Steve Blank's customer development framework is the antidote to shipping on assumption — and when your agents can prototype faster than ever, the temptation to skip discovery is worse than it's ever been.
The Four Steps to the Epiphany by Steve Blank argues that startups fail not because engineering ships bad code but because founders never leave the building to test whether a real problem exists. Blank lays out four sequential disciplines — customer discovery, customer validation, customer creation, and company building — and insists each must be earned before the next begins. The trap most teams fall into is treating the sales and marketing playbook of a large company as a template. It isn't. A startup is a search, not an execution.
Agents compress the product loop so dramatically that founders now face a new version of Blank's original sin: building fast feels like learning fast, but it isn't. You can spin up an agent workflow in a day, watch it handle tasks, and mistake throughput for validation. The customer development discipline translates directly — discovery still means sitting with humans and watching where their judgment breaks down, validation still means someone pays or commits before you scale the pipeline. Agents accelerate execution; they do not replace the founder's obligation to get out of the building and earn the right to scale.
- Speed of agent deployment amplifies the cost of discovering product-market fit late, not early
- treat each agent workflow as a hypothesis requiring the same falsifiability standard Blank demands of any product assumption
- human judgment checkpoints in your agent loops are not friction, they are the validation gates.