Skip to Main Content

Article

Progress vs. Perfection: Minimum Viable Product Thinking

August 1, 2019

The way to solve prob­lems is to uncov­er them as you go and then piv­ot to meet them.” — Eric Reis, The Start­up Way

Whether your orga­ni­za­tion is new or has been around for a cou­ple gen­er­a­tions, chances are you waste time dri­ving for perfection.

It doesn’t mat­ter if you’re talk­ing about a phys­i­cal prod­uct, a dig­i­tal prod­uct or a pre­sen­ta­tion deck, peo­ple often try to make it per­fect with­out ask­ing for feed­back while it’s still a work in progress. When you shoot for per­fec­tion first – to be a Most Valu­able Play­er – you miss the oppor­tu­ni­ty to build it bet­ter in the first place — and to deter­mine if there’s an audi­ence who wants it.

It’s what I call the dri­ve for pre­sen­ta­tion over performance.

Min­i­mum Viable Product

It’s far bet­ter to shoot for a dif­fer­ent kind of MVP: A Min­i­mum Viable Prod­uct – to cre­ate a pro­to­type of what­ev­er you are mak­ing, specif­i­cal­ly as a way to present your ideas. Way bet­ter than spend­ing incred­i­ble amounts of time and mon­ey on some­thing that may or may not see the light of day.

In The Start­up Way, author Eric Ries describes a Build-Mea­sure-Learn feed­back loop – an incre­men­tal, iter­a­tive way of quick­ly and cost-effec­tive­ly deter­min­ing if an idea is viable.

This doesn’t have to be a com­pli­cat­ed process. Here are a cou­ple of quick examples:

  • A client we work with want­ed to build a new phone App. Instead of invest­ing in build­ing from scratch, we decid­ed to gath­er and cor­re­late the data from three exist­ing apps to give us a new piece of infor­ma­tion, and to test hypothe­ses. We quick­ly knew exact­ly what we need­ed to build and saved $200,000 in R&D in the process.
  • My team recent­ly need­ed quick turn­around on a new piece of col­lat­er­al. Instead of spend­ing hours cre­at­ing what we thought could be a fin­ished prod­uct, we quick­ly cre­at­ed an MVP using Pow­er­Point and a flow chart then ran it by the team leader. He pro­vid­ed feed­back and only then did we invest time in design.

Your MVP can be as sim­ple as a sketch on a nap­kin, and mea­sur­ing (test­ing) can be as sim­ple as ask­ing ques­tions — lots of them:

  • Is this what you had in mind?”
  • What do you mean by that?”
  • What works and what doesn’t?”
  • You want blue – what shade are you think­ing of.”

In fact, ask­ing the same ques­tion three dif­fer­ent ways can help you to go deep, and then sit back while you hold the space for peo­ple to think and to speak. You’ll be amazed at the clar­i­ty you can uncover.

Of course, this may require a shift in how your orga­ni­za­tion cur­rent­ly works. As Reis sees it, inno­va­tion is no dif­fer­ent from oth­er tra­di­tion­al man­age­ment prac­tices. They are all root­ed in a foun­da­tion of account­abil­i­ty, on which is added process, cul­ture, and people.

Think of it as build­ing a new mus­cle or skill set – it won’t be per­fect the first time but then again, isn’t that the idea?

The Chal­lenge

  • What new prod­uct, ser­vice or impor­tant project are you work­ing on now that could ben­e­fit from MVP thinking?
  • What are the check­points that allow to you to iter­ate and recal­i­brate along the way – and then what is the MVP for each stage?
  • What sup­port do you need to try it?

Tim Schokking is a Coach and Strate­gic Plan­ning Advi­sor at Lawrence & Co. Growth Advisors.


Lawrence & Co’s work focuses on sustainable and enhanced growth for you and your business. Our diverse and experienced group of advisors can help your leaders and executive teams stay competitive through the use of various learning tools including workshops, webinars, executive retreats, or one-to-one coaching.

We help high-achieving leaders to have it all – a great business and a rewarding life. Contact us for simple and impactful advice. No BS. No fluff.