PERSON
Eric Ries
The entrepreneur-methodologist who codified the Build-Measure-Learn loop and whose insistence that the speed of building has never been the speed of learning has become—in the AI era that compresses building toward zero—the most urgent discipline available to founders who can now build anything but must still discover what deserves to be built.
Eric Ries published
The Lean Startup in 2011 with a simple but counterintuitive argument: the problem with most startups is not that they cannot build products, but that they build the wrong ones, and they build the wrong ones because they spend too long building before confronting the market with the results. The solution he proposed was the
Build-Measure-Learn loop—the smallest possible experiment that could generate the validated learning needed to answer the one question that matters: are we creating value? The method’s central insight was always temporal: the competitive advantage of the lean startup was speed of
learning, not speed of building. Building was a means. Learning was the point. This distinction, which was important when building took weeks, has become existential now that
[YOU] on AI documents a world where building takes hours. In the era of AI-assisted development,