Framework for Figuring out Your Value Proposition

I’m a big fan of the Lean Startup movement and love the underlying principle of testing, learning, and pivoting by experimenting with the most basic product prototypes imaginable – so-called Minimal Viable Products (MVP) – during the search for product-market fit. It helps companies avoid building stuff that customers don’t want. Yet, there is no underlying conceptual tool that accompanies this process. There is no practical tool that helps business people map, think through, discuss, test, and pivot their company’s value proposition in relationship to their customers’ needs. So I came up with the Value PropositionDesigner Canvas together with Yves Pigneur and Alan Smith.

The Value Proposition Designer Canvas is like a plug-in tool to the Business Model Canvas. It helps you design, test, and build your company’s Value Proposition to Customers in a more structured and thoughtful way, just like the Canvas assists you in the business model design process (I wrote more about how we came up with this new tool previously).

This article is from :: http://businessmodelalchemist.com/blog/2012/08/achieve-product-market-fit-with-our-brand-new-value-proposition-designer.html

The Canvas with its 9 building blocks focuses on the big picture. The Value Proposition Designer Canvas zooms in on two of those building blocks, the Value Proposition and the Customer Segment, so you can describe them in more detail and analyze the “fit” between them. Companies need to get both right, the “fit” and the business model, if they don’t want to go out of business, as I described in an earlier post on failure. The tools work best in combination. One does not replace the other.

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In this post I’ll explain the conceptual tool. In my next post I’ll outline how you can use it for testing in combination with the Customer Development process by Steve Blank and the Lean Start-up process by Eric Ries. The Value Proposition Designer Canvas will allow you to better describe the hypotheses underlying Value Propositions and Customers, it will prepare you for customer interviews, and it will guide you in the testing and pivoting.

The Value Proposition Designer Canvas

As mentioned above, the Value Proposition Designer Canvas is composed of two blocks from the Business Model Canvas, the Value Proposition and the corresponding Customer Segment you are targeting. The purpose of the tool is to help you sketch out both in more detail with a simple but powerful structure. Through this visualization you will have better strategic conversations and it will prepare you for testing both building blocks.

Achieving Fit

The goal of the Value Proposition Designer Canvas is to assist you in designing great Value Propositions that match your Customer’s needs and jobs-to-be-done and helps them solve their problems. This is what the start-up scene calls product-market fit or problem-solution fit. The Value Proposition Designer Canvas helps you work towards this fit in a more systematic way.

Value Proposition Canvas - fit

Customer Jobs

First let us look at customers more closely by sketching out a customer profile. I want you to look at three things. Start by describing what the customers you are targeting are trying to get done. It could be the tasks they are trying to perform and complete, the problems they are trying to solve, or the needs they are trying to satisfy. Value Proposition Canvas - customer jobs

Ask yourself:

  • What functional jobs is your customer trying get done? (e.g. perform or complete a specific task, solve a specific problem, …)
  • What social jobs is your customer trying to get done? (e.g. trying to look good, gain power or status, …)
  • What emotional jobs is your customer trying get done? (e.g. esthetics, feel good, security, …)
  • What basic needs is your customer trying to satisfy? (e.g. communication, sex, …)

Customer Pains

Now describe negative emotions, undesired costs and situations, and risks that your customer experiences or could experience before, during, and after getting the job done. Value Proposition Canvas - pains Ask yourself:

  • What does your customer find too costly? (e.g. takes a lot of time, costs too much money, requires substantial efforts, …)
  • What makes your customer feel bad?(e.g. frustrations, annoyances, things that give them a headache, …)
  • How are current solutions underperforming for your customer? (e.g. lack of features, performance, malfunctioning, …)
  • What are the main difficulties and challenges your customer encounters? (e.g. understanding how things work, difficulties getting things done, resistance, …)
  • What negative social consequences does your customer encounter or fear? (e.g. loss of face, power, trust, or status, …)
  • What risks does your customer fear? (e.g. financial, social, technical risks, or what could go awfully wrong, …)
  • What’s keeping your customer awake at night? (e.g. big issues, concerns, worries, …)
  • What common mistakes does your customer make? (e.g. usage mistakes, …)
  • What barriers are keeping your customer from adopting solutions? (e.g. upfront investment costs, learning curve, resistance to change, …)

Rank each pain according to the intensity it represents for your customer. Is it very intense or is it very light. For each pain indicate how often it occurs.

Customer Gains

Now describe the benefits your customer expects, desires or would be surprised by. This includes functional utility, social gains, positive emotions, and cost savings. Value Proposition Canvas - gains Ask yourself:

  • Which savings would make your customer happy? (e.g. in terms of time, money and effort, …)
  • What outcomes does your customer expect and what would go beyond his/her expectations? (e.g. quality level, more of something, less of something, …)
  • How do current solutions delight your customer? (e.g. specific features, performance, quality, …)
  • What would make your customer’s job or life easier? (e.g. flatter learning curve, more services, lower cost of ownership, …)
  • What positive social consequences does your customer desire? (e.g. makes them look good, increase in power, status, …)
  • What are customers looking for? (e.g. good design, guarantees, specific or more features, …)
  • What do customers dream about? (e.g. big achievements, big reliefs, …)
  • How does your customer measure success and failure? (e.g. performance, cost, …)
  • What would increase the likelihood of adopting a solution? (e.g. lower cost, less investments, lower risk, better quality, performance, design, …)

Rank each gain according to its relevance to your customer. Is it substantial or is it insignificant? For each gain indicate how often it occurs.

Products & Services

Now that you sketched out a profile of your Customer, let’s tackle the Value Proposition. Again, I want you to look at three things. First, list all the products and services your value proposition is built around. Value Proposition Canvas - products & services

Ask yourself which products and services you offer that help your customer get either a functional, social, or emotional job done, or help him/her satisfy basic needs?

Products and services may either by tangible (e.g. manufactured goods, face-to-face customer service), digital/virtual (e.g. downloads, online recommendations), intangible (e.g. copyrights, quality assurance), or financial (e.g. investment funds, financing services).

Rank all products and services according to their importance to your customer. Are they crucial or trivial to your customer?

Pain Relievers

Now lets outline how your products and services create value. First, describe how your products and services alleviate customer pains. How do they eliminate or reduce negative emotions, undesired costs and situations, and risks your customer experiences or could experience before, during, and after getting the job done? Value Proposition Canvas - pain relievers Ask yourself if they…

  • … produce savings? (e.g. in terms of time, money, or efforts, …)
  • … make your customers feel better? (e.g. kills frustrations, annoyances, things that give them a headache, …)
  • … fix underperforming solutions? (e.g. new features, better performance, better quality, …)
  • … put an end to difficulties and challenges your customers encounter? (e.g. make things easier, helping them get done, eliminate resistance, …)
  • … wipe out negative social consequences your customers encounter or fear? (e.g. loss of face, power, trust, or status, …)
  • … eliminate risks your customers fear? (e.g. financial, social, technical risks, or what could go awfully wrong, …)
  • … help your customers better sleep at night? (e.g. by helping with big issues, diminishing concerns, or eliminating worries, …)
  • … limit or eradicate common mistakes customers make? (e.g. usage mistakes, …)
  • … get rid of barriers that are keeping your customer from adopting solutions? (e.g. lower or no upfront investment costs, flatter learning curve, less resistance to change, …)

Rank each pain your products and services kill according to their intensity for your customer. Is it very intense or very light? For each pain indicate how often it occurs.

Gain Creators

Finally, describe how your products and services create customer gains. How do they create benefits your customer expects, desires or would be surprised by, including functional utility, social gains, positive emotions, and cost savings? Value Proposition Canvas Ask yourself if they…

  • …create savings that make your customer happy? (e.g. in terms of time, money and effort, …)
  • … produce outcomes your customer expects or that go beyond their expectations? (e.g. better quality level, more of something, less of something, …)
  • … copy or outperform current solutions that delight your customer? (e.g. regarding specific features, performance, quality, …)
  • … make your customer’s job or life easier? (e.g. flatter learning curve, usability, accessibility, more services, lower cost of ownership, …)
  • … create positive social consequences that your customer desires? (e.g. makes them look good, produces an increase in power, status, …)
  • … do something customers are looking for? (e.g. good design, guarantees, specific or more features, …)
  • … fulfill something customers are dreaming about? (e.g. help big achievements, produce big reliefs, …)
  • … produce positive outcomes matching your customers success and failure criteria? (e.g. better performance, lower cost, …)
  • … help make adoption easier? (e.g. lower cost, less investments, lower risk, better quality, performance, design, …)

Rank each gain your products and services create according to its relevance to your customer. Is it substantial or insignificant? For each gain indicate how often it occurs.

Competing for Customers

Most Value Propositions compete with others for the same Customer Segment. I like thinking of this as an “open slot” that will be filled by the company with the best fit. The visualization for this was an idea by Alan Smith, one of my co-founders, and the designer of Business Model Generation. Competing Value Propositions If you sketch out competing value propositions, you can easily compare them by mapping out the same variables (e.g. price, performance, risk, service quality, etc.) on a so-called strategy canvas. BoS Strategy Canvas

The Value Proposition Designer Canvas Poster

You can use the Value Proposition Designer Canvas like the Business Model Canvas: plot it as a poster, then stick it up on the wall, and then use sticky notes to start sketching.

Contrary to the Canvas, the Value Proposition Designer Canvas poster and methodology is copyrighted. However, you are free to use it and earn money with it as an entrepreneur, consultant, or executive, as long as you are not a software company (the latter need to license it from us). However, when you us it please reference and link toBusinessModelGeneration.com.

Here is a downloadable draft poster version of the Value PropositionDesigner Canvas.

Value Proposition Designer

Testing and Pivoting

Using the Value Proposition Designer Canvas as a thinking and design tool is only a start. To get the best out of it you need to combine it with testing and pivoting. In my next blogpost I explain how the Value PropositionDesigner Canvas perfectly integrates with the Customer Development and Lean Startup Process. I explain how it helps you substantially when you “get out of the building” as Steve Blank would say.

Last But Not Least: Workshop Date Announcements

We have a couple of 2-day workshops coming up where you can learn about all our tools:

Hope to see you in either San Francisco or Zurich!

Book Idea – a Template for Myself

Chief Content 101: Your Content Is Irrelevant – The 3-Step Process to Integrate Marketing That Brings in Hungry Leads

Chief Content: An Innovative Method To Own Your Content and Make it Work for You.

Chief Content: How Relentless Work on Marketing Aspects Will Win You the Customers You Deserve

Description:

Your Logo Is Irrelevant. No really, it is. Let me explain.

It turns out that drooling dogs and ringing bells are far more important than a logo (thank you Pavlov).

Sure, successful businesses have logos–easily recognizable logos. Playboy, McDonald’s, Coke. But there’s far more to their success than bunny ears, golden arches or a certain shade of red. Stripped of all the marketing lingo, branding is pretty simple: Your brand is all the associations that come to mind when your potential customers see or hear your name.

Whether your focus is on personal branding or on branding your company culture–you’ve got to have more than a fancy logo and edgy color scheme to create brand stickability (you know, a brand your customers can’t get out of their heads).

Well, there’s a process to capturing attention and getting your foot in the door of your customers’ minds. Here’s a taste of some of the personal branding advice you’ll find in this book:

You must become the first solution your customer thinks of when they have a problem you can solve. How?

The first step is to figure out what your audience cares about. What keeps them up at night? What problems can you help them solve? From there, you need to apply these three steps:

1) Frequency
2) Repetition
3) Anchoring

In this e-book, we’ll show you how to figure out what your customers really want. Then we will show you how to apply these three steps to help you become the trusted resource that comes to mind first when your customer’s itch needs to be scratched.

Is real and authentic branding going to happen overnight? Probably not. But ask yourself this: Do you want short-term results that lose effectiveness? Or are you willing to invest a bit more time and effort to create long-term results that get better and better?

If you’re looking for a branding book that promises a quick fix, this isn’t the book for you. But if you want to create a brand that sticks like superglue–read this book!

Go ahead and let the wimps and whiners have the get-rich quick schemes that fizzle and fall flat like a wet firework. You want to ignite a branding bonfire.

Best Ideas for Entrepreneurs >> List of Must-Know Resources

Lean Startup – Eric Ries.

Customer Development course on Udacity from Steve Blank

Lincoln Murphy’s Blog

Patio Kalzumeus http://www.kalzumeus.com/2015/10/30/developing-in-stockfighter-with-no-trading-experience/

Both Sides of the Table

Startup School Podcast by Seth Godin

the Dip by Set Godin

How to Win Friends and Influence People

Brand you 50 by Tom Peters

Passion Meets Momentum .com << videos from Hack Forward

Business Model Canvas

Blog from Groove HQ

Books written by Brad Feld.

CopyHackers -> Startup Differentiation

Ideas from Delivering Happiness

10 Day MBA Program by ESCP Europe

Fabrica de Antreprenori

HubSpot’s ebooks on Inbound Marketing

The investor from HubSpot who had some really good books written on how to do marketing automation

https://www.youtube.com/user/HowToWebConf/videos

GrowthHacker .tv

https://www.youtube.com/user/thenextweb/videos

MicroConf

https://vimeo.com/user12790628

https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCxIJaCMEptJjxmmQgGFsnCg

https://www.youtube.com/user/stanfordbusiness

https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCcefcZRL2oaA_uBNeo5UOWg/videos

https://www.youtube.com/user/500startups/videos

https://www.youtube.com/user/Techsylvania/videos

The MicroConf Blog Posts

Product Launch Formula

Startup Plays / Guides.co

The employees of an Ecommerce company created a new word they’re using for inside jobs

So, I’ve seen this review recently and got really excited:

Squirrlyized Products are Moving Up in the Rank

So far we really like the Squirrly interface. Our employees have been “squirrlyizing”(This is what our employees call it.) our products for a few weeks. We enjoy checking everyday to see who has been the most successful in getting their products to the highest rank on google. Thanks for the great product and keep up the good work.

Jeff Chambliss
https://www.stickertalk.com

HiHi, we’ve been together for 3 Years.

Screenshot 2016-02-10 02.04.36

I’m very lucky to be the CEO of Squirrly. This thing I’ve helped build keep amazing me with all the great people who are a part of our Journey.

Danut, from the email above, has been an amazing customer since 16 February 2013. Right now, it’s almost 3 Years Later !!!

He is one of our first customers ever.

I love the fact that we real mean a lot to so many people. It’s what makes everything worth-while.