Hey Reader,
As a founder, never lose sight of what you’re here to do. Strip everything back to that one critical feature your app or service must-execute flawlessly aka the job to be done. Then, reverse-engineer the path to achieving it, pinpointing the must-haves to make it happen. (π Tweet)
TLDR; Nail down what must go right and consider the flip side. What if it doesn’t? Then align it with the market. That’s your SWOT analysis without the jargon.
STARTUP FRAMEWORK DOWNLOADS:
1.2 Why Does My StartUp Exist: Problem Validation
β1.3 Does The Market Care: Problem Impact Analysis
β1.4 Investor Update Template: You Are Your First Investor
β1.5 StartUp Value Chain: Where Do You Fit In
LETS GET INTO IT:
Iterating mid-development isnβt agile; itβs expensive. Agility comes from deep dives into your concept before any code comes to life. Each thought, each ‘what if’ is a free iteration, saving you from costly pivots later on.
It’s those images of founding teams relentlessly mapping everything out on whiteboards and post-its, through dissent, ideation, and the hopeful breakthrough into unexpected gold.
Most first time founders race into engineering without a clear picture, iterating mid-build, and without even realizing, becoming a feature factory. Building more stuff no one asked for, convinced ‘this one feature’ is going to change everything.
This week we lightly introduce the SWOT analysis. More than a McKinsey buzzword; It’s your initial 360 battlefield assessment, likely the first time you’re putting it down on paper.
Think of this workbook as a series of questions that it’s only reasonable for you to have answers to…
Every Question, A Decision Point: Remember, at some stage, “What’s our SWOT?” becomes “What’s our move?” Each question you tackle now helps define your trajectory.
Don’t wait until ‘later’ as that quickly becomes ‘if only’. Every founder wishes they’d asked these questions sooner. Your next iteration, aha moment, or new insight, is just a question away.
The goal of this module, is just to introduce a framework, without all the fluff, to ask you to answer some very reasonable questions and then translate that into a business framework you can look at with honest eyes. It’s just a first draft.
As always, you are welcome to grab time with me. Good luck.
— James
β