Welcome

Hi, my name is Kyle Seaman.  I'm a founder at HighScore House and former b-schooler in Montreal, originally from PEI, figuring out these interwebs while making it even more awesome to be a kid. Thanks for visiting.

 

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Thursday
May052011

Facing User Reality Sucks

I think this is one of those things you can't really understand until you're in the middle of it. One of the classic points of advice is to be embarrassed and release early, and release often

The problem is, when it comes time to finally show what you've built to solve problem x to the world (best solution ever, in your mind), it's so tempting to delay. It's easy to find a laundry list of things that need to be fixed before your product is pushed to face reality.

As long as you don't release and keep building, you don't have to face reality. You can continue to believe you will have 100% conversion and 100% love. The longer you can stave off reality, the more confident you can make yourself feel. It's not until you push the release/invite button that reality strikes and you see your 6% conversion, with 2% providing feedback and 98% not saying a word or using the service.

We recenlty found plenty of reasons not to push HighScore House out to more parents, who were waiting to try it. We eventually realized the reasons sucked, and we did push it. We then saw how few actually converted to users. From the release though, we did find key early adopters who will help drive the product forward and we now know the work required in getting to our first 100 users.

Reality sucks, but it isn't until you face it that you can measure, learn and build.  If it's a truly useful idea, your product will survive the "reality test,"  If the idea sucks, well, better to face reality sooner rather than later. 

Click to read more ...

Thursday
Mar102011

The Struggle in Finding An Addressable Problem - Lean Startups

The lean startup methodology really turns business creation upside down by focusing on a market before an actual product idea. Theo and I have been following the lean startup methodology with Ncentiv.  We knew that the parenting market was changing dramatically, where kids were becoming attached to technology in ways parents and teachers wouldn’t understand.  The question was, what was the minimal addressable problem that would double as validation of a larger addressable opportunity.

By starting with a market and focusing on data/interviews to find an addressable problem, rather than building software from day one, we encountered problems I would never have predicted.  For the last month we haven’t written a line of code and have instead spent our time talking to as many parents/teacher/psychiatrists that would give us their time.

Hitting the Walls

The first wall we hit during the process was in week two.  We looked at what we had accomplished to date and where we had to go.  Unlike coding software, the data collection process doesn’t have tangible metrics to measure productivity -- it’s actually a really vague process.  And no two companies will go through it the same way.  It felt like we hadn’t made any progress.  How do you properly measure learning and insight?   We’re lucky to have a great set of advisors who continued to tell us to focus and to refine our problem/solution pitch.  We kept asking ourselves though, how can we possibly cut off 99% of the market and focus on that 1% problem/solution fit? 

This led to the second wall, which we hit during week three and four.  The more we narrowed our focus the less motivated we became.  We went from looking at a massive addressable market to a subset of people and a minimal product offering.  This quickly became our biggest challenge. 

We struggled to stay in love with the market the more we narrowed our MVP feature set and target market.  We got stuck going in circles for about a week.  On one hand we were lucky that we picked a huge market and that we had an incredible group of parents who were more then willing to spend an hour talking with us about anything we wanted to know.  On the other hand, we had to segment them and ignore the obvious opportunities they were telling us about.  

What made it even worse was that as we narrowed our description, it was continually met with positive feedback from each segment.  And we knew, from a technical standpoint, that there was little to no difference in the offering from one segment to another. So why cut anyone out?

Finally, six weeks in, it is much clearer.  Focusing, as difficult as it was, was necessary given the reality that we were two people trying to help the same group of people as Disney and Johnson & Johnson.  Something changed for us last Monday.  It was wake up call that came in the combination of being called out by our advisors and by other pieces suddenly clicking together.  We were able to define a set of goals for the week, which we met and soon surpassed.  Finally, laser focusing made it possible to stop getting pulled between opportunities and to put all of our effort into proving our current set of assumptions.

The take away.

As we look back on the struggle to find an addressable problem while still staying motivated, we realized a few steps we should have considered. 

  • Write everything down.  This is one the best ways to drastically narrow your scope, it’s easy to list four or five options but having to pick just one and describe it fully really focuses things.   
  • Pitching everyday.  Just like writing everything down, when you force yourself to articulate what you're doing (even if you have no idea or even if it’s going in the wrong direction) it helps you to iterate much faster.  You can kill an idea effectively when you’re actually able to explain it to someone and witness their reaction.  People tend to love your idea when it’s vague, as they develop their own picture of what it will really be.  -- What we found to really work well was building a baseline pitch deck and iterating on it every day based on what we had learned.  By taking the last 30 minutes of the day to review it, our focus and message became clearer. 
  • Balancing macro and micro visions.  This idea is practiced in buddhism and game design and it’s a real art.  Being able to hyper focus on just the tip of the iceberg while staying focused on the entire iceberg is tough.  It takes practice and discipline but it is crucial.  Doing it properly allows you to see how your MVP will actually lead to the bigger vision. 
  • Take all the “ands” out.  This was a trick we learned late, but it’s a great way to get to the crucial part of the problem solution.  Instead of saying:  We help parents to fix the problems in their child's daily routine and to encourage them to try new things.  Say: We help parents to fix the problems in their child's daily routine.  Even the second one seems too big, so to take it one step further.  Say:  We help parents to fix the one or two main problems in their child's daily routine. 

We failed to do all of the above, and I can’t say for sure, but I really feel it would have helped keep the vague process slightly more structured.  If nothing else, I’m sure we would have saved a week or two of wandering.

No one said the Lean Startup methodology was easy.  Like any good exercise, it takes real discipline.  It’s tough to not start writing code after your first positive interview.  It’s also tough to know you’ll likely throw away weeks of work.  But it’s all part of becoming smarter.  I do feel that we are going into the MVP stage smarter than ever.  As we stay disciplined through our MVP testing, I am confident will be even more savvy, and that we will be in a better position to pivot our product to the best opportunity.  

Next Up

Now we are confident.  Not because we found the best problem/solution mix, but rather because we found one solution that we can quickly test and on which we can iterate.  We will spend the next few weeks building and quickly getting our product into the hands of customers for testing.

 

Tuesday
Feb082011

It's All About the Ups and Downs

The saying goes: the bigger the risk, the bigger the reward.  What this leaves out are the huge failures and mental downs along the way.  The other part that is left out? The frequency of downs.  

This applies across the board, from personal to business decisions.  You have two fundamental choices: play it safe and stay steady or push for something more and ride the waves.

The fool I am, I’ve chosen to go big.  It started with the decision to leave PEI for a much more expensive (and opportunity filled) city along with a more expensive school.  This has paid off already with the amazing Year One Labs opportunity, but has been equally filled with downs.  The downs include less time with family and friends, going  broke frequently, landlord issues and so on.

I’ve learnt a few things to stay sane throughout this process.

 

  1. Focus on the big picture and take a step back.
  2. Remember, it doesn't have to be intense/stressful, but odds are the alternative is going to bore you to death.
  3. Use everything as a learning opportunity, particularly the downs.  All it takes is a few minutes of reflection, and then you should be able to explain the all important why/how.  

 

Learn from this all.  Constantly remind yourself how much smarter and experienced you are. Be grateful that you’re learning from the ups and downs and that in no time these new skills will become second nature.

Wednesday
Jan262011

nCentiv and YearOne Labs

When I made the moved to Montreal three years ago, it was to expose my self to a highly engaged and competitive entrepreneurial culture.  School was a good way into the city.  Since moving here I have met incredible people who are driven to innovate and take the necessary risks.  

I’m excited to announce that I am finally making the jump.  As of today I have stopped school and have joined YearOne Labs.  I will be working with Theo Ephraim to build a next generation product.  Details are still slim, but we are calling it nCentiv for the time being.  

I couldn’t be more excited to be joining YearOne.  The current companies are moving fast and crushing it.  Theo and I are gaining access to an incredible group of advisors and surrounding ourselves with incredibly talented people.  I can’t wait to put all my lean startup reading/theory to practice as we move to find product/market fit. 

The next few months are going to be fast and fun.