Think your startup idea will work? Run a premortem for the best chance at success

Challenge your assumptions before you build anything, otherwise you’ll burn money fast.

Everproof
Published in
4 min readSep 23, 2018

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We start all new projects at Everproof with a premortem. If you don’t know what a premortem is, this video by Nobel laureate Daniel Kahneman explains it quite succinctly:

Dr. Kahneman explaining the benefits 🏆

Everproof’s technique for running a premortem

Prep:

Include everyone you think will add value. We invite product, engineering and commercial thinkers to our sessions. You’ll need around 120 minutes of their time.

Equipment:

  • Post-it notes 📝
  • Sharpies and pens 🖊️
  • A whiteboard 📈 (use Realtime Board or Mural if you’re remote)

Steps:

1. Introduction (10 minutes) — Your team must understand they need to dedicate two hours to this session, no phones and no laptops allowed. Ensure they’re present by starting the session with an icebreaker. I’ve found that the funnier you make the game, the better the session will be. This is my favorite icebreaker, but the rest of my team would beg to differ:

From Design Sprint Kit

2. I Assume That (30 minutes) — Ask everyone to write down all the things they assume to be true about the problem you’re trying to solve, and the world around you. There’s no such thing as silly assumptions! Write out assumption like this:

IAT = I Assume That

3. This Failed Because (30 minutes) — Ask everyone to write down all the reasons they think the project could fail, even ones that may seem improbable. As with assumptions, there’s no such thing as silly reasons for failure! Write out reasons like this:

TFB = This Failed Because

A quick note — some people on our team like to spend the entire 60 minutes writing a mixture of assumptions and reasons for failure, there’s no rules here! This is what the output for two people in a 30 minute IAT and 30 minute TFB session can look like:

Pink = TFB and Green = IAT

4. Cluster post-its (30 mins) — One person chooses a note from their pile, reads it to the room, and sticks it on the whiteboard. If anyone in the team has a similar note, they stick it clustered next to that one. You’ll know what I mean by “similar” when you start doing the exercise.

Rhys Gevaux doing his thing

5. Review notes and groupings (30 mins) — Review each card, making sure it makes sense and is grouped appropriately. You should be able to summarize each group in a simple sentence.

👈 Each row is a grouping… 👉 An example of a grouping

What’s next:

Now that you’ve documented your view of the world (your assumptions), you should conduct some research to try and validate (or invalidate) that perspective. The output of these sessions should power your research plans, for example, you can use the assumptions to decide what types of research to conduct, and what questions to include in an interview guide.

Before that though, we need to document our assumptions and reasons for failure in a spreadsheet. I’ve written another article explaining how we do that.

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