Steve Blank Podcast

A podcast by Steve Blank

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248 Episodes

  1. Hacking for Defense @ Stanford 2018 – wonder and awe

    Published: 6/8/2018
  2. The Innovation Stack: How to make innovation programs deliver more than coffee cups

    Published: 6/7/2018
  3. Why the Future of Tesla May Depend on Knowing What Happened to Billy Durant

    Published: 5/3/2018
  4. Why Entrepreneurs Start Companies Rather Than Join Them

    Published: 4/11/2018
  5. The Difference Between Innovators and Entrepreneurs

    Published: 4/3/2018
  6. Leadership is More Than a Memo

    Published: 3/19/2018
  7. CoinOut Gets Coin In

    Published: 2/21/2018
  8. Innovation at Speed – when you have 2 million employees

    Published: 2/13/2018
  9. Janesville – A Story About the Rest of America

    Published: 2/2/2018
  10. Why GE’s Jeff Immelt Lost His Job – Disruption and Activist Investors

    Published: 11/4/2017
  11. The Red Queen Problem – Innovation in the DoD and Intelligence Community

    Published: 10/19/2017
  12. Office of Naval Research (ONR) Goes Lean

    Published: 10/12/2017
  13. Removing the Roadblocks to Corporate Innovation – When Theory Meets Practice

    Published: 9/21/2017
  14. How companies strangle innovation – and how you can get it right

    Published: 9/19/2017
  15. Working Outside the Tech Bubble

    Published: 8/17/2017
  16. National Security Innovation just got a major boost in Washington

    Published: 7/21/2017
  17. Why good people leave large tech companies

    Published: 7/11/2017
  18. Why a Company Can’t “Be More Like a Startup”

    Published: 6/30/2017
  19. Tesla Lost $700 Million Last Year, So Why Is Tesla’s Valuation $60 Billion?

    Published: 6/20/2017
  20. Hacking for Defense @ Stanford 2017 – Lessons Learned Presentations

    Published: 6/20/2017

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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.