Here's the May, 2014 article about Venture College entrepreneur Kelli Soll, and her business Global Service Partnerships
Not everyone wants to start and build a business with
investors, high growth and an exit. Some prefer to simply work for
themselves. We call these
businesses Main Street or Lifestyle businesses. Lean startup principles apply to starting a Main Street
business as well as to scalable businesses attractive to angel investors.
Venture College entrepreneur Kelli Soll, a partner in Global
Service Partnerships (GSP) is an example of the application of lean startup
principles to a Main Street business. Kelli and her partner had a vision that
they could somehow create a business in Idaho that would deliver value to
people here and at the same time attack a literacy problem in Belize. They wanted to create a profit making
social venture that would enable them to earn a living while impacting this
social problem in Belize. How do
you do that?
They began by proposing service learning trips to high
school students. Kelli interviewed
90 high school students and educators.
She learned they would love to go to Belize, but there was a
problem. High school students
don’t have the money to go. So she had to pivot. That is she had to find a customer for whom such a trip
would provide value and who could and would pay.
She spent 50 hours talking with parents. She learned they
might be willing to pay to send their children to Belize, but only if she could
assure the parents their children would be safe. Pivot number two.
She needed to redefine her relationship with her customers. This wasn’t
just a commercial transaction; she needed to develop a very personal
relationship with her customers to gain their confidence.
Armed with this information, Kelli developed a “minimum
viable product” or an MVP. An MVP
has just enough features to see if the customer will in fact pay. She spent $20 to print brochures. Note, this was her first cash
investment. She invited those she
had previously interviewed to meetings where she gave them her flyer that said
she would be taking people to Belize in March 2014 and the fee would be
$3000. Fifteen grandparents,
parents, senior citizens and four teenagers signed up to go. Wow! That was $45,000 of presold
revenue. Kelli’s total investment
to date, other than her time, had been $20.
Based upon this assurance that she had paying customers,
Kelli then (and only then) went to Belize to set up the partners and activities
such a trip requires. The end of
the story is the trip happened, Belizean children’s lives were changed, and
fifteen Americans had an amazing experience. Kelli has now presold two more trips. That will result in a total of $135,000
of revenue in her six months of operations. You can learn more about GSP at www.globalservicepartners.org.
The lesson is that she did not first make a significant
investment and build a product.
She talked with potential customers and kept talking and changing her
plan until she nailed down the customer segment, the
value she would create, and a revenue stream. Only then did she begin spending money on her product—the
opposite of most entrepreneurs.
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