| Video |
Tools for Business Model Generation [Entire Talk]
 Entrepreneur and business model innovator Alexander Osterwalder discusses dynamic, yet simple-to-use tools for visualizing, challenging and re-inventing business models. Osterwalder articulates how to use the visual language of his business model canvas framework, and shares stories of how this approach helps organizations of all sizes to better create, deliver and capture value.
|
Alexander Osterwalder · Steve Blank
|
Author
|
53:20
|
01/2012
|
| Video |
Using Business Models to Beat the Competition
 Author Alexander Osterwalder and serial entrepreneur Steve Blank discuss the importance blending a strong, clear story with the building blocks of the business model canvas to out perform competitors. Osterwalder also elaborates on the power of pattern recognition in developing new models.
|
Alexander Osterwalder · Steve Blank
|
Author
|
04:30
|
01/2012
|
| Video |
Mapping Customer Pains to Value Proposition
 Business model innovator Alexander Osterwalder lays out reasons to map a product or service's value proposition with the actual pains customers face. Using building blocks from his business model canvas framework, Osterwalder maps the relationship and discusses, with interviewer Steve Blank, how value is created.
|
Alexander Osterwalder · Steve Blank
|
Author
|
04:28
|
01/2012
|
| Podcast |
Tools for Business Model Generation
 Entrepreneur and business model innovator Alexander Osterwalder discusses dynamic, yet simple-to-use tools for visualizing, challenging and re-inventing business models. Osterwalder articulates how to use the visual language of his business model canvas framework, and shares stories of how this approach helps organizations of all sizes to better create, deliver and capture value.
|
Alexander Osterwalder · Steve Blank
|
Author
|
54:28
|
01/2012
|
| Video |
Nature vs. Nurture in Entrepreneurship
 Can entrepreneurs be made? This question is incredibly important for aspiring entrepreneurs, investors, and educational organizations like BASES. For some, the answer is straightforward; if you inherently possess a certain set of qualities, then, at the very least, you have the potential to become a successful entrepreneur. Otherwise, you're out of luck. For others, there is a relatively distinct manner in which entrepreneurs can be developed, through both intentional circumstances and otherwise, such as family background and education.
|
Steve Blank · Mark Suster · Patrick Chung · Vivek Wadhwa
|
Panel Discussion
|
01:05:25
|
04/2010
|
| Podcast |
Fall 2009 Quarter Roundup: What Did We Learn?
 Stanford instructor and seasoned serial entrepreneur Steve Blank looks back at the commonalities and quirks of the quarter's previous speakers. Blank outlines a thorough checklist of questions and analysis helpful to any new enterprise leader, and offers insight and case studies from industry giants and new technology plays alike.
|
Steve Blank
|
Serial Entrepreneur
|
01:00:28
|
11/2009
|
| Video |
An Entrepreneur's Checklist
 No matter what business vertical you're entering, serial entrepreneur Steve Blank outlines a few points of necessary focus for the emerging business start-up, including market opportunity, market regulations and distribution, competitors and complimentors, and technology breakthroughs. He notes that the customer is not always the same thing as the payer, and that this bifurcation is creating interesting new business models.
|
Steve Blank
|
Serial Entrepreneur
|
02:36
|
11/2009
|
| Video |
Is First-to-Market Best?
 Why is it a bad idea to be the first and only player in a market? Serial entrepreneur Steve Blank outlines a host of reasons, including limited market opportunity, the expense of defining new markets, and the positioning risk involved in setting the market standard. Blank cautions that it may not be wise to be break new ground, and that safer terrain can be found in the footholds of the "first fast follower."
|
Steve Blank
|
Serial Entrepreneur
|
01:59
|
11/2009
|
| Video |
Vertical vs. Horizontal Markets
 In this clip, the difference between vertical markets - niche players serving a specific need or customer set; and horizontal markets - goods or services that enable a platitude of businesses - are defined for the student of entrepreneurship. The needs of start-ups differ dramatically by vertical, says serial entrepreneur Steve Blank. And taking advice from new enterprises in a different market niche can end in disaster. Take heed when receiving advice from friends in a neighboring business vertical.
|
Steve Blank
|
Serial Entrepreneur
|
01:32
|
11/2009
|
| Video |
Market Risk and Technology Risk
 Market risk is the concern that you'll find your customers before you run out of funding. A technical risk asks if the innovation is in place to bring your start-up idea to market successfully. Both of these concerns are paramount for an entrepreneurial venture, says serial entrepreneur Steve Blank, and both have the potential to cause a young business to shutter.
|
Steve Blank
|
Serial Entrepreneur
|
03:03
|
11/2009
|
| Video |
The Entrepreneur and the Family
 Female Stanford students of entrepreneurship ask serial entrepreneur Steve Blank: "How can one balance family life with the demands of the start-up?" Blank advises single people to stay single, and suggests that those with family ties set strict schedules to insure time together. Start-ups can easily take over one's life, he says, and one must be equally diligent in taking time off as working.
|
Steve Blank
|
Serial Entrepreneur
|
02:13
|
11/2009
|
| Video |
Fall 2009 Quarter Roundup: What Did We Learn? (Entire Talk)
 Stanford instructor and seasoned serial entrepreneur Steve Blank looks back at the commonalities and quirks of the quarter's previous speakers. Blank outlines a thorough checklist of questions and analysis helpful to any new enterprise leader, and offers insight and case studies from industry giants and new technology plays alike.
|
Steve Blank
|
Serial Entrepreneur
|
59:40
|
11/2009
|
| Podcast |
Retooling Early Stage Development
 Ninety-percent of Silicon Valley's start-ups fail not because of faulty product, but because they don't tap the right market and they don't know their customer. Well-seasoned serial entrepreneur Steve Blank drafts a new model for plotting the path between good idea and market success.
|
Steve Blank
|
Serial Entrepreneur
|
56:52
|
10/2008
|
| Video |
Rethinking the Product Development Process
 The canonical product development model - concept, develop, alpha, beta, first customer, ship - is how Silicon Valley grew strong. But why does this process to build a business only succeed part of the time? And how can early stage ventures reduce their overall risk? Serial entrepreneur Steve Blank points out that most founding partners strongly focus on product and ship. But too often, startups confuse engineering's accomplishments with marketing and sales success, and they pop the champagne corks too soon.
|
Steve Blank
|
Serial Entrepreneur
|
05:29
|
10/2008
|
| Video |
Assessing Customer and Market Risks
 The odds of success in Silicon Valley are about 1,000:1. How can so many good ideas fail to find their place in the market? Too many start-ups burn too many resources on sales and marketing too soon, says serial entrepreneur Steve Blank. Less than ten percent of start-ups fail because of faulty technology or engineering, whereas most allude success because they don't pinpoint the right market or the right customer.
|
Steve Blank
|
Serial Entrepreneur
|
04:22
|
10/2008
|
| Video |
The Customer Development Process
 Any assumption that an entrepreneur makes about their customers and markets is nothing but a guess, says serial entrepreneur Steve Blank. But how can one prove a working hypothesis? It goes beyond soliciting friends for feedback in the dorm room. Successful ventures locate real customers in the field, solicit their feedback, and deeply analyze the customers whose problems they hope to solve.
|
Steve Blank
|
Serial Entrepreneur
|
03:33
|
10/2008
|
| Video |
Engineers and Founders: The First Sales Team
 The most radical thing a new company can do is sell their product, says serial entrepreneur Steve Blank. He believes that the company founders - not the sales team - should be the first to try to turn a profit, as they will learn firsthand about their product's shortcomings and usability. Great engineers directly understand what their customers need.
|
Steve Blank
|
Serial Entrepreneur
|
02:00
|
10/2008
|
| Video |
Don't Seek Publicity Too Soon
 Public relations and media contact should be strategic, rather than serendipitous. Serial entrepreneur Steve Blank is deeply against media coverage for a fledgeling start-up, as too many factors are variable in the early stages of a growing business.
|
Steve Blank
|
Serial Entrepreneur
|
01:41
|
10/2008
|
| Video |
Company Building as Shakespearean Tragedy
 Silicon Valley lore includes anecdotes of company founders being thrown out of their own companies. But starting a company and growing a company are two different skill sets, says serial entrepreneur Steve Blank. Investors are often frightened away by world class entrepreneurs who know how to build, but not deepen and enrich, a later stage enterprise. The tragedy, says Blank, is that the largest, best-known tech companies are still run by their founders - think Microsoft, Oracle, or Apple. The gap in this insight, says Blank, is of theatrical proportion.
|
Steve Blank
|
Serial Entrepreneur
|
01:50
|
10/2008
|
| Video |
Acting on Customer Discovery
 Customer feedback simply cannot be outsourced, according to serial entrepreneur Steve Blank. Here he shares an anecdote demonstrating the importance of founders speaking directly to customers. Blank recalls how entrepreneur Alan Michaels was forced to listen to customer needs and altered his product accordingly. These changes turned single-digit sales into the thousands, and resulted in an eventual $400 million company sale.
|
Steve Blank
|
Serial Entrepreneur
|
05:59
|
10/2008
|