First Lesson Taught in Harvard MBA in 18 Minutes | Thales Teixeira

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  • Опубліковано 28 вер 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 295

  • @entreprenuership_opportunities
    @entreprenuership_opportunities  2 місяці тому +9

    Crush-It Conference 2024 | SF | July 18th | Discovering Productivity Tools in AI Era
    Get Your Tickets 🎟 bit.ly/3S0brbE

  • @ShapeshifterOS
    @ShapeshifterOS 2 місяці тому +23

    In simple terms, creating ease of access and providing the path of least resistance to your potential customers.

  • @hashamshafqat
    @hashamshafqat 3 місяці тому +687

    So the summary is, finding problems in any activity that are hard and take time, and then make it easier for customers.

    • @RaviAgarwal-d3j
      @RaviAgarwal-d3j 3 місяці тому +19

      you're forgetting the decoupling part,

    • @fifaham
      @fifaham 2 місяці тому

      @@RaviAgarwal-d3j and the coupling part. Like Uber taking over taxis and providing food delivery.

    • @kebabbert
      @kebabbert 2 місяці тому +6

      Yes, that is basically what he is saying. That is not new?

    • @B.M.Trading
      @B.M.Trading 2 місяці тому +6

      No you forgot to couple and then decouple

    • @pikiwiki
      @pikiwiki 2 місяці тому +1

      thank you, for that

  • @raymobula
    @raymobula 3 місяці тому +65

    Excellent. In Design Thinking we use “the user journey”. Map out a typical task (or have the user map out a typical task), which steps are involved, which are the biggest pain points. Adding a value driven spin to it helps to see where a solution might have the biggest impact, allowing to capture the created value.
    And yes, testing and pivoting is a part of it - you can’t predict the future!

  • @avonzo
    @avonzo 3 місяці тому +13

    Despite what some others say this is a great simplified insight to breaking down further the improbable aspects of an industry. I’m going for this book.

  • @AmiVider
    @AmiVider 3 місяці тому +9

    Excellent simplistic (easy to understand) explanation of what most digital products have done (and are trying to do)

  • @SevenOneTv.
    @SevenOneTv. 3 місяці тому +10

    I still have this man book and just few days ago saw it in my kindle app to re-read it. Gems aplenty

  • @ChamaraPhilips
    @ChamaraPhilips 3 місяці тому +3

    This one really helps a lot for me. Knowing how to do things and knowing why it works are two different things. Thanks a lot for keeping it so compact yet comprehensive.

  • @MerazhileBadshrayets
    @MerazhileBadshrayets 14 днів тому +1

    Great broker choice! I'm here too. Profits were modest at first but now I’m a full-time trader.

  • @CedricCheAzeh
    @CedricCheAzeh 13 днів тому

    Great knowledge from here! I love these business school professors for their ability to decomplexify common strategies used in several businesses which are not documented

  • @SandeepPatel-vd8lb
    @SandeepPatel-vd8lb 3 місяці тому +5

    Great Professor! So much of the knowledge in just one video.

  • @Thesophisticatedinvestor
    @Thesophisticatedinvestor 3 місяці тому +4

    Thank you for this master class! I love and appreciate the science of business. Well done!

  • @pgl99
    @pgl99 26 днів тому +2

    Wait? Ricky Ponting was a professor at Harvard Business School?

  • @ReflectionOcean
    @ReflectionOcean 3 місяці тому +11

    By "YouSum Live"
    00:00:30 Understanding digital disruption and startup success
    00:00:57 Decoupling the customer value chain with Uber
    00:01:58 Importance of customer value chain in disruption
    00:02:52 Identifying weak links for decoupling opportunities
    00:04:26 Types of decoupling activities in various industries
    00:07:16 Investors' preference for value-creating decouplers
    00:07:41 Impact of decoupling on attracting unsatisfied customers
    00:08:01 Coupling: expanding activities post decoupling
    00:08:50 Uncertainty in profitability despite providing value
    00:09:42 Steps in the decoupling process for startups
    00:13:28 Recognizing the weakest link for successful disruption
    00:15:09 Opportunities for decoupling arise from customer dissatisfaction
    00:16:25 Utilizing AI for enhancing customer value through decoupling
    00:18:24 Advice on applying decoupling concepts for business success
    By "YouSum Live"

  • @HealthElites
    @HealthElites Місяць тому

    He has broken down the steps for us nerds

  • @dineshpratapupadhyay6583
    @dineshpratapupadhyay6583 2 місяці тому

    Very well explained, Professor.
    Kudos.
    Thank you.

  • @KippinCollars
    @KippinCollars 2 місяці тому

    The problem with this line of thinking is because anyone can do it, a lot of people end up doing the same thing. You face a lot of competitors and then you end up giving up value to the market to gain market share thereby negating the value capture of your company. This is also about value capture and not value creation. You can capture value from existing competitors, but you're not creating something new, which again means your ceiling becomes limited.

  • @Frank-rk8td
    @Frank-rk8td 21 день тому +1

    Has this guy built a business? Getting a checking account would quickly looking at the top 3 options, deciding, and moving on. You don’t look at every option lol

  • @TrInc-sh3kn
    @TrInc-sh3kn Місяць тому

    This can also be done in a small, niche, local scale as well. Great info and thx! Will start using a microscope to identify the CVC in everything around me, and identify the weak leak (s).

  • @Hank-ry9bz
    @Hank-ry9bz 3 місяці тому +12

    4:11 3 types of Value related stuff: Value ... Creating/Capturing/Eroding

  • @BitAmericas
    @BitAmericas 13 днів тому

    In other words: help the customer even more.

  • @therevivalsoundsproject9418
    @therevivalsoundsproject9418 17 днів тому

    I like it; very informative. Thank you guys

  • @sammylu4702
    @sammylu4702 3 місяці тому

    This man is smart❤

  • @NoFeeRE
    @NoFeeRE 24 дні тому

    Thank you!

  • @saurabhchaudhari5273
    @saurabhchaudhari5273 2 місяці тому

    Thanks you for the insights 😊

  • @jakobkristensen2390
    @jakobkristensen2390 Місяць тому +1

    Decoupling

  • @DanielWieser
    @DanielWieser 2 місяці тому

    When costs and efforts to purchase a certain product or service are rising, this might be an opportunity.

  • @tanglish5858
    @tanglish5858 3 місяці тому

    Lovely and informative video.Great thanks

  • @quynhxuannguyen8735
    @quynhxuannguyen8735 3 місяці тому

    Thank you so much ❤

  • @AnkushGaikawad733
    @AnkushGaikawad733 Місяць тому

    superb awesome information

  • @AUMADOCUS
    @AUMADOCUS 3 місяці тому +1

    Great job

  • @mosannef
    @mosannef 2 місяці тому

    So many thanks

  • @lokeyfunny
    @lokeyfunny 3 місяці тому

    This is an amazing video 👏👏👏

  • @angelotheman
    @angelotheman 3 місяці тому

    Are you guys on masterclass? I would love to take a course on this. It's very useful

  • @matv7469
    @matv7469 2 місяці тому +1

    How many "high growth" startups have you designed?

  • @rodrigodifederico
    @rodrigodifederico 3 місяці тому +2

    I always thought that it was something obvious on a startup founder's mind. I am surprised for learning that this is not the case 😳

  • @GudrunAsha
    @GudrunAsha Місяць тому

    every tip you gave was right on point! thanks a million!

  • @leonlary9542
    @leonlary9542 3 місяці тому +7

    So he is value generating by making this video and then value coupling by shilling his book🤙

  • @justincase4812
    @justincase4812 2 місяці тому

    There is an important piece missing here, which most MBAs are never taught. Business ethics. That is a concept that has been bleached out of western society largely because the ideas in MBAs are insensitive to the side effects of making a buck no matter the societal fallout, issues faced in many developed nations where business is encouraged to run amokx and neglecting ethical conduct, ACTUAL ethical practices.
    MBA programs are disgracefully vacant in these concepts.

  • @gobajoseph5064
    @gobajoseph5064 3 місяці тому +2

    Formidable comment peut-on rentrer en contact avec l'invité

  • @genovo
    @genovo 3 місяці тому +1

    "Just So" . Now memorize. Get MBA

  • @HMJahirulHaque
    @HMJahirulHaque 3 місяці тому

    great

  • @NobodyInTraining
    @NobodyInTraining 2 місяці тому +6

    All of this is navel-gazing for academics. Nobody actually starts a business by thinking like this.

    • @namesdemeanusboth9568
      @namesdemeanusboth9568 2 місяці тому +1

      That’s why so many businesses fail, because they are established mostly by people without systems and knowledge/experience, inability to execute, inability to scale and raise capital, but with what they think is a ‘good idea’ and grinding. This content was genius.

    • @othername2428
      @othername2428 12 годин тому

      Uber did. Google did. Gates did. Jobs & Woz did. Bezos did. Elon did, multiple times. What was your point again?

  • @joristube
    @joristube 3 місяці тому +204

    Sorry, but that was not the history and motivation of Uber. You're rewriting history in order to make your story work. Stick to the facts please.

    • @DerekBodily
      @DerekBodily 3 місяці тому +35

      That definitely wasn’t the initial idea and motivation behind Uber, but it is the problem they eventually solved, so he’s not entirely wrong.

    • @michaelmeon
      @michaelmeon 3 місяці тому +91

      This your comment nearly made me stop watching this wonderful video.
      The Uber example is just one example, and he's not here to talk about history of Uber.
      Hes just talking about the value Uber offers and the problem they solved.
      Please stop spreading bad energy.

    • @yosoys
      @yosoys 3 місяці тому

      👏👏👏

    • @krisg900
      @krisg900 3 місяці тому +3

      Lol sounds like the Quran.

    • @mehmedtiro412
      @mehmedtiro412 3 місяці тому +9

      Oh, you were behind the scenes at Uber? No? Cool.

  • @timlind3129
    @timlind3129 Місяць тому

    Lots of words......

  • @jahangiry
    @jahangiry Місяць тому +3

    bullshido master

    • @othername2428
      @othername2428 12 годин тому

      Totally agree! Btw, how many multi-billion dollar startups have you founded? 😊🙃

  • @PullmanLeopold-f8p
    @PullmanLeopold-f8p 15 днів тому

    Wilson Ronald Rodriguez Donald Harris Lisa

  • @phasematerialsresearch9319
    @phasematerialsresearch9319 3 місяці тому +9

    He looks like Bashar al-Assad 😂

    • @dakalodk
      @dakalodk 3 місяці тому

      Yep. Portuguese looks like Arabic

  • @liyexiang666
    @liyexiang666 2 місяці тому

    oh i can sum up : try to provide better customer experience. which is true, but.... I don't think anyone need to go to Harvard to know that 😂

  • @ac-uk6hs
    @ac-uk6hs 2 місяці тому

    I'm sorry but if you were an academic at Harvard then there's a darn good chance you're a plagiarist So sorry can't trust this article

  • @airbound1779
    @airbound1779 3 місяці тому +4

    Dude isn’t saying anything

  • @hajjimubarak
    @hajjimubarak 2 місяці тому +1

    Isn't this Blue ocean strategy? Bro talking like he invented it

  • @Riddlemethiseveryone
    @Riddlemethiseveryone 3 місяці тому +2

    Lol getting advice from someone who is just a teacher. What has he done?

    • @Thesophisticatedinvestor
      @Thesophisticatedinvestor 3 місяці тому

      This comment says a lot about your literacy. You’ll never get ahead with that mindset.

  • @dabig_guy2204
    @dabig_guy2204 Місяць тому

    How to steal customers from large corps😂

  • @Acbd6443
    @Acbd6443 3 місяці тому +11

    Pay 100,000$ for such universities lol
    Value of HARVARD education = fárt

    • @JeroenErne
      @JeroenErne 3 місяці тому +7

      The value are the connections

    • @fischX
      @fischX 2 місяці тому +2

      ​@@JeroenErneconnections to broke grifters aren't worth that much - there are some "old money" networks in Harvard still, but without old money you will not connect there.

    • @Johnny_Savage
      @Johnny_Savage 2 місяці тому +1

      ​@@JeroenErne that's the biggest myth those institutions perpetuate. elite universities are the worst place to find connections if you don't come from a wealthy family, because wealthy students won't connect with you as they see nothing in return for them to do so

  • @LeMemePage
    @LeMemePage 3 місяці тому +7

    Eh… whole lotta fluff lol

  • @soundsless
    @soundsless 3 місяці тому +189

    Take away:
    Decouple the value chain activities and identify things that make customers unhappy:
    * Expensive activities - make cheaper
    * ⁠Time consuming activities - make faster
    * ⁠Too much effort ( Time to value creation is long ) - make easier

    • @FragranceCraft
      @FragranceCraft 3 місяці тому +8

      Cheaper
      Faster
      Easier
      ...
      Make it more FUN 🎉😂❤

    • @mickmoon6887
      @mickmoon6887 3 місяці тому

      Take solve problems of other people

    • @mrjgilbert
      @mrjgilbert 2 місяці тому +4

      Thanks! Saved me 18 minutes

    • @mikedeharo
      @mikedeharo Місяць тому

      Have connections. Do deeper research and find that most tech success stories had met individuals who helped support their vision early on.

    • @bangmachiv
      @bangmachiv 16 днів тому

      Give example to differentiate between faster and less time to value

  • @VuPham-bq7te
    @VuPham-bq7te 3 місяці тому +260

    The full process for this kind of market analysis is: Choose a big general market you wanna play: Food, Tech, Medicine, Steel, Etc… -> Do the Industry Value chain analysis/ Customer Value Chain analysis to pick a node in that chain for you to jump in. Then do an STP analysis to find the easy-to-join, high growth rate, and profitable to build a business around. Remember to always choose things you have an interest in and know/ have an unfair advantage to do business.

    • @omuani
      @omuani 3 місяці тому +4

      Business is very iterative. It's not rational

    • @VuPham-bq7te
      @VuPham-bq7te 3 місяці тому

      @@omuani Yes. But if you do have a rationale, it would be better. My motto is "wrong plan is better than no plan".

    • @MCLottotv
      @MCLottotv 3 місяці тому +6

      Sounds like gambling to me

    • @VuPham-bq7te
      @VuPham-bq7te 3 місяці тому +9

      @@MCLottotv yeah, gambling all the way. But businesss is less risky and is not a zero sum game.

    • @BlueBearOne
      @BlueBearOne 2 місяці тому +1

      @@MCLottotv Brother. If you dislike risk and are very risk adverse; let me ask you to pause and reconsider how to define risk. Be an entrepreneur and risk losing your investment? Of course, but you only need ONE to really succeed! Work as an employee for a guaranteed paycheck? 100% guaranteed to die broke and under someone else's rules, will, and best interests. 100% guaranteed. What is a bigger risk than that? The few financial upsides of being an employee are mostly gone anyway; no more pensions, no more loyalty, average person moves every 2-3 year to actually improve their salary, and now literally EVERYONE is just a dispensable number NO MATTER WHAT YOU DO FOR THEM. And have they earned a lot of money off the sweat of you brow? At least that will keep you safe, right? No, Sir. It is always, "What have you done for me LATELY."

  • @forplay2706
    @forplay2706 3 місяці тому +8

    😢is this the basic stuff taught at Harvard MBA!
    He’s over complicating a basic thing

  • @moeunvannroth
    @moeunvannroth 3 місяці тому +109

    People complain about his rewriting of Uber's history, but I learned something new about the customer value chain and decoupling.

  • @NanheeByrnesPhD
    @NanheeByrnesPhD 3 місяці тому +64

    As someone who enjoyed reading the late Clayton Christensen's "The Innovator's Dilemma," which I personally view as a Thomas Kuhn's theory of scientific revolution applied to the business world, I am uncertain whether Thales Teixeira's theory is superior, as it seems to contradict Christensen's view. Specifically, Teixeira's point of attempting to decouple and disrupt existing business models could create resistance and be squashed by incumbents, as this upfront attack could face significant opposition.
    I believe that Christensen's stealthy move of serving customers who were ignored by the existing giants is a better approach, as exemplified by Walmart or even Target versus Amazon. By targeting overlooked segments initially, disruptors can gain a foothold before eventually challenging the incumbents, rather than directly confronting their established models from the outset.

    • @scrollblau2262
      @scrollblau2262 3 місяці тому +16

      You make a compelling case for Christensen’s approach in business disruption, particularly noting its effectiveness in allowing new entrants to carve out a niche quietly before taking on industry giants. This strategic subtlety indeed seems less confrontational and perhaps more sustainable in the long run. However, considering the dynamics of modern markets, Teixeira's theory could also have its merits, particularly in industries that are ripe for rapid transformation due to technological advances or shifting consumer expectations.
      To add another dimension to this discussion, let's consider the example of Netflix in the digital streaming industry. Initially, Netflix did not confront traditional giants directly. Instead, they offered a DVD rental service by mail, targeting a niche market of movie enthusiasts who were underserved by the inconvenience of physical rental stores. This approach aligns with Christensen’s strategy of focusing on overlooked segments. Over time, as they established a strong customer base and a robust distribution network, Netflix shifted gears by introducing streaming services. This move, which decouples content consumption from physical and scheduled constraints, embodies Teixeira’s idea of disrupting existing business models. It was a direct challenge to the established practices of cable and rental services, leveraging technological advancements to disrupt the status quo.
      Netflix’s strategy showcases how a company can start with a Christensen-like approach to gain initial traction and then adopt Teixeira’s aggressive disruption tactics as they grow stronger and more capable of handling competitive pressures. This dual strategy allowed Netflix to not only enter the market with minimal resistance but also to redefine it entirely, demonstrating the potential effectiveness of integrating both theories depending on the stage of business development and market conditions.
      Your preference for Christensen’s method is well-justified, especially in industries where a quieter entry might prevent immediate and possibly overwhelming retaliation from incumbents. However, the Netflix example illustrates that there could be strategic value in eventually shifting toward Teixeira’s approach as companies stabilize and look to capitalize on broader systemic inefficiencies. What are your thoughts on the potential for such a phased or hybrid approach in business disruption strategies?

    • @NanheeByrnesPhD
      @NanheeByrnesPhD 3 місяці тому

      @@scrollblau2262 Thank you for the thoughtful comments. I believe we are on the same page, as I also think that starting with a niche market but having the ambition to revolutionize the business world is crucial. Without such ambition, a business would remain a mom-and-pop store. The revolutionary force of Amazon is a perfect example of this.
      Jeff Bezos embodies the philosophy of "think big, but start small." When Bezos quit his Wall Street job to start an internet company nearly three decades ago, envisioning a future where people could buy refrigerators online, many thought he had gone mad. At that time, hardly anyone believed they would buy anything online when they could “easily” do the same at brick-and-mortar stores.
      Despite his dream of revolutionizing the business world, Bezos began Amazon by selling used college books from his proverbial garage, packaging the books himself. I recall him mentioning in an interview that his first business purchase was knee pads because he needed to wrap the books on the floor. Bezos dreamt big but didn't start by attacking the entire market. Instead, he began small, proving his concept step by step.

    • @DanielSolis33
      @DanielSolis33 3 місяці тому +1

      I think he explained what you are talking about when he described the way Uber met the needs of people that could not be served by existing taxi companies.
      Once they had a solid taxi service they then branched out and disrupted other industries.

    • @NanheeByrnesPhD
      @NanheeByrnesPhD 3 місяці тому +3

      @@DanielSolis33 I guess I am turned off by the speaker's apparent assumption that business is a science that can be replicated, when in truth even the best chemistry experiments face replication problems (with many experiments not being replicable, as highlighted by the replication crisis in science). Most startups are constantly pivoting, demonstrating that business success is not algorithmic or easily replicable. As seen in the case of Netflix vs. Blockbuster, which I learned about from the podcast "Business Wars" (not on Netflix), Blockbuster tried to steal Netflix's process and approach but could not copy the soul of Netflix - its software and innovative culture.

    • @dunnybrush
      @dunnybrush 2 місяці тому

      I’m not sure that this is what he’s trying to do. My sense is that he’s attempting curate a theory of disruptive innovation. A value chain perspective allows the student to analyse markets and consumers, to isolate factors that have disruptive potential.
      As theories go, it could provide explanatory potential, reproducibility, generalisability and maybe prediction.
      I think you’re referring to a business strategy which helps with acceptance in the face of disruptive innovation, using a targeted focus on marginalised customers (I.e., targeting a narrow market segment).

  • @RobStevens64
    @RobStevens64 3 місяці тому +20

    What’s interesting about most of the examples given here is the value eroding activities being avoided are REGULATORY. What these startups figured out is if you move fast enough, the regulatory environment often can’t keep up. Uber put a lot of unregulated drivers on the road. AirBnB put a lot of unregulated hoteliers on the market. Yes, some of them figured out how to automate or otherwise streamline regulatory hurdles, yet the others just ignored them and treated the eventual fines or other legal issues something they would deal with later (kicking the can).

  • @bobymartis4317
    @bobymartis4317 2 місяці тому +3

    Such an academic fraud! The only thing he do is copying existing concepts from others (like User journey mapping, lean startup, Value Proposition Canvas), changing the names, and making it look like he invented them

  • @1Esteband
    @1Esteband 2 місяці тому +3

    He is explaining history and adapting his narrative to past events.
    Nothing actionable just word salad.

  • @jers132
    @jers132 3 місяці тому +5

    This is education? He created a "new language" to create his job! See a need, build the need, sell more to your existing customer base. My Gd what BS.

  • @Hoonnam81
    @Hoonnam81 3 місяці тому +4

    I don't really learn from any college professor especially who never had his own business. I am sorry for that sigh

    • @JLu-k5z
      @JLu-k5z 3 місяці тому +1

      That shows you don’t know the difference between ‚street knowledge‘ and ‚book knowledge‘

  • @joaoalbertofn
    @joaoalbertofn 11 днів тому +3

    I love how he has so many examples of each step of each concept that he mentions. The animations in the video also added much value to it.

  • @erickjuma7643
    @erickjuma7643 Місяць тому +16

    But how come an MBA professor couldn't come up with the idea of UBER? It occurs to me that there is a significant gap between academic knowledge and real inventions.

    • @recoveryplanx
      @recoveryplanx Місяць тому +3

      A teacher's job is to teach. If you're an entrepreneur, it's your job to identify business opportunities.

    • @Eyenn_n
      @Eyenn_n Місяць тому +1

      exactly. this professor in the video sounds like having too much "hindsight bias"

    • @kashankhan6950
      @kashankhan6950 28 днів тому

      Wise comment

    • @kashankhan6950
      @kashankhan6950 28 днів тому

      ​@@recoveryplanxyeah because teachers hate making money😂

    • @Jimwenten
      @Jimwenten 24 дні тому +1

      Professors are being told what to teach. That is their job. As a student it is your job to figure out how to make money with the knowledge you have.

  • @JilianToree
    @JilianToree 2 місяці тому +1

    Would have taken this seriously but there’s so many mindless people getting rich “providing value” doing the most random sh*t & not considering ANYTHING he just said in this video…😴 everyone’s a genius once they get some money.

  • @darknezx9542
    @darknezx9542 3 місяці тому +31

    The Uber story was partly because they made a way any car driver could ferry passengers in a efficient/safe way, and they subsidized the heck out of the fares to gain market share at huge loss. The subsidized fare was critical and leaving that part out glamorizes Uber when it was never profitable for a long time in the past.

    • @ravanpee1325
      @ravanpee1325 3 місяці тому +9

      Also Uber is de facto just a taxi without taxi regulation

    • @sriramananthakrishnan138
      @sriramananthakrishnan138 3 місяці тому +2

      @@ravanpee1325 this is such a crucial point, it skirted regulations to achieve scale, this is a hard thing to do unless you're pioneering something new which can fall in a legal grey area

    • @ravanpee1325
      @ravanpee1325 3 місяці тому +1

      @@sriramananthakrishnan138 It's not scaling but rather which company has more Lobbying power to doge regulations like Boeing now or the Sacklers in the past with the Opiod crisis

    • @brandonreed09
      @brandonreed09 2 місяці тому +6

      Not exactly. Uber originally started with Black cars, which wasn't anyone with a car. It was Lyft that introduced any car and driver model. Then Uber copied it as Uber X and both companies heavily subsidized fares.

    • @ravanpee1325
      @ravanpee1325 2 місяці тому +3

      @@brandonreed09 So Uber operated an illegal Taxi operation without paying >200.000$ for the medallion

  • @MrRWF2004
    @MrRWF2004 Місяць тому +1

    Playing video game is wasting time. NOT value creation actually 😂😂😅😅😅

  • @largebeppo
    @largebeppo 2 місяці тому +11

    I can tell this guy was a professor at Harvard because he does a lot of talking without really saying anything.

  • @dadequalcustody8350
    @dadequalcustody8350 3 місяці тому +2

    Interesting concepts. Watch this video and don’t pay attention to the comments.

  • @niranjanp65
    @niranjanp65 3 місяці тому +41

    Imagine going to Harvard to learn this. Your dream college. Meanwhile Alex Hormozi is lightyears ahead these MBA folks.

    • @The_Quaalude
      @The_Quaalude 3 місяці тому +3

      It's 2024, everything but brand new technology is on the Internet for Free 😂

    • @filip3148
      @filip3148 2 місяці тому +9

      imagine simping for a shill like alex

    • @niranjanp65
      @niranjanp65 2 місяці тому +1

      ​@@Joe-sg9ll oh wait! you're right I forgot ... every product should be sold cheap to big young ladies.

    • @niranjanp65
      @niranjanp65 2 місяці тому +2

      @@filip3148 Ah yes, because I didn't took an education loan to study the same information which Alex made for free.
      Guess I'm a simp then.

    • @e.r.6147
      @e.r.6147 2 місяці тому

      @@Joe-sg9ll😂😂 who told you that

  • @null4624
    @null4624 24 дні тому +2

    We are so lucky to still have access to stuff like this for free.. Thank you.

  • @apigtooter5727
    @apigtooter5727 3 місяці тому +3

    How many times did he say read my book?

  • @rlywhocares
    @rlywhocares 3 місяці тому +21

    youtube algorithm, gimme more of this. thank you

  • @jay-koh-sahn
    @jay-koh-sahn 3 місяці тому +2

    Just solve problems!

  • @DavidHixson
    @DavidHixson 3 місяці тому +2

    There are some interesting thoughts, but it would be helpful if you new what Steam did and what it's business model was.

  • @AlexGerasimenko
    @AlexGerasimenko 3 місяці тому +2

    That’s why you shouldn’t go to business school

  • @ItsJustMigs
    @ItsJustMigs 2 місяці тому +1

    So Vertical Scaling first by decoupling CVC, and then Horizontal Scaling by coupling CVC

  • @snowmthiyane8854
    @snowmthiyane8854 2 дні тому

    This is the only business class you would ever need; it was well summarized and explained quickly. Thank you EO and Thales Teixeira.

  • @chrisn7188
    @chrisn7188 3 дні тому

    Why do so many entrepreneurs not have MBA”s let alone Ivy League MBA’s? Because entrepreneurs instinctually understand filling market needs and work like hell to fill them while Ivy League businesses professors spend their time researching and pontificating about the obvious.

  • @RichflixInc
    @RichflixInc 2 місяці тому +1

    So to sum up, if you want your value added idea to actually be a PROFITABLE business model just assume that every prospective client is a LAZY client and the more "hand holding" you can do for them, the more money you will make 😂 but seriously, great value add in this video, good job!

  • @PlatoCave
    @PlatoCave 2 місяці тому +3

    Too text-bookish to be interesting or practical. This gentleman was just verbatim without being passionate about the subject.

  • @paulkunal5586
    @paulkunal5586 Місяць тому +1

    Why are you making simple topics so complex. I also don't agree with the use of your own technical jargon 😅 coupling seriously!

    • @feralmode
      @feralmode Місяць тому

      if it’s so simple for you then please do share your easy framework for explaining this in detail.

  • @ironwolf1773
    @ironwolf1773 3 місяці тому +5

    One more guy explaining things retroactively.

  • @msdukaaa
    @msdukaaa 11 днів тому

    Summary:
    There are things customers hate, fix them. - Uber
    There are things customers like, give it/create it for them. - Twitch
    There are things you can improve, improve it. - Pill Pack

  • @spotium
    @spotium 3 місяці тому +1

    Even shorter:
    Find a problem provide solution. Money or time.

  • @youssefelsayed5867
    @youssefelsayed5867 23 дні тому +1

    This video is great, I don't what these guys in the comments are talking about, thank you so much professor.

  • @Patrick-ep4sf
    @Patrick-ep4sf 2 місяці тому +1

    The exmaple of Steam removing the value erroding activity of going to the store is imho a misrepresentation. Steam came at a time when every game could be downloaded via torrent and cracks were provided to play them without actually buying them. Steam was no benefit to the "consumer". Steam was enforced onto them.

    • @schneid3r-kay
      @schneid3r-kay Місяць тому +2

      The torrent and cracks using part of the targeted audience is split into two groups. The much bigger group was just using it because of the value of "not going to the store" it provided. The "free" part of it was always tied to some kind of risk, so as Steam provided a solution without risk, everyone went for it. And as for the much smaller group of wich one either do not had the money for the activity or was a true believer of open-source, yes on them it was forced on.

    • @jaggeryreviews9869
      @jaggeryreviews9869 Місяць тому

      Good point there, thank you​@@schneid3r-kay

  • @simonsays7688
    @simonsays7688 Місяць тому +1

    It’s incredible that we have access to such high quality content, for free

  • @GC_990
    @GC_990 Місяць тому

    tl;dr
    To make a successful startup, find a problem in a common process, like how Uber made getting a ride easier by matching drivers and passengers quickly.

  • @danh5637
    @danh5637 12 днів тому

    If it’s being taught in degree courses. It’s already out of date.

  • @themarcbon
    @themarcbon 24 дні тому

    Steal ideas that others developed, market it as yours and make money safely, while stealing

  • @bot_meditation5587
    @bot_meditation5587 2 місяці тому

    Fine but the cost of energy/storage still cost 💲+ all the earnings and payments of xyz startups , they can probably attract more broader market but at the same salary ? - and the living of cost it’s also increasing.

  • @Abhishek.Saini28
    @Abhishek.Saini28 22 дні тому

    EO Builders Club link is not working, showing 404.

  • @MuratDagcan
    @MuratDagcan 17 днів тому

    Gonzalez Ronald Thomas Susan Robinson Anthony

  • @Rakibrown111
    @Rakibrown111 24 дні тому

    Holt crap this guy is boring. Just goes to show that stating the obvious in a boring way can be a career

  • @tyrellcobb4665
    @tyrellcobb4665 3 місяці тому +11

    bull crap