They told you that breakthrough innovation requires customer validation. They are wrong.

The laser. The transistor. The iPhone. ChatGPT. None followed the innovation playbook taught in accelerators and MBA programs. None validated customer needs before building. All were dismissed as "solutions looking for problems."

Yet they changed the world.

This book reveals why breakthrough innovation works backwards from everything you've been taught.

If you're an engineer who's sat through Lean Startup workshops feeling like something's deeply wrong, you weren't mistaken. The methodologies that work for incremental improvements actively kill breakthrough innovation.

Inside this book:

• Why customer validation fails for breakthrough technology (customers can't request what doesn't exist yet)

• The Technology Readiness Pipeline (TRP): a systematic framework for developing deep tech without pivots

• How constraints force better innovations than unlimited resources (DeepSeek, Raspberry Pi, Starlink)

• Why AI makes breakthrough innovation MORE valuable, not less (and destroys first-mover advantage)

• Platform thinking: building infrastructure instead of products (AWS, Arduino, Linux)

• Bootstrap vs. VC: when each funding path makes strategic sense

• Permission to build: trusting your technical instincts over business orthodoxy

This book is for engineers who:

- Build first, validate later

- Trust physics over focus groups

- See through innovation theater

- Know that "faster horses" thinking never creates automobiles

Written for the engineer who's been told they're "doing innovation wrong"-when really, they're the only ones seeing clearly. No MBA required. No TED talk credentials. Just engineering truth: some problems can't be solved by asking customers what they want. Sometimes you have to build the future first, then show them what's possible.

Build first. Market later. Change everything.

Titel
Build First, Market Later: How Engineers Create Breakthrough Innovation Without Permission
EAN
9789153175612
Format
E-Book (epub)
Hersteller
Digitaler Kopierschutz
Adobe-DRM
Dateigrösse
4.34 MB