Steve Blank

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Steve Blank, 2012

Steve Blank (born 1953) is a Silicon Valley serial entrepreneur and academician who developed the Customer Development methodology that launched the Lean Startup movement. He authored The Four Steps to the Epiphany and The Startup Owner’s Manual to describe how to build a successful company.

Quotes[edit]

  • Customers don't ask to see your business plan.
    • Not All Who Wander Are Lost, K&S Ranch, 2010, p. 40.
  • While there is an occasional bad apple, the public market rewards companies with revenue growth and sustainable profits.
    • Not All Who Wander Are Lost, K&S Ranch, 2010, p. 54.
  • 80% of success in your career will come from just showing up. The world is run by those who show up…not those who wait to be asked.
  • Founders fit the definition of a composer: they see something no one else does. And to help them create it from nothing, they surround themselves with world-class performers.
  • In Silicon Valley, we have a special word for a failed entrepreneur – it’s called experienced.
    • University of Minnesota commencement speech, FounderLY. May 06, 2013.
  • A founder's skill is knowing how to recognize new patterns and to pivot on a dime. At times the pattern is noise, and the vision turns out to be a hallucination.
  • When I was young, I learned a quote in Sunday school that has stayed with me throughout my life. It said, 'teach us to number our days that we gain a heart of wisdom.' * Most of us will wake up 28,762 days- and then one day - we won’t. That means you have about 21,000 days left - and about 14,000 of them for your career. So herein lies the urgency.
  • Mentorship is a two-way street. While I was learning from them [brilliant mentors] - and their years of experience and expertise - what I was giving back was equally important. I brought fresh insights and new perspectives to their thinking.
  • Progress and stability are mutually exclusive.
    • Tweet at twitter.com/sgblank, 30 Oct. 2016, 10:41 PM
  • Number one is "Do you have curiosity?" Number two is "Does it translate to imagination?" But number three is "Did it translate to action?" That’s the difference between someone with an idea and someone who is an entrepreneur.
    • Interview with Harvard Business Review, [1].3 August 2017
  • Don’t execute other peoples advice if you can’t explain why you’re doing it.
    • Tweet at twitter.com/sgblank, Mar 14, 2018, 10:35 AM ·

The Startup Owner’s Manual (2012)[edit]

Steve Blank and Bob Dorf. The Startup Owner’s Manual, K&S Ranch, 2012

  • A startup is not a smaller version of a large company.
    • p. xvii.
  • A startup is a temporary organization in search of a scalable, repeatable, profitable business model.
    • p. xvii.
  • On Day One, a startup is a faith-based enterprise.
    • p. 8
  • Relentless execution without knowing what to execute is a crime.
    • p. 11.
  • In a startup, founders define the product vision and then use customer discovery to find customers and a market for that vision.
    • p. 25.
  • If you're afraid to fail in a startup, you're destined to do so.
    • p. 33.
  • Market type influences everything a company does.
    • p. 39.
  • Startups demand comfort with chaos, uncertainty and change.
    • p. 44.
  • No business plan survives its first contact with customers.
    • p. 53.
  • Only because earlyvangelists are buying into your total vision will they spend money for an incomplete, buggy, barely functions first product.
    • p. 77.
  • The best startups discover a situation where customers have tried to build a solution themselves.
    • p. 86.
  • The answers are easy. Asking the right questions is hard.
    • p. 91.
  • Winners understand why customers buy.
    • p. 124.
  • Building your product is easy. The hard part is getting customers.
    • p. 147.
  • Change engenders resistance, and resistance creates saboteurs.
    • p. 345.

The Four Steps to the Epiphany (2013)[edit]

Steve Blank, The Four Steps to the Epiphany, K&S Ranch, 2013.

  • Customer Discovery is damn hard work. You can't fake it.
    • p. 50.
  • A startup is in reality a 'faith-based enterprise' on day one. To turn the vision into reality and the faith into facts (and a profitable company), a startup must test those guesses, or hypotheses, and find out which are correct.
    • p. 83
  • Money is the lifeblood of startups. You stay in business until you run out of it.
    • p. 297

Interview with Steve Blank (2013)[edit]

Tablet Magazine "Tikkum Olam in Silicon Valley". May 06, 2013.

  • Great entrepreneurs are revolutionaries. They speak truth to power. They change the status quo. They rebel against what exists. If you want to see what country will create the next Steve Jobs or Elon Musk, see how they treat their dissidents.
  • The Silicon Valley entrepreneurial culture used to be limited to a few entrepreneurial clusters. Now the Internet has spread that culture everywhere.
  • There are several generations of Silicon Valley CEOs who "pay-it-forward." It’s an understood, underground thing you don’t talk about. You give back to younger founders and entrepreneurs without asking for anything. The goal is to pass on what we learned to make our startup ecosystem better.
  • The #1 change in Silicon Valley is information density. If you think about it, 30 years ago the only way you got info was during one-on-one meetings. You knew very little and the world knew very little. We just know a lot more now.
  • The Silicon Valley culture is "I can win and you can win" - it isn't a sum-zero game.

Commencement Addresses[edit]

Dalhousie University (2017)[edit]

"Steve Blank: Dark Age or Enlightenment? It's Up to the Future Generations", Inc.com, June 1, 2017.

  • I’ve watched how, in a blink of an eye, technology went from products used by the very few, to ending up in the pockets of billions, bringing social change and corporate disruption.
  • Only a few generations have been granted the role of determining whether a revolution in communication will allow our better angels – or our darker angels – to win. You leave here with incredible opportunity, but also with immense responsibility.
  • Your brains have been rewired to process all this Net-based information. Your brains are dealing with the world in a different way than humans ever have. That kind of profound shift has occurred only six times in the entire 200,000-year history of Homo Sapiens. And you, here today, are the vanguard of the seventh wave
    • Discussing the seven waves (the invention of speech, the written word, the printing press, newspapers, radio, television, and Internet)
  • Will you let darker angels win as you add fire to the flame, or will you seek out and spread real news?
  • The question is whether you'll tell your children that this decade was the beginning of a new dark age, or whether it was the time of something new and wonderful.
  • Light a path for the better angels. The world is counting on you.

UC Santa Cruz, Rachel Carson College (2019)[edit]

15 June 2019. [2][3]

  • You don't need to be the smartest person to be the most effective. Being effective means not just mastering the facts but figuring out how to move your agenda forward.
  • Change happens only when you could educate and inspire others. When you could use facts to create faith in what's possible... The easy part will be to write papers for your peers... The harder part, and the one you should think about, is how are you going to explain inconvenient truths to people who may not want to hear them. How are you going to rouse an audience to action?
  • The measure of a life is not time or money. It’s the impact you make serving God, your family, community, and country. Your report card is whether you leave the world a better place.

External links[edit]

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