Customer Development: Innovation Focused on the Customer

How the Customer Development methodology guides the development of solutions aligned with market needs and supported by a viable business model.


October 4, 2024 - Author: Tainara Costa / Co-author: Lucas Fernando


The Customer Development methodology, developed by Steve Blank in the 1990s, is an essential tool for companies that aim to build solutions aligned with customer needs in a secure and scalable way. It helps mitigate the risks associated with the market to which the opportunity is directed. When the company focuses its efforts on understanding its customers and the market it serves — or wishes to serve — the chances of success and acceptance of a new solution increase. The premise of the methodology is that the goal is not simply to develop a product or service, but rather to create a solution that meets a customer’s needs. Therefore, the focus is not on the solution itself and its technologies, but on the problem it solves in context, especially when a relevant group of people is willing to pay to have their problems solved.

Customer Development is composed of four stages: Customer Discovery, Customer Validation, Customer Creation, and Company Building. Each stage plays a crucial role in the evolution of a successful business in terms of perceived value and financial sustainability.


Stage 1: Customer Discovery


The first step is to achieve product-solution fit and ensure that the company is on the right path to solving a relevant market pain. This phase involves identifying who the people facing the problem are and understanding the context in which it occurs. Additionally, it is important to assess whether there is a relevant market to justify the investment in the proposed solution.


To validate whether a solution effectively meets customer needs, the company must develop a Minimum Viable Product (MVP) — a simplified version of a solution, with its essential functionalities, designed to obtain feedback from real customers. This allows learning from users, adjusting the product features, and improving the initial value proposition, reducing risks, saving time, and resources.


Resources such as interviews, surveys, and support and service requests analysis are tools that can contribute to this phase. They help build and test initial hypotheses, identifying whether the value offered by the solution is truly capable of meeting customer needs in their journeys and effectively solving their problems.


Stage 2: Customer Validation


The next step is to test how the product behaves in relation to the needs and desires of the specific market. It is important to verify whether people are actively seeking a solution to the problem the product or service intends to solve, whether it is attractive and competitive compared to competitors, and whether there is a growing and sustainable demand for this potential solution.


In other words, the Product-Market Fit (PMF). Although there is no single metric that determines PMF for a solution in a market context, there are indicators that can be used as references for this purpose:


  • The 40% Rule, created by Sean Ellis: For a new business to be on the right track, it should have an annual revenue growth of 40% to achieve significant success.
  • Sales Learning Curve, by Mark Leslie: Describes the process a company goes through to learn how to sell its solution efficiently and the time required to optimize sales. As the company accumulates experience and adjusts its approach, sales should become more predictable and scalable.
  • The 30-day test, developed by Douglas Leone: A strategy to validate customer interest after a 30-day period of using the product for free. It also serves to collect valuable feedback on whether people are willing to pay for it after the trial period.


This concept must be tested and evaluated based on a business model, allowing companies to visualize, analyze, adjust, and refine the key elements of the business. It connects, integrates, and aligns the most relevant components, enabling the most efficient way to connect the solution with the market through a viable, scalable, and replicable business structure.


It is between the Customer Discovery and Customer Validation stages that businesses typically “pivot,” that is, make strategic and significant changes to the business model, product, or communication based on validated feedback and learnings. These adjustments allow the creation of consistent business models that are more competitive and, consequently, have higher chances of long-term success.


Stage 3: Customer Creation


With the product validated, the demand creation and customer attraction phase come into play. The focus is on implementing marketing and sales strategies that promote the product, allowing it to reach a larger audience. Tools like metrics analysis, customer relationship management (CRM), and market testing are essential for ensuring success in this phase.


The creation of a clear value proposition and the definition of a go-to-market strategy ensure that the product is perceived as the ideal solution to the customer’s problems.


Stage 4: Company Building


The fourth and final stage, Company Building, marks the moment when the company, after validating its business model and building a solid customer base, prepares to scale sustainably. In this stage, the company consolidates its structure, expands its operations, strengthens its culture and values, and develops efficient management with processes capable of sustaining long-term growth. At this point, it may be necessary to formalize certain practices, such as regulatory adjustments, hiring new talent, and obtaining specific licenses. It is also important to standardize processes and invest in technologies to optimize and automate operational tasks, while the team is continuously trained to support growth without losing agility and quality. During growth, it is crucial to adjust production and logistics capacity to meet increasing demand, in addition to establishing strategic partnerships and business alliances that strengthen the company.


The company also begins to invest in technologies to reduce production and distribution costs while aiming to optimize its revenue streams and improve operational efficiency. At this stage, the company begins to adopt more structured characteristics, typical of established businesses, and bureaucracy inevitably becomes part of the process. However, to keep innovation as a strategic pillar, many companies create dedicated areas for Research & Development (R&D) and innovation, allowing new opportunities to be identified and tested more quickly. When these opportunities prove promising, spin-offs — new products or companies derived from the main business — may emerge. These spin-offs restart the Customer Development cycle, now with the financial backing of the parent company, sustaining and enabling continuous innovation.


Conclusion


The Customer Development methodology provides a structured path for developing market-oriented solutions, placing the customer at the center of every decision. By adopting this method, companies can mitigate risks, validate hypotheses, and align the product with the real needs of their consumers, maximizing the chances of success. Divided into four stages — Customer Discovery, Customer Validation, Customer Creation, and Company Building — the methodology guides from identifying the customer's problem to creating a solid customer base, up to the scalability of operations.


By balancing innovation with the sustainability of a viable business model, Customer Development fosters not only company growth but also continuous adaptation to market changes. Through tools like MVPs, feedback metrics, and validated marketing strategies, the company can adapt to grow in a planned way and, when necessary, "change course" to ensure competitiveness. In the final stage, scalability and strengthening organizational culture consolidate the company's structure to support robust and innovative growth.


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