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Patterns 2009 vol 2

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Patterns 2009 vol 2
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PAT T E R N S volume 2. 2009 BUSINESS IN BETA guest author Colin Raney BUSINESS IN BETA PAT T E R N S volume 2. 2009 Don’t wait for perfection— launch and learn THE EVIDENCE – stories from around the globe How do you build a business in an unproven market? How do you figure out what customers need when you’re delivering an experience they’ve never seen before? You begin where service and software companies have begun, by conducting fast, cheap experiments that help you understand your customers. You build on what you learn. In short, you prototype. With ever-increasing competition, innovative businesses are finding that in order to stay competitive their offerings need to constantly evolve. And that to improve their offerings is to encourage consumer participation. This helps them build a competitive advantage by constantly revisiting what they deliver and how they deliver it. They know that traditional market testing will only validate their past successes. To understand the next big thing, companies have to engage with customers and react to their needs. Front-of-house flexibility The secret behind the unique feel of Whole Foods and Trader Joe’s is how employees are empowered to cocreate the customer experience. Each store establishes teams to figure out the best way to serve customers, from the products they offer to the way sections are organized. Each week, employees can see the results of their experiments in the aisles. Jesse recently joined the cheese department at Whole Foods and one of his favorite jobs is to select the cheeses that customers sample. He feels it helps set the mood of the entire store, and when he nails the selection, the store usually sells the entire stock. Giving teams the tools to constantly improve the business creates an engaging and successful environment. What control should you give up so your team is empowered to serve customers better? Making lemonade Like many fashion houses, Liz Claiborne has been hit hard by changes in the economy. Cuts in garment orders can make designer lines unprofitable to ship. Normally, these clothes would end up in outlet malls. Instead, Claiborne decided to use this opportunity to experiment. This summer and fall, they will open pop-up stores in high-traffic retail areas to learn more about their customers. Then, they’ll use this data to inform future collections and improve negotiations with retailers. How can you turn your biggest challenge into an opportunity to try something new? Real-time results Internet companies routinely use their constant connections with customers to prototype new offerings. Companies like Google and Amazon routinely select pools of users and change the functionality in their products (e.g., you may be looking at a different Gmail interface than your friends). Depending on specific behavioral metrics, Google may change a product without ever directly asking the customer. Smart and nimble businesses know that always-on and alwaysaccessible allows them to learn and evolve. How can you experiment on the fly and learn without compromising experience? Platform for change Companies like Apple and Facebook have learned to harness the energy of outside developers to create new applications. By allowing thousands of new applications to run on their platforms, they create a Darwinian environment where only the fittest survive. Jeff, a developer, noticed that Facebook lacked reminders around birthdays, so he created Birthday Alert. Customers quickly made it one of the hottest apps on the platform. Instead of trying to guess what type of functionality users wanted, Facebook just tapped into smart developers like Jeff who built it for them. Through this process, Facebook learned it needed a mechanism to foster developers who could improve the overall ecosystem. Now the Facebook Fund supports enterprising developers who are eager to build their ideas. How can you engage your customers and partners to help you prototype new offerings? Grassroots growth Ayr is a former scientist with an MBA from Harvard. After several years with McKinsey, he decided to follow his dream to create a chain of fast and friendly vegetarian restaurants. He could have hired a chef and tested his menu with focus groups, but instead he decided that it would be better to run a lot of experiments at low cost. So he launched his restaurant from a food truck parked outside the MIT campus, updating his customers about daily specials through text messages and blog posts. After six months, the results have been phenomenal. By starting small and prototyping, Ayr is learning while he shapes his business. He’s adding additional trucks, developing permanent spaces, and has begun to cater special events. Each experiment brings him closer to his ultimate goal. How can you intentionally limit your resources to create a more inspired offering? Ongoing experimentation McDonald’s has built prototyping into its organization. Since the company does not want every employee in every store deviating from service patterns, it has set up test restaurants to try new menu items, new pricing strategies, and new food preparation methods. This flexibility has paid off. McDonald’s has been able to roll out worldwide menu expansions in just a few months—quite a feat for a company that serves 47 million customers a day. How can you build experimentation into the culture of your organization? Name my book Tim Ferriss loved the playful working title of his first book, Drug Dealing for Fun and Profit, but it was too racy for Walmart and other retailers. With the success of the book hinging on this decision, Tim decided to prototype. He drafted a shortlist of titles and bought Google AdWords. Each online click equaled one vote. Within a week, he had his title, and The 4-Hour Work Week was finally finished. How much information do you need to make decisions? Can prototyping help you get there faster? TAKE ACTION – designing for Business in Beta 1. 2. 3. 4. Go early, go often Building experimentation into your business is harder than you think. Start small and stay focused. Try everything, but don’t try it all in one prototype. Learning by doing Build value for the business as you prototype. If you fail, what will you have learned? What will you salvage? Inspiration through constraint Don’t exhaust yourself searching for money and resources. The tighter your constraints, the more creative your prototypes will be. Open to opportunity Look for unanticipated ways customers are using your offering. Their improvisations may be the future of your business. PATTERNS are a collection of shared thoughts, insights, and observations gathered through our work and the world around us. We invite you to join the conversation, so we can raise the bar and develop richer design thinking experiences collectively. Be a pattern spotter: Now that you’ve been exposed to a few different examples, don’t be surprised if you start seeing Business in Beta patterns all around. Keep your eyes open and let us know what you find, especially if it’s the next new pattern. Guest author: Colin Raney. Contributors: Annie Valdes, Leslie Witt, Martin Schnitzer, Suzanne Gibbs Howard, Tom Hulme, Kate Piper, Rebecca Hornbuckle. Contact: Get in touch with us for all that is pattern related at patterns@ideo.com or visit us at http://patterns.ideo.com. copyright 2009

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