I recently stumbled across the “Lean Start-Up” Process, a term coined by Eric Ries, 31, an engineer, entrepreneur and blogger. His inspiration was the lean manufacturing process, fine-tuned in Japanese factories decades ago – which focused on eliminating any work or investment that doesn’t produce value for customers. This is a concept I am familiar with in my solo, virtual law practice – operate lean and focus only on providing good legal service. Any effort or energy expended otherwise is of no benefit to me nor my clients.
Part of the this process also involves developing a “minimum viable product” that will please some customers, and then build the business from there, responding and reacting rapidly to market responses to product changes.
Below is a great slideshow that illustrates the process.
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- Why Startups are Agile and Opportunistic – Pivoting the Business Model (tpgblog.com)
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