What you can learn from the Museum of Failure
A couple of weeks ago, I took some clients on a trip to the Museum of Failure while it was in D.C.
It's a touring testament to some of the most significant innovation missteps of the last couple of centuries (think Sony Betamax, the Delorean and Colgate Lasagne), and it's well worth a few hours of your time when it's in a town near you.
Partway through the tour, a client asked me, 'How do we make sure we don't wind up as an exhibit in here?'.
Though long-winded and rambling, my answer centred around noticing how many of the examples predominantly failed due to a lack of 'fit' or alignment in three key areas, and I wanted to try again to articulate how important these checkpoints are through a mini-tour of some of the exhibits.
Google +
Google's foray into social networking is a classic case of misaligned Company-Opportunity Fit. Designed to compete with Facebook, it boasted unique features like user circles and Google Hangouts for video chats. But it didn't scale significantly with users. The primary issue wasn't a lack of problem-solution fit or even product-market fit; it was the absence of company-opportunity fit. Google's core competencies lie in algorithms, search optimisation, and advertising, driven by very different user behaviour and network effects than social media.
When you’re identifying new opportunities to pursue, you have to be able to demonstrate:
Crystal Pepsi
Another example of misalignment is Crystal Pepsi, a caffeine-free cola variant marketed as a healthier choice. Launched in 1993, the product failed to address any significant consumer problems or offer a compelling solution. Consumers simply didn't perceive a clear beverage as an improvement or a healthier alternative, and the product was discontinued a year later. This misadventure in problem-solution fit led to its failure.
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When you’re developing new propositions for customers, you have to be able to demonstrate:
Microsoft Zune
Microsoft's Zune is an example of achieving Company-Opportunity and Problem-Solution Fit but failing in Product-Market Fit. Launched in 2006, the Microsoft Zune entered a declining market of standalone music players dominated by Apple's iPod. The product's bulky design and less intuitive interface than the iPod also contributed to its failure. Despite Microsoft's capabilities, Zune didn’t offer a compelling advantage to shift market preference.
So when you’re validating new propositions in market, you have to be able to demonstrate:
As we hurtle into another economically challenging year for many of you, these types of fit should be lenses through which you view all your work.
They’ll help you to avoid the public, expensive, and prolonged failures that we shouldn’t celebrate and embrace modern design thinking, lean startup, and agile product development methods so you can make sure your setbacks are quick, cheap, and private.
The Museum of Failure isn’t just about the past; it's an important reminder that creating a product is not enough. You have to make sure the product is right for your company, solves a real problem for customers, and compellingly meets market demands at scale.
P.S. We run programmes designed to help clients establish company-opportunity fit, problem-solution fit and product-market fit in a time-bound, outcome-driven way.
If you want to work with us on one of those programmes, we’d love to talk you through them. Grab some time here.