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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

In his article “Searching for the Center of Design,” service design expert Jess McMullin defines value-centered design as follows: Value-centered design starts a story about an ideal interaction between an individual and an organization and the benefits each realizes from that interaction.

Mapping Experiences

James Kalbach

Outcome-based road maps work because they help create a multiteam implementation of mission command. They are a way of articulating, in a cascading manner, the key elements we need when we direct the work of teams: The strategic intent (“We want to increase the organization’s impact by a factor of 10”) The strategic constraints (“We will do this by creating an online matching service that must be live by X date”) The definition of success (“The service will match parties at X rate”) When implemented well, outcome-based road maps help organizations create alignment, which is critical to making mission command work.

Sense and Respond

Jeff Gothelf, Josh Seiden

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