Writing for the Harvard Business Review, entrepreneur Scott Anthony offers Nine Ways to Test an Entrepreneurial Idea. I like his list. Some are obvious, and some are surprising, all are useful. 
Here are my five favorites. This is all quoted directly from the original, but I’ve cut down the explanations.
- Talk to a prospective customer to get their perspective. Remember, that is likely to be different from your perspective.
- Research an analogy.Who did something similar? What can you find out about how well that worked from public sources? Remember, a failure doesn’t mean you shouldn’t do it, if you can understand why the failure happened.
- Visualize it.What would the thing look like? Create a sketch or mockup to bring the idea to life. For example, consider a six-panel storyboard (like a cartoon) that describes how people find out about, obtain, and then use your product or service.
- Conduct a broader assumption identification exercise. That sounds like a mouthful, but this is really nothing more than asking yourself "what would need to be true" for this idea to be viable. Which of those assumptions makes you worried?
- Spend an hour conducting a past pattern exercise. That is, look back at things you have done that have worked, and things that haven’t worked. What separates them?
I recommend reading all nine points in the original.
(Image: snail_race/Flickr cc)
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Dear Tim,
This post was copied to my cousins Facebook wall so naturally I was curious. After reading through the 5 tips it inspired me to write my own article titled 5 (somewhat sarcastic) Truths About Entrepreneurship. I just published it to our corporate website http://www.mediasharkllc.com/blog Thanks for the inspiration and feel free to share your comments. I hope it gives you a chuckle.
Joel,
I completely agree with all of your points. The 5th point “You will be thought an idiot until you start making money,” really struck home with me. Even beyond being thought of an idiot, once you start making money every person who dismissed your idea will be your best friend.
I think one of the biggest tests of an entrepreneur is whether he or she gets sucked in by the people who come out of the woodwork to celebrate the entrepreneur’s success, but were nowhere to be found when the risk and work were being doled out.
Thanks for the response. I subscribed to MediaShark’s blog and I’ll be reading along.
Kai
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