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I realized there’s an underlying structure to discovery that we can use to guide our work. It starts with defining a clear outcome—one that sets the scope for discovery. From there, we must discover and map out the opportunity space—this is what gives structure to the ill-structured problem of reaching our desired outcome. It’s the all-important problem framing that opens up the solution space. And finally, we need to discover the solutions that will address those opportunities and thus drive our desired outcome. It sounds simple, but this structure helps us know what to do when. I encourage teams to visualize it using an opportunity solution tree (OST).

Continuous Discovery Habits

Teresa Torres

**Product Strategy** The product strategy describes how you plan to accomplish the product vision, while meeting the needs of the business as you go. The strategy starts with focus, then leverages insights, converts these insights into action, and finally manages the work through to completion. We dive into what all this means in chapter 16, “Product Strategy.”

Transformed

Marty Cagan

Here’s what you need to look for in a North Star Metric: As close as possible to the core value experience ... Aggregate number, not a rate or ratio—We’re looking for a number that will sum up the value across the entire market and potentially grow up-and-to-right over time... Simple and memorable—No North Star Metric is perfect. Some messages sent via WhatsApp may be spam, some items purchased on eBay may not be fully satisfactory to the buyer. That’s fine as long as the number is still generally indicative of total value.

Evidence-Guided

Itamar Gilad

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