Sticky, not gimmicky. Your road to a better?product.
Priya Narasimhan
CEO and Founder, YinzCam? ? Professor, Electrical and Computer Engineering, Carnegie Mellon University.
Cheetos-flavored lip balm—orange lips smelling like Cheetos all day, moisturized to protect us from the harsh winter. ?
Smart scroll—bobbing our heads up and down in front of our phones, for a hands-free scrolling experience of today’s news.
Gimmicks evoke contradictory feelings.?They attract and repel, at the same time. We’re filled with amazement and disdain, in equal parts.
In a world with 3-second attention spans, digital gimmicks are trotted out for competitive differentiation, to grab human attention on the glowing rectangular screens that we clutch in our hands. That auto-playing of an advertisement video that you never asked for. Gimmick. That phone with a built-in projector that you’re never going to watch movies on. Gimmick.?
Physical gimmicks make the ordinary feel less ordinary. As seasons change, so do supermarkets. Aisles bulge with imaginative displays, limited editions of snacks, and just-in-time-for-your-fill-in-the-blanks-holiday reimagined specials. The Valentine’s Day pink-and-red peanut-butter cups. The Terry’s Chocolate Orange that you “tap and unwrap” to break apart wedges of orange-flavored chocolate. The colorful Kit-Kats in 300 unholy flavors, including churro, tiramisu, key lime pie, and yes, fruity cereal. Gimmick, gimmick, gimmick.?
Ungimmicking your?product.
How do you spot a gimmick? It’s how long it takes for the novelty to wear off.
Gimmicks are flash. Products are substance.?
Gimmicks generate attention.? Products generate engagement.
Gimmicks have short-lived relevance.? Products have long-lived relevance.
Gimmicks form external trappings. ? Products form internal foundations.?
Gimmicks are dispensable embellishment.? Products are necessary functionality.
Gimmicks drive impulse buys.? Products drive thoughtful value.
Gimmicks produce short-lived hits of joy. Products deliver sustained joy.
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Gimmicks deliver single-use success. Products deliver repeat-use success.
A product is something that users return to, something that is an indispensable, valuable, and valued part of their lives. Something that impacts how they live, or how well they live.?
Users use useful things—on repeat.
In product development, stickiness is the North star.
People don’t buy products. They buy solutions to their problems.
Product development is simple—just start with the people and their problems.?
Once you’ve sunk your teeth into a juicy problem, and you’ve figured out a solution that is effective, practical, scalable, affordable, and sticky, you’re on the right road.
Gimmicks put the brand first.
Products put the user first.?
If you start with the user, you will never lose your way.
My kids would love Cheetos Puffs lip balm...and i might even try it!
Software Engineer with 5+ Years Experience | MS Computer Science | Ex-PhonePe | Ex-CognitiveClouds | Seeking New Opportunities in Tech
1 年A great food for thought on how to evaluate if a new idea is a gimmick or a product. Thanks for sharing these insightful perspectives!