
Audio is streamed directly from the publisher (traffic.libsyn.com) as published in their RSS feed. Play Podcasts does not host this file. Rights-holders can request removal through the copyright & takedown page.
Show Notes
David Bland discusses the importance of testing your business ideas and shares ways to dramatically reduce the risk and increase the likelihood of success for your product, initiative, or project.
Show Notes
Studies show that 7 out of 10 products fail to deliver on expectations. We often fall into the trap of moving forward with a project, product, or business idea without first validating it. This results in wasted time and money from solutions that don’t have a good market fit or aren’t solving the right problem.
The most expensive way to find out if you’re right or wrong is to build the whole thing.
David Bland
The Three Lenses
When testing your idea to reduce risk, look at the solution through three lenses; desirability, feasibility, and viability.
Desirability implies that customers want your solution. Feasibility means that we can build and support the solution. This is isn’t just technical feasibility; we also look need to look at overall regulatory, policy, and governance that would prevent you from making your solution a success.
While customers may want your solution (desirable) and you can build it (feasibility), perhaps there’s not enough of a market for it or people won’t pay enough for it. This is viability.
We want to unpack our risk and then test our way through it, going from no evidence to some evidence and then from some evidence to strong evidence that we’re on the right path.
Process to Validate Your Idea
If you have an idea that you want to validate, start by understanding the higher level risks. Who’s your customer? What’s your value proposition? What’s your revenue model and the cost it’s going to take to do this?
This information helps you map out desirability and viability. Then work to understand the big activities you need to do, the resources you need to have, and anything else related to feasibility.
A business model canvas may help you to understand the things that have to be true for your idea to succeed. From there, you can identify the things that have to be true that you have no evidence to support. You can then select experiments that would help generate evidence about those things.
Listen to the full episode to understand how to sequence your experiments, discover simple yet effective ways to test your business ideas before spending a lot of time and money, and more.
| YOUR HOMEWORK Quite often, the biggest risk is desirability. Look for observable evidence that there are more people than just you or friends or family that have the problem you’re trying to solve with your project or product. Learn firsthand whether or not there’s a market for what you want to do. Find out if it is a problem that’s big enough to actually build something for before you spend a lot of time and money. The observable evidence in this scenario would be people searching for something. Google could show search trend analysis could help show how big of a problem you’re solving. Are people searching for it regularly? Is it seasonal? How many people are searching for it? Was a search volume look like weather related terms or to specific regions in the world where it’s popular? |
Links Mentioned in This Episode
- David’s website DavidJBland.com
- Precoil – David’s company
- David’s Book – Testing Business Ideas

David J. Bland
David Bland is the founder of Precoil, an organization that helps companies find product market fit using lean startup, design thinking and business model innovation. David has helped validate new products and businesses at companies such as GE, Toyota, Adobe, HP, Behr and more.
David has also written several books and is the co-author of Testing Business Ideas: A Field Guide for Rapid Experimentation.
Latest Episodes
- MBA228: Software Development Pearls

- MBA227: The Minimum Viable Business

- MBALC: Elon Musk’s 5-Step Design Process

- MBA226: The FOCCCUS Formula

- MBA225: The Value of Business Models

- MBA224: Corkscrew Thinking

- MBA223: The Human Work Machine

- MBA222: Testing Your Business Ideas

- MBA221: Systems Thinking and Business Agility

- MBA220: Thoughtless Design with Karl Wiegers

- MBA219: How To Be an Agile Business Analyst

- BA Toolbox – A3 Report

- MBA218: Customer-Centric Transformation

- Lightning Cast: Agile Planning

- MBA217: Objectives and Key Results

- Lightning Cast: POWER Start for Your Meetings

- MBA216: Outcome Based Change

- Lightning Cast: Resistance to Change

- MBA215: The Challenges with Leading in Product Management

- MBA214: The BA Success Path

- MBA213: Applying Theory of Constraints

- MBA212: Transforming Your Work with Modern Agile

- MBA211: Adaptive Leadership

- MBA210: Vital Communication

- MBA209: Visual Thinking

- MBA208: Facilitative Leadership

- MBA207: Bad Behaviors in the Workplace

- MBA206: Succeeding with Analytics

- Lightning Cast: BA Goals Revisited

- MBA205: Beyond Data Literacy

- MBA204: Top Skills for 2020

- MBA203: Career Insurance

- Yes, Virginia, There Are BAs in Agile

- Lightning Cast: Failure to Launch (a new product)

- MBA202: Business Value Analysis

- MBA201: Tips From an Accidental Product Owner

- MBA200: Take Action! The Best Advice from Over 200 Episodes

- MBA199: The Future of the BA Profession

- MBA198: DevOps – What it Means for BAs

- MBA197: Making Change Fun

- MBA196: Customer Journey Treasure Hunting

- MBA195: Example Mapping

- MBA194: Start Your Project Off Right

- MBA193: About Your Career

- Lightning Cast: Story Estimation – What’s the Point?

- Lightning Cast: Requirements Rot

- MBA192: The Blight of Product Debt

- Lightning Cast: The Power to Get Things Done

- MBA191: Use Cases in Agile

- Lightning Cast: AI – Can you be replaced by a machine?

- MBA190: Business Data Analytics

- Lightning Cast: You Are a Facilitator

- MBA189: Adventures in Product Ownership

- Lightning Cast: Simplified Value Stream Mapping

- MBA188: The Four Ps of Product Ownership

- Lightning Cast: Product Debt

- MBA187: Transitioning to a Scrum Master Role

- Lightning Cast: Business Agility

- MBA186: Exploring Product Ownership

- Lightning Cast: Don’t Throw it Over the Wall

- MBA185: Business Analysis in Agile

- Lightning Cast: Non-Functional Requirements in Agile

- MBA184: Discover What Customers Want with JTBD

- Lightning Cast: We Are the Business

- MBA183: The BA Role on a Scrum Team

- MBA182: BA in the Service Industry

- Lightning Cast: Death, Taxes, and Missed Requirements

- MBA181: The Three BA Archetypes

- MBA180: Socratic Questioning

- Lightning Cast: BA Performance Goals

- MBA179: The Power of Prototyping

- MBA178: Career Options for BAs

- MBA177: Product Backlog Refinement

- MBA176: Predictions for 2019

- Lightning Cast: A Visit From the Business Analyst

- MBA175: Product Management is the New Business Analysis – Part 2

- MBA174: Product Management is the New Business Analysis

- MBA173: Avoiding the Build Trap

- MBA172: Decide Smarter Faster with Kupe Kupersmith

- MBA171: Your Questions Answered – Listener Mailbag

- MBA170: Persuasion – Get Buy-In for Your Ideas

- Lightning Cast: Big Design Up Front

- MBA169: Digital Business Analyst Competencies

- MBA168: Exploring the BA Career Path

- MBA167: The Power of Storytelling

