and make sure you are not missing the forest for the tree

• Validate your early adopter and get feedback on whether or not there’s someone who will pay to use your product or service to solve their problem(s)

http://www.spikelab.org/blog/early-adopters-definition.html

Page 10: Customer identification and development

Now write your value proposition

• “Like X for abc”• The most popular value proposition: like Uber for food

delivery, Twitter for shopping, Airbnb for cats and dogs• Why it works: you’re calling upon the recipient's

understanding of the term of comparison and then reframe it to your market. It can be very powerful as you unconsciously borrow some of the trustworthiness from the known brand and transfer it to your own.

• Potential downside: this can play against you if the public isn't that familiar with the term of reference

Page 11: Customer identification and development

Now write your value proposition

• “the for-who-our-that template”• The most effective approach to explaining your VP• For short desc of who the customer is who short desc

of the problem our short desc of the solution so that short desc of the value created

• For college students taking online courses through video who struggle to discuss the lesson in a separate forum our web app integrates discussions directly on the video so that the student can easily get his questions answered