Tips for Startups

Customer Discovery: the Hidden Key to a Successful Startup

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The term “customer discovery” might make you think of all kinds of processes.

Is it the part where you try to learn as much about your customers as you can? Is it the part where you go out and discover actual flesh-and-blood customers who will buy your products? Is it something else?

Turns out, it’s something else.

What Is Customer Discovery?

Customer discovery is a term used by two of the main figures of the lean startup methodology, Steve Blank and Eric Reis. They define customer discovery as questioning your core business assumptions. It is a way for you to validate your ideas and theories by going to the source – the customer – and a way to flesh out evidence supporting your product-market fit.

When Would You Need Customer Discovery?

In reality, you need customer discovery whenever you are designing a product or a service.

Let’s break it down into three distinct stages:

  1. You define a problem/market need (that your product/service is meant to fill).
  2. You develop a hypothesis about the solution (i.e., develop the product/service idea).
  3. You conduct an experiment to test your hypothesis (gather data from actual customers).

Yes, customer discovery is meant to validate your ideas – but it is more of a scientific approach than asking your friends, family, and coworkers what they think about your idea and whether they think it would work.

Let’s take a look at the four key steps to customer discovery, and see how you can use it to design solutions that fit your customer’s needs.

Step One: Come up with Your Hypothesis

This step encompasses stages one and two we’ve listed above: you are defining both the problem and the solution you are proposing to implement, and you are forming a hypothesis as to how the solution will impact the problem.

The best way to formulate your hypothesis is in a single sentence: my solution solves problem X. As simple as that.

You want to be incredibly specific with your hypothesis, and you want it to be accurate. Don’t just assume certain people have a certain problem. What if these people don’t see it as a problem?

That’s what customer discovery will help you discover, but in order to set off on the best foot possible, ensure you have a firm grasp of the issue yourself.

As for specificity: don’t just say, “I am solving the problem of lack of dog walkers by starting a dog walking service.” Instead, go for “I am solving a problem people living in this area have with walking their dogs from 9-5 by offering a safe, hassle-free, and reliable dog walking service”.

Step Two: Define Your Assumptions

As you can already tell, you were forced to make certain assumptions in step one. They may be correct, or they may be incorrect, and now is the time to write them all down.

You may be assuming that something is a problem (when, in fact, it isn’t), you may be assuming that your solution will help (when in reality, it won’t), and you may be assuming a certain demographic has this issue (which they may not).

Once you have your assumptions down, create a target persona in order to alleviate as much of them as possible. This is the person you are targeting, your ideal customer, the person with these problems.

Go into as much detail about your persona as possible, as it will help you ensure your data is sound later on.

Step Three: Test It out

Now that you have your hypothesis, an ideal customer in mind, and you are (in theory) aware of at least some of the pitfalls you may be facing, the time has come to test your theory out in the real world.

You are going to ask some people some questions.

The people you start with should be your potential customers. In our hypothetical case, dog owners living in a certain area, working 9-to-5 jobs.

Don’t ask people living in other areas, people who own cats and not dogs, or people who don’t own dogs but live in the area and work the nine-to-five. You have defined your audience – stick to it.

As for the questions themselves, you need to be very careful about how you formulate them.

You don’t want to ask, “Do you think this is a good idea?”. You don’t want to say anything about your idea, in fact. You want the people you’re asking to tell you what they would appreciate as a solution, and you are then going to build your solution based on their answers.

This is what customer discovery is about – creating a final product that matches the real needs of real customers.

To that end, your questions should be open-ended and not specifically related to your idea. Here are some examples:

  • What do you currently do for…?
  • Do you like the process?
  • Is it working out for you?
  • If you could improve the process, how would you do it?
  • What is the biggest challenge about…?
  • What do you like about it?

And so on.

The answers you get should help you outline your solution and make it a reality in the future.

Step Four: Evaluate Your Data

Now that you have plenty of data at your disposal, the time has come to go through it.

If you have done your homework well, you’ve likely discovered information you had no idea about previously. Someone has pointed out a solution or an issue you were not aware of.

This allows you to go back and refine your hypothesis and the idea itself, at which point you can do another round of customer discovery.

If, however, you’ve discovered your hypothesis was entirely correct, you can move on to product development.

Test out more than one hypothesis, and keep discovering until you are satisfied that you have come up with the best possible solution.

Final Thoughts

Customer discovery is certainly a lengthy and complex process, but it’s worth all the effort. It can significantly increase your chances of producing a solution that not only works but that is already sought after by a vast number of people. Consequently, your solution will be much more likely to become a success.

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