The Lean Product Playbook: How to Innovate with Minimum Viable Products and Rapid Customer Feedback
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The “what” describes the benefits that the product should give the customer—what the product will accomplish for the user or allow the user to accomplish.
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The “how” is the design of the product and the specific technology used to implement the product.
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The best way to mitigate the risk of an “inside-out” mindset is to ensure your team is talking with customers.
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it started with: What incredible benefits can we give to the customer?
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If you are targeting businesses, you'll use firmographics instead; these are to organizations what demographics are to people, and include traits such as company size and industry.
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Psychographic attributes are more useful than demographics for many products.
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behavioral attributes to describe your target customer: whether or not someone takes a particular action or how frequently they do.
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Crossing the Chasm, Geoffrey Moore's classic book on how to market high-tech products.
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Good personas convey the relevant demographic, psychographic, behavioral, and needs-based attributes of your target customer.
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If you have customers, you can use interviews and surveys.
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Talking to customers in one-on-one interviews is the best way to build this knowledge.
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“The average person in my community has 2.3 children, but not a single person in my community has exactly 2.3 children.”
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if you are launching a new product or trying to expand to a new target market, you won't have existing customers.
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You can always use your judgment to make initial hypotheses about your target customer's attributes, and then test those hypotheses by talking to prospective customers who match that profile.
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Before you have any designs or product on which to solicit feedback, you will mainly talk with prospective customers to gain a deeper understanding of their needs, usage of current solutions, and pain poin...
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Your goal is to iterate until you feel confident that you have identified a target customer with an underserved customer need that you believe you can address.
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Talking with those passionate customers can especially help sharpen your hypotheses about your target market
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Customers are generally not skilled at discussing the problem space; they are better at telling you what they like and dislike about a particular solution.
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Good interviewers excel at listening closely to what customers say, repeating statements back to ensure understanding, and asking additional probing questions to illuminate the problem space.
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A user goal is no different from a customer need.
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customer needs is that they are like onions: they have multiple layers, each with a deeper layer just below it.
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As with well-written Agile user stories, benefits should be written from the customer's perspective (using “I” and “my”).
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each benefit begins with a verb:
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many of the benefits speak to increasing something that's desired (tax deductions) or decreasing something that is not desired (audit risk, time required to accomplish a task).
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This makes the benefit very clear and often enables you to objectively measure the performance improvement your product is providing.
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customer benefits start out as hypotheses.
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Once you have an initial set of hypothetical customer benefits you feel good about, it's time to test them with users. The best way to do so is via one-on-one, in-person customer discovery interviews.
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What does this statement mean to you? (to check their understanding)
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help you to see if the way you're describing the benefit is clear to users.
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The reasons why customers find certain benefits valuable are the gold nuggets you want to mine, since those comments help you gain a better understanding of how customers think and what's important to them.
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customer needs can have hierarchies.
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These hierarchies create dependencies between needs, where the value created by addressing one need is a function of how much another need is being met.
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lower-level needs have to be met before higher-level needs matter.
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Importance is a problem space concept, separate from any specific solution space implementation.
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Differences in the importance of needs influence a customer's decisions and preferences.
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the importance axis is more stable.
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It's usually best to measure satisfaction using a bipolar scale; since people can be satisfied or dissatisfied, a negative score makes sense.
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importance is just a matter of degree—without any negative value—and therefore better measured with a unipolar scale.
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it is generally agreed that 5-point scales are best for unipolar and 7-point scales are best for bipolar—which
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“doing quant on qual”—quantitative analysis on qualitative data.
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Statistical significance is great when you have the sample size to achieve it, but it isn't an all or nothing proposition.
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you can make progress with a sample size of zero. How? By using the framework to formulate and clarify your hypotheses.
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You could lay out each of your hypotheses on the four-quadrant framework—either digitally or with Post-it notes—and then move them around, revise them, and add new ones as you learn and iterate.
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Anthony Ulwick's book What Customers Want.
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all too often, product objectives or requirements are far too “fuzzy”—too high-level or vague.
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“For most jobs, even those that may seem somewhat trivial, there are typically 50 to 150 or more desired outcomes—not just a handful.”
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breaks customer needs into three relevant categories that you can use: performance needs, must-have needs, and delighters.
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Must-have needs don't create satisfaction by being met. Instead, the need not being met causes customer dissatisfaction.
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You have to meet basic needs before you can get credit for performance features. And your product must be competitive on performance features before delighters matter.
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Think about the customer benefits that are relevant in your product category and classify them into the three categories of must-haves, performance benefits, and delighters.
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