◦ Be timely ◦ No devise peeping ◦ Phone stack ◦ Write BIG & clearly Rules of Conduct ◦ No TPS (jargon) ◦ No Hippos ◦ Tough on ideas, not on people ◦ No “Yes, but…” ◦ Be comfortable ◦ Have fun!
1. On your own, pen a “Dear John” style letter explaining why you want to breakup with a Your roadmapping 2. Swap letter with neighbor. 3. Read letters aloud to the group 4. Identify top 3 issues per group PURPOSE OUTPUT 10 minutes INSTRUCTIONS DEAR _________, IT’S NOT ME, IT’S YOU … SINCERELY, - DISGRUNTLED USER
Product Strategy Problems/Needs What you will build that solves for these needs. What you need to solve for in order for your product to be valuable. How your product will create value and contribute to your mission (internal + external). Why your product exists in the world. The future world your product seeks to create. The change you want to see in the world COMPANY LEVEL PRODUCT LEVEL
the only ___________ How: that _____________ Who: for ______________ Where: in ______________ Why: who ____________ Supports: ______________ (company mission) Product Vision Source: Jeffrey Moore
less… our product is the only international restaurant recommendation engine… that gives immediate recommendations based on location and review… for the everyday traveler… from countries all over the world… who need to save time and energy on finding local eateries.
region by 10% • Increase traveler average session to 26 hours / week in all active regions Objective: Increase geographic coverage of hotel product • Increase coverage of North America to 100% • Increase coverage for all major cities to 75% • Decrease pickup time to < 10 mins in any coverage area during peak hours of usage Objective: Enhance user experience • Define and measure user happiness score • Increase user happiness score to 75th percentile
this lifetime. Product Vision: Create a high efficiency, low cost space travel vehicle that can carry passengers to Mars. Key Result: Get cost to travel to Mars under $200,000. Objective: reduce the cost of space travel to what an average American family can afford.
to find a place to eat I need… a quick way to search and vet restaurants near me So I can… choose a place and enjoy a good meal. Find restaurant at the last minute
to find a place to eat I need… a quick way to search and vet restaurants near me So I can… choose a place and enjoy a good meal. Find restaurant at the last minute “Theme”
this lifetime. Product Vision: Create a high efficiency, low cost space travel vehicle that can seat multiple civilian passengers. Key Result: Get cost to travel to Mars under $200,000. Objective: reducing the cost of space travel to what an average American family can afford. Themes: • Full reusability • Refueling in orbit • Propellent production on Mars • Right propellant
the product to be launched. These are the critical path items or dissatisfiers, without which no one will buy or use your product. • Should Haves are not critical to launch, but are important and may be painful to leave out. • Could Haves are features that are wanted, but not as important as should haves. These are the first items you would cut if they introduce budget or deadline risk. • Won’t Haves are requirements deemed “out of scope” for a particular release. MoSCoW NOT a prioritization method, but a way to clearly communicate priorities on release criteria.
5 5 15 User expertise rating 3 4 4 11 Find restaurant by cuisine 2 4 3 9 Auto-populate search 5 2 2 9 Order of priority Quick sort on short list of things. 1-5 Scale
alignment on theme before it hits roadmap • What is the theme’s scope (including success criteria)? • Why a theme is important and how it adds value? • Who will need to work on it to get it done?
decisions that involves compromise and trade- offs. Authorship: Opportunity for early input means they have authorship too Trust: Build trust and rapport with each of these stakeholders Politics: Get exposure to key, or even hidden, politics