255 Episodes

  1. How To Think Like an Entrepreneur: the Inventure Cycle

    Published: 12/09/2014
  2. Why Founders Should Know How to Code

    Published: 05/09/2014
  3. Pioneering Women in Venture Capital: Kathryn Gould

    Published: 09/08/2014
  4. Driving Corporate Innovation: Design Thinking vs. Customer Development

    Published: 05/08/2014
  5. Getting Lean in Education – By Getting Out of the Classroom

    Published: 30/07/2014
  6. The Path of Our Lives

    Published: 10/07/2014
  7. How Investors Make Better Decisions: The Investment Readiness Level

    Published: 03/07/2014
  8. I-Corps @ NIH – Pivoting the Curriculum

    Published: 28/06/2014
  9. Why Lean May Save Your Life – The I-Corps @ NIH

    Published: 21/06/2014
  10. Hostages Strapped to the Tank: Coastal Commission Stories – Lesson 2

    Published: 19/06/2014
  11. Farming for Developers: Coastal Commission Stories – Lesson 1

    Published: 12/06/2014
  12. Three Things I Learned on Commencement Day

    Published: 31/05/2014
  13. Innovating Municipal Government Culture

    Published: 29/04/2014
  14. New Lessons Learned from Berkeley & Stanford Lean LaunchPad Classes

    Published: 28/04/2014
  15. Corporate Acquisitions of Startups: Why Do They Fail?

    Published: 24/04/2014
  16. If I Told You I’d Have to Kill You: The Story Behind “The Secret History of Silicon Valley”

    Published: 31/03/2014
  17. SuperMac War Story 4: Repositioning SuperMac – “Market Type” at Work

    Published: 31/03/2014
  18. SuperMac War Story 3: Customer Insight Is Everyone’s Job

    Published: 29/03/2014
  19. SuperMac War Story 2: Facts Exist Outside the Building, Opinions Reside Within

    Published: 26/03/2014
  20. Why Internal Ventures are Different from External Startups

    Published: 26/03/2014

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Steve Blank, eight-time entrepreneur and now a business school professor at Stanford, Columbia and Berkeley, shares his hard-won wisdom as he pioneers entrepreneurship as a management science, combining Customer Development, Business Model Design and Agile Development. The conclusion? Startups are simply not small versions of large companies! Startups are actually temporary organizations designed to search for a scalable and repeatable business model.

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