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The Lean Startup: How Today's Entrepreneurs Use Continuous Innovation to Create Radically Successful Businesses

The Lean Startup: How Today's Entrepreneurs Use Continuous Innovation to Create Radically Successful Businesses

byEric Ries
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Top positive review

Positive reviews›
Helen
5.0 out of 5 starsGreat book
Reviewed in the United States on September 25, 2023
Was really excited to receive the book and quickly scanned through, found some great opinions! Will dive deeper into the details!
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Top critical review

Critical reviews›
Herve Lebret
3.0 out of 5 starsA frustraing experience
Reviewed in the United States on November 15, 2011
After reading Clayton Christensen, Geoffrey Moore and Steve Blank, I was expecting a lot from The Lean Startup by Eric Ries. I was disappointed. It could be that I did not read it well or too fast, but I was expecting much more. But instead of saying what I did not like, let me begin with the good points. Just like the previous three authors, Ries shows that innovation may be totally counterintuitive: "My cofounders and I are determined to make new mistakes. We do everything wrong. We build a minimum viable product, an early product that is terrible, full of bugs and crash-your-computer-yes-really stability problems. Then we ship it to customers before it's ready. And we charge money for it. After securing initial customers, we change the product constantly. [...] We really had customers, often talked to them and did not do what they said." [page 4] On page 8, Eric Ries explains that the lean startup method helps entrepreneurs "under conditions of extreme uncertainty" with a "new kind of management" by "testing each element of their vision", and "learn whether to pivot or persevere" using a "feedback loop".

This is he Build-Measure-Learn process. He goes on by explaining why start-ups fail:
1- The first problem is the allure of a good plan. "Planning and forecasting are only accurate when based on a long, stable operating history and a relatively static environment. Startups have neither."
2- The second problem is the "Just-do-it". "This school believes that chaos is the answer. This does not work either. A startup must be managed".
The main and most convincing lesson from Ries is that because start-ups face a lot of uncertainty, they should test, experiment, learn from the right or wrong hypotheses as early and as often as possible. They should use actionable metrics, split-test experiments, innovation accounting. He is also a big fan of Toyota lean manufacturing.

I loved his borrowing of Komisar's Analogs and Antilogs. For the iPod, the Sony Walkman was an Analog ("people listen to music in a public place using earphones") and Napster was an Antilog ("although people were willing to download music, they were not willing to pay for it"). [Page 83] Ries further develops the MVP, Minimum Viable Product: "it is not the smallest product imaginable, but the fastest way to get through the Build-Measure-Learn feedback loop." Apple's original iPhone, Google's first search engine, or even Dropbox Video Demo were such MVPs. More on Techcrunch [page 97]. He adds that MVP does not go without risks, including legal issues, competition, branding and morale of the team. He has a good point about intellectual property [page 110]: "In my opinion, [...the] current patent law inhibits innovation and should be remedied as a matter of public policy."

So why did I feel some frustration? There is probably the feeling Ries gives that his method is a science. [Page 3]: "Startup success can be engineered by following the right process, which means it can be learned, which means it can be taught." [Page 148]: "Because of the scientific methodology that underlies the Lean Startup, there is often a misconception that it offers a rigid clinical formula for making pivot or persevere decisions. There is no way to remove the human element - vision, intuition, judgment - from the practice of entrepreneurship, nor that would be desirable". I was probably expecting more recipes, as the ones Blnak gives in The Four Steps to the Epiphany. So? Art or science? Ries explains on page 161 that pivot requires courage. "First, Vanity Metrics can allow to form false conclusions. [...] Second, an unclear hypothesis makes it impossible to experience complete failure, [...] Third, many entrepreneurs are afraid. Acknowledging failure can lead to dangerously low morale." A few pages before (page 154), he writes that "failure is a prerequisite to learning". Ries describes a systematic method, I am not sure it is a science, not even a process. Indeed, in his concluding chapter, as if he wanted to mitigate his previous arguments, he tends to agree: "the real goal of innovation: to learn that which is currently unknown" [page 275]. "Throughout our celebration of the Lean Startup movement, a note of caution is essential. We cannot afford to have our success breed a new pseudoscience around pivots, MVPs, and the like" [page 279]. This in no way diminishes the traditional entrepreneurial virtues; the primacy of vision, the willingness to take bold risks, and the courage required in the face of overwhelming odds" [page 278].

Let me mention here a video from Komisar. Together with Moore and Blank, he is among the ones who advise reading Ries' book. I am less convinced than them about the necessity to read this book. I have now more questions than answers, but this may be a good sign! I have been more frustrated than enlightened by the anecdotes he gives or his use of the Toyota strategy. In na interview given to the Stanford Venture Technology program, Komisar talks about how to teach entrepreneurship. Listen to him! To be fair, Eric Ries is helping a lot the entrepreneurship movement. I just discovered a new set of videos he is a part of, thanks to SpinkleLab. Fred Destin had also a great post on his blog about the Lean Startup and you should probably read it too to build your own opinion. Lean is hard and (generally) good for you. Fred summaries Lean this way and he is right: "In the real world, most companies do too much development and spend too much money too early (usually to hit some pre-defined plan that is nothing more than a fantasy and / or is not where they need to go to succeed) and find themselves with an impossible task of raising money at uprounds around Series B. So founders get screwed and everyone ends up with a bad taste in their mouth. That's fundamentally why early stage capital efficiency should matter to you, and why you should at least understand lean concepts."

Let me finish with a recent interview given by Steve Blank in Finland: "I have devoted the last decade of my life and my "fourth career" to trying to prove that methods for improving entrepreneurial success can be taught. Entrepreneurship itself is more of a genetic phenomenon. Either you have the passion and drive to start something, or you don't. I believe entrepreneurs are artists, and I'd like to quote George Bernard Shaw to illustrate: "Some men see things as they are and ask why. Others dream things that never were and ask why not." Over the last decade we assumed that once we found repeatable methodologies (Agile and Customer Development, Business Model Design) to build early stage ventures, entrepreneurship would become a "science," and anyone could do it. I'm beginning to suspect this assumption may be wrong. It's not that the tools are wrong. Where I think we have gone wrong is the belief that anyone can use these tools equally well. When page-layout programs came out with the Macintosh in 1984, everyone thought it was going to be the end of graphic artists and designers. "Now everyone can do design," was the mantra. Users quickly learned how hard it was do design well and again hired professionals. The same thing happened with the first bit-mapped word processors. We didn't get more or better authors. Instead we ended up with poorly written documents that looked like ransom notes. Today's equivalent is Apple's "Garageband". Not everyone who uses composition tools can actually write music that anyone wants to listen to. It may be we can increase the number of founders and entrepreneurial employees, with better tools, more money, and greater education. But it's more likely that until we truly understand how to teach creativity, their numbers are limited. Not everyone is an artist, after all."
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From the United States

Grady L. Owens
2.0 out of 5 stars Pretty frustrating, extremely vague
Reviewed in the United States on March 18, 2023
Verified Purchase
I've only gotten about halfway through this book, so admittedly I'm not finished. But, halfway through, you might expect to have learned something, anything, about what the book purports to teach. The chapter titles are exciting, encouraging even, and one would certainly expect to follow their one-word direction, in the hopes of perhaps learning how exactly to apply them. But, that's not what happens.

In each chapter, Ries provides ample examples, situations he's seen and ways to improve. The problem is, while this gives a vague idea, it does precious little to mould itself to others' experiences, to others' needs. It seems like it'd be a great book if you're trying to develop an internet-based service, as that's easily, EASILY, 95% of the examples and direction. If you're trying to do literally anything else as a startup, this really isn't the book for you.

Take, for example, the chapter I just completed, Chapter 7: "Measure". Measure what, you may ask? Why, your metrics, of course? But what metrics would those be? Whatever you do, don't use vanity metrics! But, what are those? The book doesn't define it very well, aside from basically, metrics that make you feel good. Don't metrics that actually show proper growth do that? No, what you want are "actionable metrics", but what does actionable mean? The three As of good metrics: Actionable, Accessible, and Auditable. But what do these MEAN? Again, we get vague examples, which might work in hindsight but really don't tell how best to approach from the get-go.

What is cohort analysis? The chapter indicates it's "one of the most important tools of startup analysis", then spends a good chunk of the chapter talking about their results, without properly introducing them. I'm reading this book because I don't have a degree in marketing; I don't know what that phrase means, much less what it might mean in context. All I gleaned from the chapter was, it's necessary in order to read the supplied graph *correctly*, and as a scientist, that, too, makes little sense.

I thought this was a problem in just the first part, "Vision"; that section, 72 pages long, I strongly believe could have been condensed to five with almost no loss of utility. The section felt like little more than advertisement for the remainder of the book. "This is why you're reading." Did I need 72 pages to learn that? As I got to the second part, "Steer", I'd hoped to encounter more meat. And I did! Initially. But this did precious little but whet the appetite, and for all its lovely language, this part still drags on with plentiful examples but precious little application. Nothing "actionable", to use his own language.

If the book had been advertised and sold as a memoir, I don't think it would have gotten so bad a review from me, but then I likely wouldn't have read it.
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D.Damato
2.0 out of 5 stars Word processor diarrhea leads to WASTE in The Lean Start-Up
Reviewed in the United States on September 21, 2014
Verified Purchase
I had two primary issues with the book. First, the books is written by a software guy for software guys and start-ups. I can only recall one reference in all the pages to a hardware product. So this books in not for anyone that is looking to create physical and tangible products. In fact, hardware is hard and my research hasn't found anything remotely useful in applying lean start-up principles to hardware.

Second, the focus of the book is on "what" a lean start-up is and doesn't provide actionable information. Diarrhea of the word processor resulted in a 365 page definition of a lean start-up, where it could have been boiled down to less than 100 pages (minus 1-star for waste...Distill it down to an A3 using Lean Thinking). So let me save you some time.

1. An entrepreneur is a person who creates a business around a product or service under conditions of "extreme uncertainty", and should ascend the vision-strategy-product pyramid. (Google: Start with Why TEDx - Ries redefines that concept)
2. A start-up is a phase of the entrepreneur's organization, tasked with the goal of reducing the condition of "extreme uncertainty", and finding a sustainable business model (Google: Lean Business Model Canvas).
3. Use customer discovery (class) and validated learning (method) to find a sustainable business model around your product or service idea. The validated learning method of Build-Measure-Learn is synonymous with Plan-Do (Build), Check (Measure), and Act (Learn) cycle, which as most people know is derived from the scientific method.
a. Build a Minimum Viable Product (MVP)
b. Measure using Actionable Metrics instead of Vanity Metrics.
c. Learn from your MVP and Actionable metrics and Pivot to improve problem/solution and product/market fit or Persevere.
4. Finally, use lean principles (i.e. small batch sizes, 5 whys root cause analysis, chief engineer, blah, blah, blah) to stream-line your operation once you've found a viable business model and are ready to leave the start-up phase and enter the growth phase. (Minus 1-star: As a hardware guy and having extensive experience in lean it's blatantly obvious Ries is just starting his lean journey and his last section (Accelerate) is superficial, survey, regurgitation of some of the lean tools and ideas).

Reference More Actionable Books:
Running Lean - Ash Maurya
Art of the Start (Ch.1) - Guy Kawasaki

Reference Free Material:
Steve Blank's Website & Blog
Simon Sinek - Start with Why
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Amazon Customer
2.0 out of 5 stars A few good concepts, but overly verbose
Reviewed in the United States on April 1, 2023
Verified Purchase
The book was 280ish pages and could have been written in 100-110. It was pedantic and exceedingly verbose. I understand the need for repetition to hammer the point home, but the whole book can by summarized by saying that a startup needs to:
1) Test data and assumptions
2) Listen to customers, they know better than you do what they are willing to buy

Take your money and buy Zero to One instead.
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Keif
2.0 out of 5 stars Dirty cover
Reviewed in the United States on August 1, 2023
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As captioned.
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Keif
2.0 out of 5 stars Dirty cover
Reviewed in the United States on August 1, 2023
As captioned.
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Amazon Customer
2.0 out of 5 stars Nothing surprising in here
Reviewed in the United States on March 23, 2020
Verified Purchase
I feel like this book is for 40-50 something's that are stuck in an old way of getting things done. If you've come out of business school within the last ten years or have a more objective view on how to get things done, this is going to be a little pain full to get through. It belabors the lean manufacturing principles including the "5 whys", batch processing, etc. and makes a halfhearted attempt at tying these principles into start-ups. It's also very software engineering heavy in it's examples which was a little boring to me.

The most valuable information was the concept of developing a minimum viable product (MVP) and working through the build-measure-learn feedback loop to modify your MVP and repeating this process until you learn enough to move forward. However, there's a much better book on this called "the right it" which is more of an inventor/ entrepreneur book than a silicon valley nerd trying to meld corporate and start-up philosophies.

Overall, the book was probably much more effective in 2011 than 2020. Read this if you know little to nothing about business or if you're an old curmudgeon that's stuck in the old values of corporate America. Otherwise, read a quick summary and save your time.
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sf guy
2.0 out of 5 stars Quite disappointing for those in the lean startup camp
Reviewed in the United States on September 15, 2011
Verified Purchase
Having studied the lean start-up methodology in business school, I was eagerly awaiting this book to see what insights Ries would have for its readers. Instead, I found myself quite disappointed. The concepts that he writes about in his book (when to pivot, iterate quickly, testing) are readily available throughout many other blogs and sites. You certainly don't need to buy this book to get the concepts.

In fact, when evaluated against other entrepreneurial start-up/go-to-market/strategy books such as Christensen's Innovator's Solution or Steve Blank's Four Steps to the Epiphany - this book is actually very basic. For tech entrepreneurs - Guy Kawasaki's book: The Art of the Start is leaps and bounds better than this one.

Pros: If you are starting your company for the first time (specifically a tech company) and have no idea what you're doing, you can use this book for some basic (and repetitive) concepts.

Cons: Too much self promotion. Too much repetition of basic concepts. And boring, unengaged stories about companies that we read about all the time.

I'd suggest saving the money, doing a quick google search on "lean start-up", and reading some of the books I mentioned above.
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Eddie
2.0 out of 5 stars Neither lean nor startups
Reviewed in the United States on April 25, 2018
Verified Purchase
This book was very disappointing. I had seen it listed on sites that recommend books for entrepreneurs, so I had high hopes. It's a business book, but the title is a flat-out lie. The examples given in the book are for companies like GE and Intuit, and even the federal government -- institutions with large teams and multi-billion dollar budget.

These companies are neither lean nor startups.

Call it a management book if you want, but it is certainly not a good book for an entrepreneur with a small-to-nonexistent team and a low budget.
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Kenneth Voshell
2.0 out of 5 stars Good for beginners
Reviewed in the United States on July 11, 2019
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This is a good intro to entrepreneurship theory to someone who has no business or lean six sigma experience. However, the ideas presented are far from revolutionary for those who have experience in lean processes or general entrepreneurship theory. Further, the book is highly repetitive and can be boiled down to a few simple and intuitive points. 2 stars because it is really easy to read, especially applicable for those looking for an intro book.
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Laura
2.0 out of 5 stars Great book but arrived damaged
Reviewed in the United States on January 10, 2022
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Great book, must read for anyone working in tech or aspiring entrepreneurs. But physical book arrived damaged; top of spine was ripped up.
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Laura
2.0 out of 5 stars Great book but arrived damaged
Reviewed in the United States on January 10, 2022
Great book, must read for anyone working in tech or aspiring entrepreneurs. But physical book arrived damaged; top of spine was ripped up.
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Sazanami
2.0 out of 5 stars Standard trendy consulting nonsense
Reviewed in the United States on January 2, 2017
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Half shilling for the second-rate and never-ran startups the author work for and consulted for, and half lean development and manufacturing buzzwords, all padding out one borrowed good idea. For entertainment, and to see how well these ideas have worked out, look up the specific ventures discussed in the case studies of the book and see what happened to them.

The useful parts of this book could have been laid out in a few pages. Spoiler: frequent re-evaluation can save you from wasted effort.
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