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validated inaveryearly stage.Buildingon theseearly successesandconfident from
the earlymarket feedback,David andEric started the business towork on adigital
marketplace for long-stay apartment bookings. After finalizing the first version of
the platform, Acomodeo had to learn that the market is much harder to acquire
compared to the times of sporting events. Their first version of the platformwas
serving at individual business travelers to book long-stay apartments directlywith
them.However, business travelers in this category are bound to corporate business
travel policies most of the time and could not just book their apartment with
Acomodeo. In fact, their users of theproductwerebusiness travelers.However, the
buyerwas the corporate travelmanager that they had to servefirst. This is a great
lesson on product-market fit and the importance of understanding customer seg-
ments from a user and buyer perspective. Product-market fit is also a lot about
understanding thebuyer and theuser (which is not always the same). Fast forward,
David and Eric pivoted the platform to serve the needs of the corporate business
travel manager and included the features they needed to approve Acomodeo as a
platform for corporate travelers.
4 Practical Implications forDigital Entrepreneurs
In the previous thoughts,we have seen thatmanydigital startups leverage the lean
startup approach but have challenges in applying it to their own journey. Our
presented thoughts on the venture pyramid andMVPs for digital businessmodels
are aiming at structuring the search process for an attractive businessmodel. This
approach is designed to reduce uncertainty (not to eliminate it) and to provide
guidance on the challenging journey. The different types of MVPs shall inspire
startups to identify awayof testing andvalidating their business idea in the search
process to an attractive business model. We understand the startup process as
two-fold.While a startup searches for a repeatable and scalable businessmodel, it
also needs to achieve operational excellence in team structuring, management,
accounting, sales, and soon.Additionally, realitywill alwaysbring surprises along
the way.We have seen great business models that work out extremely well, but
then within weeks, one of the key partners goes bankrupt and nothing seems to
workanymore.Wehavenot covered this in this chapter, but it shouldbewithin the
radiusof awarenessof everyentrepreneur, and it stresses theurge to regularlywork
and update the businessmodel.
We furthermore believe that every entrepreneurial discovery process is only as
goodas thewillingnessof theentrepreneurs to learn, adapt, andchallenge theirown
thoughts and ideas.Or simply put, the success of a venture lies in the execution of
the idea rather than in themethodology itself. Every entrepreneur needs to decide
individuallyhow theywant tobuild their business andwhat tools touse at the right
time.As a general take away,we recommend embracing iterative validation based
on hypotheses, a mindset to test, and a divergent and convergent thinking
processes.
BusinessModel Development and Validation… 83
Digital Entrepreneurship
Impact on Business and Society
- Title
- Digital Entrepreneurship
- Subtitle
- Impact on Business and Society
- Authors
- Mariusz Soltanifar
- Mathew Hughes
- Lutz Göcke
- Publisher
- Springer Verlag
- Location
- Cham
- Date
- 2021
- Language
- English
- License
- CC BY 4.0
- ISBN
- 978-3-030-53914-6
- Size
- 16.0 x 24.0 cm
- Pages
- 340
- Keywords
- Entrepreneurship, IT in Business, Innovation/Technology Management, Business and Management, Open Access, Digital transformation and entrepreneurship, ICT based business models
- Category
- International