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K**R
Great book
Breaks customer discovery into really digestible and actionable steps. Recommend for anyone looking to hone in product/market fit. Great book
B**S
Great practical book
Great practical book for customer interviews. I learnt a lot about how to interview and avoid common mistakes. Definitely using the learnings in my subsequent interviews
P**R
Customer research isn't as easy as you may have thought
It's easy to do customer research, isn't it? You just find a few customers or could-be-customers and start asking them questions about their problem and thoughts on their preferred solution.Wrong.As the book says "every question we ask carries the very real possibility of biasing the person we’re talking to and rendering the whole exercise pointless."And then "Bad customer conversations aren’t just useless. Worse, they convince you that you’re on the right path. They give you a false positive that causes you to over-invest your cash, your time, and your team."Why is this?Well it seems that the people you ask want to be nice and encouraging (and you want them to be too). This can create an accidental conspiracy where you get to hear what you WANT to hear and not what you NEED to hear.This is vital to understand and the early part of the book is very strong in the way it highlights the problem and the dangers involved with careless questioning. You need to get to facts and the truth of their problems, not their opinions about your solution.This is not a long book but I feel what is here is padded. The more I read, the less involved I was. There is a lot to learn from the book but I feel there is also a lot that could be in here that is missing. You need more structure to your questions.I'm a fan of Jobs To Be Done as a concept for understanding customers and what they want when fixing a problem by buying a solution. This will help frame your questioning and help you develop your first minimum viable product (MVP).I'm giving the book a 4 star rating. It is part of the answer within the entire lean start-up and product innovation subject but I feel the average entrepreneur is going to need to read much more widely before he or she is in a position to make best use of what's in here.Paul Simister helps business owners who are stuck and frustrated, to get unstuck.
S**M
Simple and practical
I read this in a day because it was so good. A lot of business books give you principles but sometimes it can be hard to take away applicable steps… Not with this book. It was concise and actionable. Must-read for anyone interested in working on their own project.
C**.
How to talk to ANYONE when everyone is lying to you!
Fitzpatrick focuses on customer conversations but his advice is really applicable to all conversations where people are not incentivized to be completely forthright with you (e.g. Employees, co-workers, employers, spouses, children, friends, etc). If you want to know how find out what people really think, this book is your instruction manual.Although a little pricey for such a small book (I paid £18), the wisdom conveyed is priceless and it's concision means that you can afford to re-read it often to refresh your memory. Also, I have already loaned my copy to 2 different people (and intend to loan it to more),so when you consider how much use it is getting, it is easier to justify the cost.
@**S
Have an idea and think it might be worth turning into a business? Read this.
If you have an idea and you are going to create a business OR even if you have a start-up and you are building a business, this is a book you should read. Rob Fitzpatrick and the book "The mom test" is a must read. If you think about, if you ask your mom about your new business, she is going to tell you what a great idea. The same with many people you ask, they won't want to offend you. The book will walk you through how you can test an idea or a business in a way that will gain you valuable feedback. It may even save you time and money chasing an idea that will never work, or stop you building facilities that might not be needed.
G**I
Quick read and concepts are easy to pick up...and it does work!
This is a definitely something you have to read after the lean startup. It's one of those books that just makes you realize that the intuitive way od doung things is just wrong (i.e, showing the customer the idea and ask for feedbacks).It tells you how to approach customers, where to find them and what to ask. My favourite part is about setting up meetings. Pre, during, post-meeting advices are key here.Although not in a startup but in a huge company I have started to apply the mom test when gathering consensus about a project idea that would involve different departments....and well yes it does make the difference.To be honest it is a very quick read and the concepts are very easy to pick up.
A**A
The must read book for the start up
The must read book for the start up.
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