background preloader

LeanStartup

Facebook Twitter

Authors@Google: Eric Ries "The Lean Startup" The Marshmallow Challenge « System Agility. The Marshmallow Challenge is a game for learning about innovation, creativity, teams, collaboration, as well as the value of early prototyping and incremental delivery. Part of the real power of the game is in helping people to identify the hidden assumptions that every project has, and to recognize the value in diversity of team membership. I came across the Marshmallow Challenge last year, but I didn’t get a chance to play it until I attended the Play4Agile Conference in Germany earlier this year, where Michael Sahota facilitated a great session one night in the hotel bar (which was full of conference attendees, all taking part).

Since then I’ve run the Marshmallow Challenge several times. Running the Marshmallow Challenge Game Materials For each team, you need. Lean Startup Key Concepts Overview. Lean Startup Speech. Eric Ries, Author - Evangelizing for the Lean Startup. 2011 03 11 eric ries - the lean startup sxsw. The Lean Startup. Eric Ries Lean Startup Presentation For Web 2.0 Expo April 1 2009 A... The Lean Startup workshop coming soon. How to Build a Lean Startup, step-by-step. Duration: Approximately 60 minutes.

How to Build a Lean Startup, step-by-step

Cost: Free Get started with a detailed guide to three key lean startup techniques: continuous deployment, rapid split-testing, and root cause analysis (five why's). This webcast will cover the theory of how lean startups work, implementation details, and case studies. Participants will come away with a specific plan of action for how to apply these techniques to their product, company, or startup. The core audience for this presentation is venture-backed or angel-funded startups in the software, IT, web 2.0, or ecommerce space.

About Eric Ries Eric Ries is the author of the blog Lessons Learned. Agile, Lean « System Agility. What We Did at The ALE2011 Retrospective Olaf and I were chatting on the first morning of the first ever ALE conference when he suggested I facilitate the retrospective at the end of the conference.

Agile, Lean « System Agility

Facilitating a session with 200+ very smart and very vocal people, many of whom are expert retrospective facilitators, and all of whom would have high expectations, was a pretty scary thought. But also a great opportunity to have some fun and do something that would be an experience I would not forget. Preparation In Open Space sessions, hallway discussions, the bar and other forums, I tried to talk with as many people as possible about how they felt about the ALE Network and what comes next.

Exercises Opening Activities Rain Dance I wanted to open with something that would be memorable, a little unusual and also fun. The idea is to simulate the sound of a thunderstorm, creating the sounds of rain that build up to a thunderstorm, and then calms down again as the storm passes. Project History. Seu sucesso é baseado em Métricas de Vaidade? No desenvolvimento de uma startup, um dos momentos mais difíceis (e importantes) é a hora de medir suas ações.

Seu sucesso é baseado em Métricas de Vaidade?

A empresa está tendo sucesso nas suas práticas? Fundamental para responder essa pergunta e extrair o melhor dos experimentos, as métricas são as melhores amigas do empreendedor em muitas situações. Porém, devemos atentar ao que Eric Ries, em “A Startup Enxuta”, chama de Métricas de Vaidade. As Métricas de Vaidade são dados usados para medir o desempenho da empresa, mas que tem pouca utilidade real e levam o empreendedor a tirar conclusões precipitadas – ou mesmo nenhuma conclusão.

Vamos trazer o próprio exemplo do livro que retrata bem o perigo das Métricas de Vaidade. Esse tipo métrica nos leva a um comportamento natural: quando os números são positivos, associamos às nossas ações; quando são negativos, a falha vem do trabalho de outros. Build. Measure. Learn. Lean Startup SXSW 2012. by Eric Ries (and 4 others) Build. Measure. Learn. Lean Startup SXSW 2012. by Eric Ries (and 4 others)

The Lean Startup. “Startup success can be engineered by following the process, which means it can be learned, which means it can be taught.”- Eric Ries The Lean Startup provides a scientific approach to creating and managing startups and get a desired product to customers' hands faster.

The Lean Startup

The Lean Startup method teaches you how to drive a startup-how to steer, when to turn, and when to persevere-and grow a business with maximum acceleration. It is a principled approach to new product development. Too many startups begin with an idea for a product that they think people want.