What is a video minimum viable product? How do you build one, and have it test your Lean Startup hypotheses? Learn the key tips here.
Video MVP: What Is It? (The Lean Startup)


What is a video minimum viable product? How do you build one, and have it test your Lean Startup hypotheses? Learn the key tips here.

How does the Four Actions Framework help you build your Blue Ocean Strategy? Learn the Eliminate-Reduce-Raise-Create grid here.

The Early Childhood Longitudinal Study (ECLS), launched by the US. Department of Education in the 1990s, measured the academic progress of over 20,000 students as they progressed from kindergarten to the fifth grade, interviewing parents and educators and asking a broad range of questions about the children’s home environment. The study provided an ample resource of data that researchers could use to identify more statistically meaningful relationships between specific parenting tactics and children’s academic outcomes.

What is lean experimentation in a startup? How do you run lean experiments to learn more for your company? Learn the tips from Lean Startup.

What is a value hypothesis for your startup? What is a growth hypothesis? How do you generate your lean startup hypotheses, and how do you get data to answer them? Learn more in this excerpt from Lean Startup.

What is the buyer utility map? How do you use it to build the best Blue Ocean Strategy? Learn about how to unlock buyer utility by considering their entire purchasing cycle.

What are incentives in economics? Are there different kinds of incentives? In the book Freakonomics, Stephen J. Dubner and Steven Levitt explain what incentives are when it comes to economics. They break down the three different types of incentives and provide examples. Keep reading to learn about incentives from Freakonomics.

What is a Wizard of Oz MVP from Lean Startup? How do you build one? What does it teach you about your business? Learn the key strategies from Lean Startup.

You know that in Lean Startup, you should be avoiding Vanity Metrics. These tell you less useful facts about your business and can be a misleading sign of progress. Instead, look at real metrics with cohort analysis. But what is cohort analysis, and how do you do it?

When you face a problem, how do you figure out what the root cause was? How do you learn what the right problem to tackle is? The solution is the Five Whys: keep asking Why until you find the problem. But how do you do it correctly, and what pitfalls are there in the 5 Whys Analysis? Learn from this Lean Startup guide.