Leancamp - Session Ideas
Entrepreneurs, designers, managers, developers, innovators – how can they help you? Leancamp is all about learning from people from other disciplines and different perspectives. It’s a rare opportunity to raise your current challenges and ideas, so that others can help you through them and contribute their knowledge.
Please comment and discuss. Use votes to register interest so the session host can understand if the topic is interesting to people. (Votes do not get used to choose the session – we’ll do that together at 10am.)
To help get the discussions going and give you an idea of what topics people might be interested in, please engage in the conversation – be open with your challenges and constructive with your suggestions
Want to make the most of this? There is some guidance, tips and tricks to get you started at http://leanca.mp/getting-started.
239 results found
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Workshop/Game: Design the Box
I'd like to host a 'Design the Box'-Workshop:
Design the Box is a useful game to facilitate reflection about a product's vision and how to communicate it in a way the customer understands.
We've played the game a lot with our own products and with products of friends and it helped us a great deal because it forces you to nail down your opinion on certain things
- what's the usp
- what's the vision
- what's the business model
- who's the customer
- …
and helps you to identify aspects of your product where you are uncertain. A great way to brainstorm new…
9 votes -
Effective Listening...let's brainstorm about how to listen better
Since so much of the Customer Development and Lean/ Agile methodologies depend upon internal and external dialog, being an effective listener could be the difference between getting startups off the ground or not.
We're a startup enterprise software business deep into Customer Discovery and problem-solution interviews. The concept for this session is a roundtable discussion on good techniques for listening well and ensuring what customers say is what we hear.
11 votes -
Successful MVP's from Lean Startup Machine
- How and why should MVP's be leveraged as part of the validated learning process?
- How are MVP's essential to speed, pivots, and maximizing runway?
- What are the four most common types of MVP's that teams use at Lean Startup Machine?
- What are some notable or creative examples from LSM?
- Open Q&A
10 votes -
1 vote
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What the metric?
A collaborative workshop session discussing what metrics are worth measuring and optimising for a theoretical idea you have yet to build or a currently running business.
After my last session on lean startup metrics at LSM (http://www.slideshare.net/stueccles/lean-startup-metrics) I had lots of discussions with people about what metrics they should be measuring and optimising for their product at their stage of growth. I thought we could make a collaborative session to allow people to help out each other on what and how to measure and optimise.
2 votes -
Knowsy iPad game case study
I helped The Innovation Games Company bring a new game platform from concept to App Store in just a few weeks. A key success factor was the way the small, collaborative, cross-functional team worked together. During this project, I learned some new ways to adapt my familiar user experience techniques so they more quick, visual, continuous and collaborative.
I'll share what worked (and what didn’t work) and provide five useful UX practices that help your team move faster with better results.
7 votes -
How to stay lean when developing physical products...
We hear a lot about the lean start-up with web products, but how have others used these principles with hardware or consumer products?
8 votes -
Applied Lean™: A system for Reliable and Validated Learning
Over the last 18 months I have worked with and talked with lots of people and companies about their lean experiments. This tool was devised to allow the most efficient assessment of market research and cusdev data between team members and advisors.
1 vote -
Designing experiments
Bring a hypothesis that is important to your business, and as a group let's try to rapid-fire brainstorm lightweight, focused experiments for offline and online. I'll act as both participant and facilitator to keep things moving. My hope is that it will be fun, creative and inspiring. -- Giff
20 votes -
Pair blogging: Creating better content through discussion
We're all able to have a passionate discussion about a topic with someone over coffee - but most of us are pretty bad at putting an argument in written form.
I'd like to share a format that we've recently been experimenting with, inspired by Pair Programming and the Pomodoro Technique: 5min discussion with peer, 15min writing your article, 5min review of first draft. (Repeat till done)
This is an interactive session - we'll pair up and you are expected to write content. Everyone writes their own post - the other person is merely there to help you formulate the content…
14 votes -
Hypothesis to interview to actionable learning - how I hacked together Janice Fraser, Ian Collingwood & Cindy Alvarez's Lean approaches
I'd like to share an overview of the process I use for Customer Development, which has been evolved by combining insight from Johanna Kollmann, Janice Fraser, Cindy Alvarez, Rob Fitzpatrick and Ian Collingwood and others. I'll cover how I do Customer Development for 10 minutes, then open up for questions, comments, and especially any advice you all might have!
15 votes -
Accelerators, incubators and entrepreneurship support - how are these adapting to a post-business plan world?
Even as entrepreneurs are learning that there are better ways to start up thn write a business plan, the support ecosystem still seems attached to the idea of business plans and written applications. I recently gave a talk to a number of UK entrepreneurship support organisations, pointing this out, and inviting them to adopt models more consistent with quality creation and enablement of founders, rather than distracting entrepreneurs with the vetting of their ideas. If the New York ecosystem is in a similar space, I'd love to discuss this openly. How does a fishbowl sound?
4 votes -
Fishbowl - good and bad experiences using the Business Model Canvas
Let's share techniques and learn from each others' experiences with the Business Model Canvas. Giff Constable had mentioned finding it a bit too heavy, and we'll also be joined by Lukas Fittl, who worked with Ash Maurya to create the Lean Canvas.
Giff and Lukas, it would be great if we could all have a discussion around our challenges and what approaches we tried. Up for it? Everyone else is welcome too!
10 votes -
Practical uses of the Business Model Canvas
Look at your business model, now look at reality. Back to your business model, and now reality. Sadly, your business model probably smells real, but is it?
If you stopped trying to validate that same old business model, your business could be real. Now look down.
You're at Leancamp. With me. On a boat. I've worked with Alex Osterwalder and interviewed many of the BMC's leading practitioners, learning some great techniques from them. I'd like to share how to use the Business Model Canvas:
- to avoid "local maxima" when running tests
- to help record and analyse what is…10 votes -
How to be Agile & Lean within an established and larger company.
I'll talk about how you can can focus your product and tech teams to be agile and lean within a larger company, when there are a lot of stakeholders and people involved. Examples of how to launch a new business or product - specifically, researching, customer interviews, prototyping, and knowing when to move forward or when to change directions.
25 votes -
Introducing Unassumer to test core business assumptions
The current iteration of Unassumer creates a survey to test your assumptions regarding who your customer is, what problems they want solved, and what solutions appeal to them. I'll show the product and would like to discuss where to take it.
3 votes -
Cohort Analysis - how to do it in practice with Google Analytics (Barcelona)
The aim is to continue Dan Hill thoughts from LeanCamp London:
"Cohort analysis is a powerful tool to understand your customers and ensure the product decisions you're making are actually creating a better service for your users. How being better should come before, and ultimately leads faster to, being bigger.
We'll look at what a cohort analysis is, how to use one in your startup or company, and how you can get started quickly with tools you're already using. Let me know if you have any thoughts or ideas for focus!"
14 votes -
Innovation Accounting: The Lean Startup's Competitive Advantage
How Innovation Accounting helps in the Competitive Advantage of a Lean Startup by enabling a Fast Learning Environment:
I) Concept, Design & Development of a MVP Minimum Viable Product
II) Micro changes into the MVP from baseline to ideal
III) Pivot or Persevere in a fast learning environment26 votes -
Kanban primer - designing your Scrumban board
Seems like the Kanban session is proposed for London - so let's make a similar one in Barcelona! The idea is to share different approaches when designing your first kanban-scrumban board for your team. I will introduce our Scrumban approach, which I must say is quite popular (see http://www.slideshare.net/proyectalis/110506-scrumban-xp2011), but I want to see and shareLean Startup oriented Stuff!! ;)
23 votes -
6 votes
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