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While there was definitely value in those references and tidbits of advice, it also created a bubble that distorted the reality of the world that existed outside the “techtopia” of Palo Alto.
By establishing our business venture outside the Bay Area, we quickly learned that not every place in the world provides a platform for you to only use wireframes to pitch an idea. Similarly, many distinctive cultural trends might frown on venture capital as a sound investment strategy, and not every company will see your value proposition as you do.
One of the biggest mistakes we made was not considering how the system in which our customers worked penalized and rewarded specific actions and behaviors. This essentially wiped out any value our product could provide. In addition, a lack of understanding of how decision-makers in our area thought and the incentives and values that drove them, also contributed to a disappointing disconnect at the time of the sales pitch.People favor a hands-on approach and allowing the decision-makers to test and discover for themselves the utility of what we were presenting might have made a significant difference in the long run.When you are in the B2B space, it's very common to confuse or to neglect one of the two fundamental audiences you serve: the final user and the decision-makers. In our case, we put in the energy to test our prototypes with the end-users who were parents with school-age children. However, we regrettably neglected testing our product with the heads of the educational institutions that were ultimately going to buy the platform.This mistake completely skewed our perception of how "mature" the idea and the value of our proposition were. Which brings us to the next important lesson.
When testing the product, we received a relatively small sample size of feedback that confirmed our belief (and hope) that our idea was beneficial to end-users and added value.This initial positive feedback led us to ignore other elements that were misrepresented in our business model and product. This anchoring bias prevented us to receive important feedback from other involved parties that were crucial to the process of iteration and adjustment of our strategy.
This doesn’t mean that the Mac won’t sell it just means that you have to filter out the noise to understand what your true audience is saying.In other cases, honest feedback can be hard to come by. Decision-makers or end users may compliment your product and encourage you to keep working on it, but stop short of committing to purchase it due to certain economic complications. This “shallow feedback”, especially if you continue to hear it several times from diverse clients, should throw up a huge red flag. A customer's willingness to pay should be one of the most fundamental metrics used for measuring potential success in the early stages of business development. While positive feedback is certainly encouraging, it is also extremely important to look past the noise and consider the facts. Entrepreneurs and startup business owners need to be realistic and read between the lines to get new insights instead of only focusing on superficial feedback.
This journaling exercise allowed me to describe the feelings that arose after a specific meeting, a conversation with my co-founders, or just any random thought that crossed my mind while commuting.There's a very specific log entry in which I talk about feeling a decrease in morale even after getting great and a few new leads. During that time, we hadn’t closed a sale in over two months and we were feeling defeated.
My initial thought at that time was to talk to the team, offer encouragement, and motivate us to “pull ourselves up by our bootstraps” and keep moving forward. In mid-paragraph of that journal entry, however, there's a clear change of heart in my writing.I start to ponder on how other team members are feeling and what might be on their minds. This exercise helped me realize that as a startup, it is essential that you put people at the center of your business philosophy.For any startup founder, it is important to not lose sight of the fact that some team members might be going through a hard time in their relationships, or having a tough time in school, or are perhaps struggling financially. Envisioning your company as the pampered baby who should receive everyone’s foremost attention is deceitful and somewhat selfish. As a business owner, your team is what creates value and your humanity is what keeps it together.