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As you’re identifying your problem, Roger says to keep your customers at the center: “Work on defining your problem until you can define it in terms of customers doing something you wish they weren’t doing.”
**Get specific and relate your problem to your customer**
Being too vague about your strategic problem is another common mistake. The clearer your problem statement, the more helpful it will be in guiding your thinking
Strategic Planning: How to Get Started
IDEO U
This could be a mid-level product manager who really loves creating efficiencies and optimizing processes. They get excited about making the experience better for internal employees, which in turn makes better products for customers. A chief of staff who understands product development could also be a potential fit. Ideally, your process person has coached or mentored more junior team members, contributing to the establishment of best practices and rituals, and loves continuous improvement. Most of all, this type of operations person has a high emotional intelligence. They know how to navigate a changing business landscape and use influence to align various teams across a highly-matrixed organization. They’re also a resource to help coach team members in agile and lean methodologies, as they relate to product management. “Product Operations Manager” or “Product Operations Manager—Process” is an apt title for the job description.
Product Operations
Melissa Perri and Denise Tilles
Unfortunately, it’s not as simple as talking to customers every week. That’s a good start. But we also need to consider the rest of our continuous-discovery definition: At a minimum, weekly touchpoints with customers By the team building the product Where they conduct small research activities In pursuit of a desired outcome I’ve met many teams who are good at talking to customers. But they forget that the purpose of these customer touchpoints is to conduct research in pursuit of a desired outcome. Those last two lines of the definition are critical. We aren’t doing research for research’s sake. We are doing research so that we can serve our customers in a way that creates value for our business.
Continuous Discovery Habits
Teresa Torres
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