Building a Product Mindset for Yourself and Your Organization
Carlos Gonzalez de Villaumbrosia
CEO at Product School - Global leader in product training
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There is only one boss. The customer. And [they] can fire everybody in the company from the chairman on down, simply by spending [their] money somewhere else.
— Sam Walton
What is a Product Mindset?
A Product Mindset is a way of thinking that focuses on creating product solutions that provide real user value. It’s the foundation of Product Management, really. Good Product Managers know that keeping the customer front-and-center is the best and most sustainable way to create successful products.?
Developing a Product Mindset means pushing yourself to understand users and revisit your value proposition on an ongoing basis. People with a Product Mindset aren’t interested in creating products and pushing out features for the sake of it; rather, they are wholly focused on how effectively their product solves the user problem they set out to solve.
A Product Mindset is the backdrop to all other Product tasks. No matter if you’re working on a roadmap, prioritizing your backlog, or launching a product, the goal is to keep the customer present in all processes and decisions.
And working with a Product Mindset isn’t limited to Product Managers. Indeed, your entire company can benefit from developing a customer-centric way of thinking.
For more on this, read:?Product-Led Growth Strategy for Product Managers
Building a Product Mindset for Yourself
If you want to be a Product Mindset evangelist within your company, you’d first better walk the talk. To practice a Product Mindset, the most important rule is this: Engage with your customer, and learn about their authentic wants and needs. And when they talk, listen.?
The tricky part is getting them to talk, knowing how to listen, and then acting on the insights you gather:
Brush Up Your User Research Skills
Here are some common user research methods to get in tune with the people who use your products:
Customer Insights vs Voice of Customer (VOC)
Your job as a Product Manager is to know your customers better than they know themselves. And sometimes, what customers say isn’t the full picture. This brings us to the difference between customer insights and voice of customer (VOC).?
Often, there’s a gap between what users?say?they want, and what they actually?do. It’s dangerous to develop products fully based on what people say they want, because actions and words don’t always align. A Product Manager’s nightmare is investing time and resources into a product users are clamoring for, only to face soul-crushingly low adoption rates.
VOC is the items customers demand, but customer insights are the nuggets gleaned by researching and evaluating how customers behave, interact and feel towards a product. This is why a combination of research methods is helpful: you can back up what you hear in user interviews with what you observe in field studies. And if there’s a disconnect between user actions and words, this is an opportunity to jump in and find out why. Insights come from being empathetic to customers, removing biases, and looking at the data.
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Make Connecting With Users a Habit
With the hustle and bustle of daily PM life, it’s easy to put off connecting with users. This task doesn’t feel as urgent as an upcoming development deadline, or a launch, or that meeting with an important stakeholder.?
With all the tasks you’re juggling, it’s important to remember that strategy is an essential component of Product Leadership. Countless top Product Leaders have told us that regardless of how busy their schedule gets, they make a point to carve out time in their schedule to think and strategize. Part of that time includes connecting with users.?
When you make connecting with users part of your routine, it doesn’t fall through the cracks. You’ll be surprised how many insights come out of regular user interactions, and how these insights help support decision-making and operational tasks. Create user check-in processes that work for you.?
You can connect with customers in direct or indirect ways:
Building a Product Mindset in Your Organization
A Product Mindset doesn’t stop with you, or even with the Product Team. Think bigger. When you create a Product Mindset on an organizational level, you get cross-functional alignment for the entire team. Not every team member has to become an expert in user research, but everyone should be able to easily answer this question: what value are we providing the user??
Help your organization internalize a customer focus and understand the customer, the customer problem, and exactly how your product addresses that problem. Here’s a quick temperature check you can do with your team to check their understanding:
Employees from almost all departments can benefit from?Product Management training . Product is at the intersection of many key functions in any organization. Training establishes a floor of Product knowledge across functions, a shared baseline understanding that everyone in the organization can use to move forward together. Here’s how:
Engineers?
Engineers are incredible at execution. When you give them a problem, they’ll figure out a way to solve it. But they don’t alway question why they’re being asked to solve that problem. The value engineers get from understanding Product is?context. They understand how their tasks fit into a larger strategy, and how their outcomes are related to user needs. And understanding the end goal empowers them to come up with even better solutions!
Design
Your designers are the members of the team most bought into customer-centricity – it is a concept that Product Managers adopted from design, after all. Designers benefit from a Product Mindset in a different way: sometimes they need help understanding the business side of things. Product strategy takes into account what’s best for customers?and?the business. It’s important to keep your designers happy and aligned with strategy so that they buy into their projects.
Ultimately, products do need to help bring in a profit so the company can continue operating. Sometimes we need to get the product out, and it’s not possible to include every single feature and design element that would elevate the user experience. When designers are connected to this reality, they can hyper-focus on addressing core user needs. Then, when time and resource constraints pop up, they’ll learn how to let go of nice-to-haves for the sake of the big-picture strategy.?
Sales
When your Sales Team can communicate the core value of your product, their job becomes 10x easier. Their role transforms from?convincing?to?informing?the customer; they can think of the customer as someone they’re trying to help find a solution rather than someone they’re pitching to. The more the Sales Team understands the customer problem and how your product solves it, the more easily they can usher in the customer to try the solution.?
Marketers
Similar to sales, marketers are all about the messaging. Often, terrible user experiences happen because users were marketed false promises. Users go into the product expecting the experience they were marketed, and leave disappointed. This doesn’t happen in a Product-led organization.?
Marketers need to understand the customer and the product value so that their messaging is aligned with reality. By getting to the root of this, they can target their messaging more effectively. They know just what buttons to push to get into potential users’ heads. And when users convert, they’ll get exactly what they were marketed! That’s the power of an entire organization working with Product Mindset.?
President
1 年Thank you for sharing this information.
Product Manager/Owner
1 年Such a great reminder of the importance for organizations to be product led! I particularly loved “Product is context” and “Product strategy takes into account what’s best for customers?and?the business.” So true.
Customer Success | Retention | Business Strategies | Change Management | Market Research | Data Insights | Financial Industry | Cross-functional Collaborator | Project Management | Payments |
1 年Great piece - reinforces what PM know and what should be at the center of what they do everyday
Sales Associate at American Airlines
1 年Great opportunity
Next Trend Realty LLC./wwwHar.com/Chester-Swanson/agent_cbswan
1 年Well Said.