Skip to main content

Home/ Edmonton Lean Startup Circle/ Group items tagged customer validation

Rss Feed Group items tagged

Jas P

5 Common Mistakes Made when Getting Customer Feedback - And How to Avoid Them - 0 views

  • 1) You are talking too much.. 99% of the process of getting feedback is listening. If you want some great feedback on your website, shut up and listen.
  • 2) You are getting mad at your customers for feeling one way or another. Customers are allowed to feel the way they feel. My above anecdote is a classic – she got angry for me not liking the font option, instead of making a note to herself “client can’t find the font change option – are other having a hard time finding it?” I also see companies get hung up on this mistake a lot with pricing. Business: “How much would you pay for this?” Client: “I wouldn’t pay for it but would use it if it was free.” It isn’t their fault that they did not understand the value of paying for it.
  • 3) You are not understanding or caring about the customer’s WHY. You must understand a customer’s WHY. Why do they feel the way they do? A good example with a recent client: the feedback from not one but three testers: “I hate that color purple.” Ok, so you could take that and change it to orange, but you don’t even know why you are making that change. Instead, I asked why, and got back “because the font is hard to read at the top.” Ok. now we have a readability problem, not a color problem. Much clearer issue to fix.
  • ...3 more annotations...
  • I asked “tell me about your tablet usage, if you have one. What apps are you using?”
  • Now I have their actual buying behaviour. I looked up those apps to see how much they were, and that’s data I can make good decisions on. You can learn much more from a customer’s ACTUAL behaviour than what they say they would do.
  • 5) You’re (over?)reacting to all customer feedback. Yes, you should acknowledge and thank all feedback, unsolicited or otherwise. But sometimes you have to sometimes agree to disagree. For example, maybe a feature your customer wants is too expensive and your revenue model just can’t justify it. Heck maybe your customer is wrong – it’s happened before. Or maybe that customer is heading in a different direction than you are. Again, that’s ok.
Jas P

Kyro Beshay: Hacking Behavior: The Behavior Potential - 0 views

  • One of the most popular theories on the phases of behavior change is known as the Transtheoretical Model. It outlines five phases that lead to an alteration in one’s behavior: precontemplation, contemplation, preparation, action, and maintenance. Here is a quick overview of each phase: Precontemplation: Individual is unaware that their behavior is a problem. Contemplation: Individual is aware that their behavior is an issue and is ambivalent as to whether action should be taken. Preparation: Individual plans to take action in the near future – a “window of opportunity” has opened. Action: Individual has made specific overt modifications to their lifestyle. Maintenance & Relapse Prevention: Individual take steps to avoid factors that increase the risk of relapse.
  • The Behavior Potential illustrates the common cycle of awareness, motivation, action and frustration we often experience when trying to change our ways, with each spike representing a single attempt. The goal is to manipulate the phases of the Behavior Potential so that:
  • Phase 0: Precontemplation – Get Views During this phase, no one has seen your product, and so the goal is to get it in front of people, which is where Growth Hacking comes into play.
  • ...4 more annotations...
  • Phase 1: Contemplation & Preparation – Present The Problem & Solution So you’ve finally found someone to look at your product. Now your goal is to convince them they have a horrific problem and that you have a remarkable solution. This is something I see less and less. Startups will often litter their landing pages with all the great features they’ve developed, which gains them absolutely nothing if they’ve not yet convinced the viewer there’s actually something in their life that could be improved. To do this, there are 4 basic principles: Describe the problem in your viewer’s terms. Walk through examples of life with and without the problem. Outline a plan of attack. Socially validate the legitimacy of the problem with user feedback. Individuals in these stages are often ambivalent as to whether they should actually put forth effort into changing. Individuals in this stage go back and forth between reasons for concern, and justification for lack of it, with awareness of the pros for changing and an acute awareness of the cons. Show them that the benefits of switching outweigh the costs.
  • Phase 2: Action & Maintenance – Reward, Reward, Reward You’ve convinced someone to start using your product, and now you want to ensure that they’ll keep using it. The way we lengthen Phase 2, or sustain a behavioral change, is by simultaneously reinforcing the behavior while recognizing the situations which create an increased risk of relapse.
  • Reinforcement strengthens behavior – a core component of operant conditioning. There are two types of reinforcement: positive and negative. Positive reinforcement is the introduction of a positive stimulus, while negative reinforcement is the removal of a negative stimulus. An example of positive reinforcement is a mother laughing at her child’s joke, positively reinforcing that particular behavior, and likely resulting in her hearing that joke a lot more often.
  • Phase 3: Relapse – Your Rewards Aren’t Rewarding Relapse prevention involves recognizing the factors that may lead to one reverting back to their old habits, so if you find your users becoming disengaged, then there is likely a flaw in your reinforcement mechanism. The user finds it easier to not use your product. You may have convinced them that your solution is better in theory, but in practice it isn’t. To prevent relapse, constantly measure user engagement and adjust your reinforcers accordingly. Work towards bridging the gap between what you’re selling and what your users are experiencing.
Jas P

Reaching the Startup Holy Grail: Product-Market Fit | Michael Karnjanaprakorn - 0 views

  • Product/market fit means being in a good market with a product that can satisfy that market. You can always feel when product/market fit isn’t happening. The customers aren’t quite getting value out of the product, word of mouth isn’t spreading, usage isn’t growing that fast, press reviews are kind of “blah”, the sales cycle takes too long, and lots of deals never close. And you can always feel product/market fit when it’s happening. The customers are buying the product just as fast as you can make it — or usage is growing just as fast as you can add more servers. Money from customers is piling up in your company checking account.
1 - 4 of 4
Showing 20 items per page