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Using OKRs helps you move the team from output thinking to outcome thinking. It may take a few tries, but you will be more successful once you focus on outcomes.
Radical Focus SECOND EDITION
Christina Wodtke
A product strategy is your plan for creating the most value possible for your users and your company. And you do this by focusing your time on a small set of really high impact work, rather than diluting your efforts across all the different things you could potentially do.
Product Growth Newsletter
Akashi Gupta
Three helpful lines of questioning to strengthen your scope:
When someone decides to buy and read your book, what are they trying to achieve or accomplish with it?
Why are they bothering?
After finishing it, what’s different in their life, work, or worldview?
That’s your book’s promise.
What does your ideal reader already know and believe? If they already believe in the importance of your topic, then you can skip (or hugely reduce) the sections attempting to convince them of its worth. Or if they already know the basics, then you can skip those.
Who is your book not for and what is it not doing? If you aren’t clear on who you’re leaving out, then you’ll end up writing yourself into rabbit holes, wasting time on narrow topics that only a small subset of your readers actually care about. Deciding who it isn’t for will allow you to clip those tangential branches.
Write Useful Books
Rob Fitzpatrick und Adam Rosen
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