Sandra Arps
Arielle McMahon
A Lean Canvas is a one-page document that captures key information about your future product. The Lean Canvas is frequently used by Entrepreneurs and Lean Startups.
This document will help structure your idea in terms of:
When filling out the Lean Canvas, it is best to fill the sections out in a certain way.
When filling out the problem section think with your future customer in mind. WHY is this a problem for them?
Who are your early adopters of your product, specify them in terms of demographics, situation and interest.
Your UVP is directed to your customer, what makes your product or service so special to them? What is the benefit to them?
It focuses on the key features of your product or service. Ideally, each aspect of the solution comes in line with one of the previously mentioned problems.
How are you planning to promote your product? An example can be via 'word of mouth', colleagues, Instagram or Facebook.
This section is about how you will make money of your product. For example: Freemium - 1st month free then you would charge $2.99 per month.
What are the costs you occur? An example here would be fees for Apple store or Google Pay.
How do you measure your success? For example: Number of paid subscribers like 300 downloads in the first month.
What makes your product unique. Something that cannot be easily copied or bought.
When filling out the canvas, use bullet points. Don't write long sentences. A good canvas should be understood in a few minutes.
Make sure you are filling out every box. There might be a lot of uncertainty but the canvas is there to help you and to structure your idea.
The Lean Canvas was created by Ash Maurya and based on the Business Model Canvas by Alexander Osterwalder. It aims to shorten the product development lifecycle and rapidly discover if a product idea is viable.
Lean Canvas Template and Instructions
Jeff Gotheelf created the Lean UX canvas to help organizations practice user-centered design and test hypotheses. Jeff based his work on the Lean Canvas and the Business Model Canvas.
Arielle McMahon created the UX Strategy Guide to help product teams vet ideas for new products and features. This guide is inspired by the Lean UX Canvas and Jim Kalbach’s UX Strategy Blueprint.
The UX Strategy Guide provides a 12-step list of requirements, including metrics of success, risk assumptions, market research and more. Teams can follow the guide to validate product decisions with the right research and set their products up for success.
Arielle McMahon has kindly contributed this guide to the Open Practice Library.
The business model canvas is a variation that focuses on the development of new, improving existing or understanding the current business model. In a time where existing business models are disrupted this is a vital exercise. It adds the dimension of Key Partners, Key Activities, Customer Relationships, Customer Segments to the canvas.
Check out these great links which can help you dive a little deeper into running the Lean Canvas practice with your team, customers or stakeholders.