Chapter 3: Customer Discovery | 27
Chapter 3
Customer Discovery
A journey of a thousand miles begins with a single step.
— Lao-tzu
In 1994, Steve Powell had an idea for a new type of home office device. Capitalizing on the new high-
speed phone connection called ISDN, Steve envisioned creating the Swiss Army knife of home office
devices. His box would offer fax, voicemail, intelligent call forwarding, email, video and phone all
rolled into one. Initially Steve envisioned that the market for his device would be the 11 million
people with small offices or home offices (the SOHO market).
Steve’s technical vision was compelling, and he raised $3 million in his first round of funding for
his company, FastOffice. Like most technology startups, FastOffice was first headed by its creator,
even though Steve was an engineer by training. A year after he got his first round of funding, he
raised another $5 million at a higher valuation. In good Silicon Valley tradition, his team followed
the canonical product development diagram, and in eighteen months he had first customer ship of
his product called Front Desk. There was just one small problem. Front Desk cost $1395, and at that
price, customers were not exactly lining up at FastOffice’s door. Steve’s board had assumed that like
all technology startups, first customer ship meant FastOffice was going to ramp up sales revenues
the day the product was available. Six months after first customer ship, the company had missed its
revenue plan and the investors were unhappy.
It was at about this time that I met Steve and his management team. His venture firm asked me
to come by and help Steve with his “positioning.” (Today when I hear that request I realize it’s code
for “The product is shipping, but we’re not selling any. Got any ideas?”) When I got a demo of Front
Desk, my reaction was, “Wow, that’s really an innovative device. I’d love to have one at home. How
much is it?” When Steve told me it was $1400, my response was, “Gosh, I wouldn’t buy one, but can I
be a beta site?” I still remember Steve’s heated reply: “That’s the reaction everyone has. What’s
wrong? Why wouldn’t you buy one?” The stark reality was that FastOffice had built a Rolls Royce for
people with Volkswagen budgets. Few—unfortunately, very few—small home businesses could afford
it.
Steve and his team made one of the standard startup mistakes. They had developed a great
product, but they had neglected to spend an equivalent amount of time developing the
market. The
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