The 7 Days Start Up Book By Dan Norris Full Summary.|SangaTutor|
The Book in Three Sentences
- 1.
You have to spend
time on the things that are most likely to bring you customers
- 2. If you want to be
an entrepreneur, you have to ’ship’ your product.
- 3.
You have to build
a business idea in order to test it.
The Five Big Ideas
1.
“Once you launch,
you need to get more people paying you. You have to relentlessly pursue your
best method of getting customers and not the stuff you naturally gravitate to.”
2.
“There is a very
big difference between someone entering their email and someone paying you each
month for a product.”
3.
“There’s a huge
forgotten void between ‘idea’ and ‘successful business’ that validation doesn’t
account for.”
4.
“If you want to be
an entrepreneur, you need to be passionate about growing a business.”
5.
“Solve problems
where people are already paying for solutions.”
The 7 Day Startup Summary
·
“You don’t learn
until you launch.”
·
“Eric Ries defines
a startup as ‘a human institution designed to deliver a new product or service
under conditions of extreme uncertainty.’”
·
“Anyone can create
a job for themselves. But not everyone can change the world.”
·
“Things may come
to those who wait … but only the things left by those who
hustle.” Anonymous
·
“Hustle for an
early stage startup is generally about spending your time on the things that
are most likely to bring you, customers.”
·
“Once you launch,
you need to get more people paying you. You have to relentlessly pursue your
best method of getting customers and not the stuff you naturally gravitate
to.”
·
“There is a very
big difference between someone entering their email and someone paying you each
month for a product.”
·
“To really test
whether you can build a business, you have to start building it.”
·
“There’s a huge
forgotten void between ‘idea’ and ‘successful business’ that validation doesn’t
account for.”
·
“If you want to be
an entrepreneur, you have to launch.”
·
“The world always
seems brighter when you’ve just made something that wasn’t there before.” Neil
Gaiman
The 9 Elements of a Bootstrapped Business Idea
1.
Enjoyable daily
tasks
2.
Product/founder
fit
3.
Scalable business
model
4.
Operates
profitably without the founder
5.
An asset you can
sell
6.
Large market
potential
7.
Tap into pain or
pleasure differentiators
8.
Unique lead
generation advantage
9.
Ability to launch
quickly
·
“If you want to be
an entrepreneur, you need to be passionate about growing a business.”
·
“It makes no sense
to start a business that is going to have you doing work you don’t enjoy.”
·
“Startup founders
should have the ambition to grow their business into a larger company. If you
don’t have that ambition, what you are creating is not a startup.”
·
“Your idea is not
a solid startup idea if you don’t have the capacity to make use of a
profitable, growing business model.”
·
“You need to be
able to see a point where you can hire in staff or systems to replace you, and
still continue to generate a profit. At that point it becomes a real business.”
·
“Focusing on
short-term launches or projects won’t build assets. Assets are built over time
by ignoring short-term distractions in favor of a bigger, long-term vision.”
·
“A list of
customers that pay you every month is an asset. If you focus on short-term
projects you’ll make more money initially. But if you turn down projects and
focus on providing recurring value, you build a valuable asset.”
·
“If you work on
this idea for five years, what will you have in the end?”
·
“What will make
you, and your company, unique?”
·
“Playing the
visionary is a privilege reserved for second- and third-time entrepreneurs.
It’s fun, but it’s fraught with danger.”
·
“Solve problems
where people are already paying for solutions.”
·
“Everyone might be
saying that your idea is great, but look at whether or not they are currently
paying for a solution to the same problem.”
·
“A common MVP
mistake is over-emphasizing the ‘minimum’ and under-emphasizing the ‘viable.’”
·
“The key is to
forget about automation and figure out what you can do manually.”
Questions that will help you with your MVP:
·
How can you
perform a service or offer a product to real customers?
·
How will you get
them to pay you after seven days?
·
How close will
your MVP be to the final vision of your product?
·
What can you do
manually (hint: probably everything)?
·
What can you do
yourself instead of delegating?
·
How can you make
your offer as real as possible for the end customer?
A Framework for Choosing an Acceptable Business
Name
1.
Is it taken?
2.
Is it simple?
3.
Is it easy to say
out loud?
4.
Do you like it?
5.
Does it make sense
for your idea?
·
“Every single one
of the top 25 brands in the world are 12 characters or less.”
·
“Broader is
better.”
10 Ways to Market Your Business
1.
Create Content on
Your Site
2.
Start Sending
Emails
3.
Podcasting
4.
Forums and Online
Groups
5.
Guest Blogging
6.
Listing Sites
7.
Webinars
8.
Presenting
9.
Doing Free Work
10.
Media Coverage
·
“Save your
excitement until you land people you don’t know as customers.”
·
“What are you
working on today that will make you indestructible tomorrow?”
·
“The only way to
win is to learn faster than anyone else.” Eric Ries
·
“Any time you feel
yourself wondering if what you are doing is good enough, compare it to the
best.”
·
“By comparing
yourself to the best, you set higher expectations for yourself, and you will be
better for it.”
·
“Always take a
step back and ask yourself if it’s feasible that someone else may have solved
this problem before.”
·
“Momentum is a
powerful force, so keep an eye out for what is working and do more of it.”
·
“Your own personal
happiness and motivation are the most important keys to the success of your
business.”
·
“You should be
more excited about Monday than you are about Friday. If that’s not the case,
there’s a good chance things aren’t going to work out.”
·
“No amount of
money is worth working with a difficult customer.”
7 Days to Startup
Day 1. “Brainstorm a bunch of ideas and evaluate them
against the checklist. Choose the idea that stands out as being the best option
for you.”
Day 2. “Write down exactly what you will launch on Day 7.
What will your customers get, what is included, and what is excluded? If
necessary, write down what is automated and what will be done manually in the
short term.”
Day 3. “Come up with a bunch of potential business names
and evaluate them against the criteria above. Choose whichever one makes the
most sense to you and run with it. Grab the best domain you can for that name.”
Day 4. “Build yourself a website!”
Day 5. “Build a list of what marketing methods you are
going to choose. Put together a rough plan for the first week or two of your
launch.”
Day 6. “Create a spreadsheet that covers the first few
months in business, the number of signups, revenue, estimated costs, and
monthly growth.”
Day 7. “Launch and start executing your marketing plan.”
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