255 Épisodes

  1. How to Flip the Script, Beat China and Russia – And Fix the Broken Department of Defense

    Publié: 10/12/2024
  2. Quantum Computing – An Update

    Publié: 23/10/2024
  3. How Saboteurs Threaten Innovation–and What to Do About It

    Publié: 11/10/2024
  4. What Does Product Market Fit Sound Like? This.

    Publié: 08/10/2024
  5. How To Find Your Customer In the Dept of Defense – The Directory of DoD Program Executive Offices

    Publié: 19/09/2024
  6. Security Clearances at the Speed of Startups

    Publié: 15/08/2024
  7. Why Large Organizations Struggle With Disruption, and What to Do About It

    Publié: 13/08/2024
  8. Lean LaunchPad @Stanford 2024 – 8 Teams In, 8 Companies Out

    Publié: 02/07/2024
  9. Hacking for Defense @ Stanford 2024 – Lessons Learned Presentations

    Publié: 26/06/2024
  10. Gordon Bell R.I.P.

    Publié: 29/05/2024
  11. Secret History – When Kodak Went to War with Polaroid

    Publié: 19/05/2024
  12. The Secret History of Polaroid CEO Edwin Land

    Publié: 18/05/2024
  13. Founders Need to Be Ruthless When Chasing Deals

    Publié: 17/04/2024
  14. Is a $100 Million Enough?

    Publié: 05/03/2024
  15. Apple Vision Pro – Tech in the Search of a Market

    Publié: 24/02/2024
  16. Technology, Innovation, and Great Power Competition – 2023 Wrap Up

    Publié: 09/02/2024
  17. The Secret History of Minnesota Part 1: Engineering Research Associates

    Publié: 17/01/2024
  18. The Department of Defense Is Getting Its Innovation Act Together – But More Can Be Done

    Publié: 17/01/2024
  19. Even the Smartest VCs Sometimes Get it Wrong – Bill Gurley and Regulated Markets

    Publié: 09/11/2023
  20. Leaving Government for the Private Sector – Part 2

    Publié: 30/10/2023

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Steve Blank, eight-time entrepreneur and now a business school professor at Stanford, Columbia and Berkeley, shares his hard-won wisdom as he pioneers entrepreneurship as a management science, combining Customer Development, Business Model Design and Agile Development. The conclusion? Startups are simply not small versions of large companies! Startups are actually temporary organizations designed to search for a scalable and repeatable business model.

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