Steve Blank Podcast

  • Author: Vários
  • Narrator: Vários
  • Publisher: Podcast
  • Duration: 47:27:37
  • More information

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Synopsis

Visor Labs engineers mobile customers

Episodes

  • Getting to “Yes” for Corporate Innovation

    19/03/2015 Duration: 09min

    I’ve been working with Roberto, the Chief Innovation Officer of a diversified company I’ll call Sprocket Industries. I hadn’t heard from Roberto in awhile and when we caught up, it was clear his initial optimism had faded. I listened as Roberto listed the obstacles to the new innovation program at Sprocket...

  • Fear of Failure and Lack of Speed In a Large Corporation

    12/03/2015 Duration: 09min

    I just spent a day working with Bob, the Chief Innovation Officer of a very smart large company I’ll call Acme Widgets. Bob summarized Acme’s impediments to innovation. “At our company we have a culture that fears failure. A failed project is considered a negative to a corporate career. As a result, few people want to start a project that might not succeed. And worse, even if someone does manage to start something new, our management structure has so many financial, legal and HR hurdles that every initiative needs to match our existing business financial metrics, processes and procedures.

  • Blowing up the Business Plan at U.C. Berkeley Haas Business School

    05/03/2015 Duration: 14min

    During the Cold War with the Soviet Union, science and engineering at both Stanford and U.C. Berkeley were heavily funded to develop Cold War weapon systems. Stanford’s focus was Electronic Intelligence and those advanced microwave components and systems were useful in a variety of weapons systems. Starting in the 1950’s, Stanford’s engineering department became “outward facing” and developed a culture of spinouts and active faculty support and participation in the first wave of Silicon Valley startups.

  • Life Science Startups Rising in the UK

    21/02/2015 Duration: 08min

    Stephen Chambers spent 22 years in some of the most innovative companies in life science as the director of gene expression and then as a co-founder of his own company. Today he runs SynbiCITE, the UK’s synthetic biology consortium of 56 industrial partners and 19 Academic institutions located at Imperial College in London. Stephen and SynbiCITE, just launched the world’s first Lean LaunchPad for Synthetic Biology program. Here’s his story.

  • What Do I Do Now? The Startup Lifecycle

    17/02/2015 Duration: 09min

    Last week I got a call from Patrick an ex-student I hadn’t heard from for 8 years. He was now the CEO of a company and wanted to talk about what he admitted was a “first world” problem. Over breakfast he got me up to date on his life since school (two non-CEO roles in startups,) but he wanted to talk about his third startup – the one he and two co-founders had started.

  • When Krave Jerky Showed up in Class with a $435,000 Check

    04/02/2015 Duration: 06min

    I remind my students that I’m teaching them a methodology they can use the rest of their careers, not running an incubator. Every once in awhile a team ignores my advice and builds a company worth hundreds of millions of dollars.

  • It’s About Women Running Startups

    22/01/2015 Duration: 07min

    “Why is it so hard for a woman to still get taken seriously by a venture capitalist?”

  • Getting out of the building…by staying in the building!

    02/01/2015 Duration: 10min

    The landscape for how to turn life science and health care technologies into viable companies has changed more in the last 3 years than in the last 30. New approaches to translational medicine have emerged. Our Lean Launchpad® for Life Sciences is one of them. But a new class of life science/healthcare co-working and collaboration space is another.

  • I-Corps at the NIH: Evidence-based Translational Medicine

    19/12/2014 Duration: 13min

    Over the last three years the National Science Foundation I-Corps has taught over 700 teams of scientists how to commercialize their technology and how to fail less, increasing their odds for commercial success.

  • The Big Bang. The Lean LaunchPad explodes at University of Maryland

    12/12/2014 Duration: 11min

    The University of Maryland is now integrating the Lean LaunchPad® into standard innovation and entrepreneurship courses across all 12 colleges within the University. Over 44 classes have embedded the business model canvas and/or Customer Discovery including a year-long course taken by every single one of its bioengineering majors. It’s made a big bang.

  • Impact! NYU Scales the Lean LaunchPad

    22/11/2014 Duration: 08min

    NYU has adopted the Lean LaunchPad® class as a standard entrepreneurship course across twelve different schools/colleges within the University. Over 1,000 students a year are learning lean startup concepts. Impact!

  • Why Corporate Skunk Works Need to Die

    12/11/2014 Duration: 06min

    In the 20th century corporate skunk works were used to develop disruptive innovation separate from the rest of the company. They were the hallmark of innovative corporations. By the middle of the 21st century the only companies with skunk works will be the ones that have failed to master continuous innovation. Skunk works will be the signposts of companies that will be left behind.

  • Born Global or Die Local – Building a Regional Startup Playbook

    02/11/2014 Duration: 08min

    Entrepreneurship is everywhere, but everywhere isn’t a level playing field. What’s the playbook for your region or country to make it so? Scalable startups are on a trajectory for a billion dollar market cap. They grow into companies that define an industry and create jobs. Not all start ups want to go in that direction – some will opt instead to become a small business. There’s nothing wrong with a business that supports you and perhaps an extended family. But if you want to build a scalable startup you need to be asking how you can you get enough customers/users/payers to build a business that can grow revenues past several $100M/year.

  • The Business Model Canvas Gets Even Better – Value Proposition Design

    27/10/2014 Duration: 05min

    Product/Market fit now has its own book. Alexander Osterwalder wrote it. Buy it.

  • Watching My Students Grow

    07/10/2014 Duration: 05min

    One of the great things about teaching is that while some students pass by like mist in the night others remain connected forever. I get to watch them grow into their careers and cheer them on. Its been three and a half years since I first designed and taught the Lean LaunchPad class and lots of water has gone under the bridge since then. I’ve taught hundreds of teams, the National Science Foundation Innovation Corps has taught close to 400 teams led by our nations top scientists, and the class is being taught around the world.

  • Watching Larry Ellison become Larry Ellison — The DNA of a Winner

    01/10/2014 Duration: 11min

    In Oracle’s early days Kathryn Gould was the founding VP of Marketing, working there from 1982 to 1984. When I heard that Larry Ellison was stepping down as Oracle’s CEO I asked Kathryn to think about the skills she saw in a young Larry Ellison that might make today’s founders winners.

  • The Woodstock of K-12 Education

    25/09/2014 Duration: 07min

    Describing something as the “Woodstock of…” has taken to mean a one-of-a-kind historic gathering. It happened recently when a group of educators came to the ranch to learn how to teach Lean entrepreneurship to K-12 students.

  • How To Find the Right Co-Founders?

    18/09/2014 Duration: 06min

    How do you figure out what’s the right mix of skills for the co-founders of your startup? Surprisingly if you’ve filled out the business model canvas you already know who you need. I was having breakfast with Radhika, an ex-grad student of mine who wanted to share her Customer Discovery progress for her consumer hardware startup. She started by sketching her business model canvas on a napkin, but somehow the conversation quickly shifted to what was really on her mind.

  • Why Translational Medicine Will Never be The Same

    17/09/2014 Duration: 02min

    For the past three years the National Science Foundation Innovation Corps has been teaching our nations best scientists how to build a Lean Startup. Close to 400 teams in robotics, computer science, materials science, geoscience, etc. have learned how to use business models, get out of the building to test their hypotheses and minimum viable product.

  • How To Think Like an Entrepreneur: the Inventure Cycle

    12/09/2014 Duration: 10min

    The Lean Startup is a process for turning ideas into commercial ventures. Its premise is that startups begin with a series of untested hypotheses. They succeed by getting out of the building, testing those hypotheses and learning by iterating and refining minimal viable products in front of potential customers.

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