This summer I’m working with five new technology companies that are in the process of going from bench to business. What is common with all these entrepreneurs is the belief that once you have a product, all you have to do is find a customer to buy it and you’ve got a business. (Remember I talked about going from idea to prototype in my previous post) Yes, Peter and I are famous for saying that without a customer you don’t have a business, but that’s just a clever saying. It completely overlooks the fact that a business has a lot of moving parts and the entrepreneur, the product, and the customer are just three of them.
... Read MoreOne thing we writers are good at is taking others' concepts, repackaging them, giving them a new name, and then proclaiming a new discovery. Geoffrey Moore essentially did that when he popularized the work of the Department of Agriculture in Iowa in the 1930s on the technology adoption-diffusion cycle in his very successful book called Crossing the Chasm. Blue Ocean Strategy, another best-selling business book, gave a new name to an old entrepreneurial strategy--looking for unserved needs in the market. So, not to be left out of this game, I developed what I call the Allen Technology Richter Scale, with all due apologies to Mr. Richter who helped us measure the intensity of earthquakes.
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