The Startup Report Getting The Value Equation Right
The Startup Report Getting The Value Equation Right
The Startup Report Getting The Value Equation Right
Equation Right
With Bryan Franklin & Jennifer Russell
California Leadership 2013 2013 California Leadership
managing so many variables, its not clear what you can do to make that happen. If youve already established a predictable and reliable method of generating leads, converting those leads to customers and then fulfilling on the promises you make, you are reallyin the Sustainable Phase and not the Startup phase. Look for the Sustainability report, Creating a marketing crank.
*Small Business Association, 2013
Its like quora.com for plumbers but with ubers business model (this isnt even an offer what the heck is the customer getting?) Write down your offer. Then read it back and compare it to the examples of wellformed offers and poorly formed offers. Which group does it most closely resemble? Keep narrowing it down until it sounds and feels just like the other well-formed offers. Once youve settled on the promise and the process youre offering, you can start to find out how customers value what youve got and how much it will cost you to provide it. Now youre on a scavenger hunt, looking for all the different people who want to take advantage of your offer, or ways that you could make good on the promise, and all the different ways you could deliver it. Fig. A Look For The Overlap
In each circle, there are things that do not overlap with the others. Customers are willing to pay for parking tickets even though they dont want them. You can afford to offer a small bag of rocks to your customers, but they dont want to pay for that and they dont want it either. There is also a world of things that customers want that they are not willing to pay for. Most people want a full-time gourmet chef, but less than .01% of the people are willing to pay for it. Most people want to fly private jets
California Leadership 2013
rather than commercial. Most men want a movie theater in their home. Most women want a 1000 sq ft shoe closet. But again, very very few are willing to pay for them. Even many of those who could technically afford these things are unwilling to justify their costs. Based on this, it is not enough to ask a potential customer if they want what you have to offer. You also have to know if they value it enough to buy.
values your offer. Talk to people who are qualified to be your customer and explain your offer to them. Then ask them these questions:
1. 2. 3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
Whats the main value you expect to get from my offer? What price would you not pay for this offer because its too high? What is the lowest price at which you would still rather keep your money than get the benefit of the promise? What would you expect to pay another company for a similar offer? Would you expect to pay more than that or less than that to me in exchange for my offer? (And why?) What is the highest price at which buying this offer would occur to you as a no brainer? What are some ways I could change my offer to make its value to you more tangible?
This can be a sobering conversation or an enlightening one, or both. We recommend talking to at least 10 customers and recording the conversation. The exact words the customer uses to talk about their situation are valuable for marketing and copywriting key words and phrases, and you often will hear important things when you play back the recording that you may have missed in the moment. Once youve interviewed 10 people who are qualified to be your customer about what dollar figure they attatch to the kind of promise and process you plan to offer, you will begin to see a patternfrom different people saying the same kinds of numbers. The VALUE variable in the value equation is the average of the answers to question number 3. The PRICE variable in the value equation is somewhere between the average answer to question number 4 and question number 6.
the VALUE, the more options you have on the COST side and the more freedom you have to charge higher PRICES. During your 10 interviews, youll notice that changing something about the Process often dramatically changes the perception of VALUE, even though the promise hasnt changed. Thats because customers automatically build in risk (or their assumptions about the chances of success) into their own sense of value. For example, which is more valuable, $100 cash or a lottery ticket with a chance to win $100,000,000? You chose the cash (hopefully!) because you are automatically building into your assumption the fact that the lottery ticket isnt very likely to provide those winnings. Your customers do the same thing when they consider your offer which is whyit is that they value the same offer from different companies and entrepreneurs so differently. Think about how your customers view the chance of success with your product or service. What are the things that you could do to change your promise or process that would lower the risk of failure and increase the chance of success, in the customers mind, before they purchase? Those ideas are going to help you solve your value equation.
Higher Value
Discount Expenses
Fashionable
Lower Value
Save Time
Mental Models
Clever
Lowest Value
Do-It-Yourself
Handle Necessites
Information
Functional
are variable, because they go up when you have more customers. Some businesses, like coaching, have no direct costs at all. Allocated Costs expenses that are related to your business but arent direct. Overhead expenses such as your accountant, equipment leases, and printer paper are often allocated costs. As the name suggests, in order to figure out how much it costs you to provide your service, you have to allocate some portion of those costs to each customer. This can be a bit tricky, especially at the beginning, because its hard to know how many customers you are going to have. If a software company spends $25 million developing its software, and expects to have 25 million customers, then it can allocate $1 per customer in Allocated Costs. But if they guess wrong and end up with only 100,000 customers, suddenly they have $250 in allocated cost per customer, which is deadly when you were counting on only $1. In the beginning, assume a 50% utilization rate and calculate your allocated costs based on that assumption. If you are a massage therapist, the maximium number of clients you can take is likely 3-4 massages per day, 5 days a week: 20 massages. per week. That would be 100% utilization. 50% utilization would be half of that, or 10 massages per week. Now, you can add up all your allocated expenses for the year, say $10,000. If you work 40 weeks per year, thats 400 massages. $10,000 per year divided by 400 massages is $25. That means you have $25 per massage in Allocated Costs. Heres the formula one more time: Total Yearly Allocated Costs / (Max Per Week x 50% ) x Work Weeks Now you have Direct Costs and Allocated Costs, but there is a third category of costs which is the most important and the most often overlooked. In fact, it is this third category of costs that is most often responsible for the faiure of a business.
max utilization is 10 websites per month, then half of that is 5 websites per month, or 60 websites per year. $90,000 to $150,000 devided by 60 websites is $1,500 to $2,500. That means your hidden costs are between $1,500 and $2,500. Add that to your direct and allocated costs and you get $3,600 to $4,600 per website total cost. If you can charge at lest $4,600 or more per website, then you have found the solution to your value equation. Direct Cost Per Customer + Allocated Cost (Total Divided By 50% of Max Utilization) + Hidden Costs (Total Divided By 50% of Max Utilization) = Total Costs Sadly, most entrepreneurs dont make this calcluation. It would be an easy mistake to think It costs me $1,800 to get the website done. If I charge $3,000 Im making good money on each one. Thats true until you take into account your hidden costs, and then you realize that in fact you are losing money on each site, not making good money at all. The money you are losing is the difference between the money you can pay yourself and the money youd have to pay someone else to take over. Thats why a bad value equation can trap entrepreneurs in their own businesses. More than likely, the first time you calculate your costs they are going to come out higher than your price. Almost every business in the Startup Phase starts that way. You can temporarily make the business work by taking less money for yourself, but over time that strategy will take its toll on you, and youll start to feel imprisoned by the fact that you never solved your value equation. That means you have to innovate and iterate over time to drive your costs down and the value you are providing up. Thats why the most important focus you can have in a Startup business is understanding the value equation and getting it right.
The further you can pry the two apart, driving value up and costs down, the better business you will create, the more quickly it will grow, and the more value it will generate for customers and the more cash for you.
equation right, but pay more attention to what customers say with their time and money than what they say with their mouths. Your customers spending habits will tell you what they really value and in what proportion. Thats why youre not out of the Startup Phase and into Sustainability until youve not just theorized the solution to your value equation, but youve demonstrated it. How? when you have 10-20 customers who have all bought roughly the same thing from you for roughly the same price, and they are ecstatically happy with the value theyve received from your products and services.