Product Owners and the Market

by Charl Dreyer on August 19, 2009 · 0 comments

in Documents, Roles

Following on from the Doing the Business post, which discussed the relationship between product owners and stakeholders, what kind of responsibilities rest on product owners with regard to their product’s market?

1. Identify, aggregate, prioritise user needs.
2. Study and assess new markets, applications, products, and partners.
3. Perform gap analyses.
4. Follow commercial, technological, and legal trends.
5. Develop and maintain access to customer and industry evangelists.
6. Produce innovative, needs-based solutions.
7. Possess a strong understanding of customers’ issues and priorities.
8. Champion the product to internal and external audiences.
9. Study the product domain.

Do you know where you’re going to?
One of the benefits Agile offers is greater transparency, although too often this is only felt inwardly – inside the company.

I like to encourage product owners and their organizations to become comfortable publishing a product road map externally, to customers. This document creates an effective way for the market – as well as internal stakeholders – to view and interact with the product development pipeline.

On this basis, informed and unemotional discussion can be had about priority before inappropriate choices develop into crises.

In my experience, the benefits arising from your market being settled in the knowledge that you have a strategic direction for the product, for which they can plan, often result in customer loyalty.

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Great Supporting Act

by Charl Dreyer on August 3, 2009 · 0 comments

in Roles, Working Software

Whenever I can I like to spend time with customer care people, trainers, sales people, and those who support our products in the market place. Why? Because as a manager I must always be aware of how our products are being portrayed to customers and users: Over the ‘phone, in emails, in Help and FAQs, in training, in sales demo’s, everywhere.

In his book On War, published posthumously by his wife in 1832, von Clausewitz wrote, “We fall into error if we attribute to strategy a power independent of tactical results.”

Is your strategy being made impotent by rudeness over the ‘phone, poor grammar in emails, incomplete or inaccurate Help, dour trainers, or over-promising and under-delivering sales people? You need to find out.

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Product Visions

by Charl DreyerJuly 7, 2009 Documents
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As Product Owners, you form and hold your product’s vision — but please don’t keep it a secret. Certainly every one in your team should be able to quote the vision verbatim, but I am disappointed if that’s as deep as it goes.

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What Are You Doing?

by Charl DreyerJune 17, 2009 Responding to Change
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It is a good idea for each product to have a product positioning statement. Both you and those on your product team should be able to quote this verbatim. They should revisit this every morning before they start work. Then compare what you’re doing, or more likely should be doing, to honor this statement.

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Product Owner Themes

by Charl DreyerMay 16, 2009 Individuals and Interactions
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Introspection is usual early on in an implementation of any new role. But be careful that you don’t leave customers and competitors unattended while you craft the perfect job description.

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