Log In
Or create an account -> 
Imperial Library
  • Home
  • About
  • News
  • Upload
  • Forum
  • Help
  • Login/SignUp

Index
Praise for Product Roadmaps Relaunched Foreword Preface
Dear Roadmap Who Is This Book For? How to Use This Book Why Listen to Us?
C. Todd Lombardo Bruce McCarthy Evan Ryan Michael Connors
Acknowledgments
1. Relaunching Roadmaps
What Is a Product Roadmap? Key Terms and How We’re Using Them
Product Stakeholder Customer
Where Did Product Roadmaps Come From? Requirements for a Roadmap Relaunch A Roadmap Should Put the Organization’s Plans in a Strategic Context A Roadmap Should Focus on Delivering Value to Customers and the Organization A Roadmap Should Embrace Learning A Roadmap Should Rally the Organization Around a Single Set of Priorities A Roadmap Should Get Customers Excited About the Product Direction A Roadmap Should Not Make Promises a Team Cannot Deliver On A Roadmap Should Not Require Wasteful Up-Front Design and Estimation A Roadmap Should Not Be Conflated with a Release Plan or a Project Plan Summary
2. Components of a Roadmap
Primary Components
Product Vision Business Objectives Timeframes Themes Disclaimer
Meet the Wombat Garden Hose Co. Developing the Wombat Roadmap Secondary Components
Features and Solutions Show How You Intend to Deliver on Your Themes Stage of Development Confidence Target Customers Product Areas
Secondary Components Added to the Roadmap Complementary Information
Project Information
Components in Context Components in Context Components in Context Components in Context Summary
3. Gathering Inputs
Understand Where Your Product Is in Its Life Cycle New Product Phase Growth Phase Product Expansion Phase Harvesting Phase End-of-Life Phase Gathering Input from Your Market
Understand Your Ecosystem Define the Problem and the Expected Outcome of the Solution
Gathering Input from Your Customers
Customer Roles User Types Users Versus Buyers Roles Versus Personas
Gathering Input from Your Stakeholders Summary
4. Establishing the Why with Product Vision and Strategy
Mission Defines Your Intent Vision Is the Outcome You Seek Values Are Beliefs and Ideals Product Vision: Why Your Product Exists
Value Proposition Template Example for Our Wombat Hose Duality of Company and Customer Benefit Product Strategy: How You Achieve Your Vision Objectives and Key Results The 10 universal business objectives Key results (and metrics) Outcome Versus Output Timing Case Study: SpaceX Business Objectives Themes Key Results
Summary
5. Uncovering Customer Needs Through Themes
Expressing Customer Needs Themes and Subthemes Ways to Uncover Themes and Subthemes
User Journeys and Experience Maps Existing Product Needs System Needs Opportunity-Solution Trees
Using Job Stories and User Stories to Support Themes
Themes Are About Outcomes, Not Outputs
Relating Themes Back to Your Objectives Real-World Themes
The High Cost of Space Travel Slack’s Theme-based Roadmap GOV.uk’s Gantt Chart with Benefits
Summary
6. Deepening Your Roadmap
Features and Solutions: How They Can Work with Themes
When and Why Do Features Appear on the Roadmap? Where Do Features Appear on the Roadmap? Buffer’s feature-level roadmap Feature questions
Using Stage of Development
Stage of Development Questions
Communicating Confidence
Confidence Questions
Identifying Target Customers
Target Customers Questions
Tagging Product Areas
Product Areas Questions
Secondary Components Summary
Strive for Balance
Summary
7. Prioritizing–with Science!
Why Prioritization Is Crucial
Opportunity Cost Shiny Object Syndrome Exponential Test Matrix Growth Features Versus Tests
Bad (but Common) Ways to Prioritize
Your, or someone else’s, gut Analyst opinions Popularity Sales requests Support requests Competitive me-too features
Prioritization Frameworks
Critical Path Kano Desirability, Feasibility, Viability ROI Scorecard
A Formula for Prioritization
A simple scorecard A more complex scorecard MoSCoW
Tools Versus Decisions Dependencies, Resources, and Promises (Oh, My!) Prioritization Frameworks Summary
8. Achieving Alignment and Buy-in
Alignment, Consensus, and Collaboration Walk into a Bar...
Alignment Consensus Collaboration
Shuttle Diplomacy
Shuttle Diplomacy for Product People Why Does Shuttle Diplomacy Work? How to Engage in Shuttle Diplomacy Shuttle Diplomacy Canvas What’s Difficult About Shuttle Diplomacy?
Meetings and Workshops
Presenting Recommendations Co-creation Workshop
Software Applications Summary
9. Presenting and Sharing Your Roadmap
Why to Share Your Roadmap Internally
Inspiration Alignment The IKEA Effect
Why to Share Your Roadmap Externally The Risks of Sharing
Overpromising and Underdelivering The Osborne Effect Competition Multiple Roadmaps? Not So Fast!
Presenting the Roadmap to Stakeholders What the Development Team Needs in a Roadmap
Secondary Components Complementary Information: Platform Considerations Complementary Information: Project Information Status
What Sales and Marketing Need in a Roadmap
Secondary Components Complementary Information: External Drivers
What Executives Need in a Roadmap
Complementary Information: Financial Information
What Customers Need in a Roadmap The Roadmap Presentation Preparation Case Study: Chef.io’s Roadmap Presentation
Dropping Like a Lead Balloon CASE STUDY: Chef.io’s Roadmap Presentation
Summary
10. Keeping It Fresh
Roadmap Evolution How Far Out Should Your Roadmap Go? Planned Change
Change Frequency
Unplanned Change
When Features Are Late
When to Compromise on Quality
Special Requests External Pressures Changes in Strategy
Communicating Change
Why What and When Roadmap Changes Forks in the Road
Lather, Rinse, Repeat Summary
11. Relaunching Roadmaps in Your Organization
How to Get Started
Step 1. Assess your situation Step 2. Get buy-in for change from from your key stakeholders Step 3. Train your stakeholders how to contribute Step 4. Start small and work incrementally Step 5. Evaluate your results and align on next steps Step 6. Keep relaunching
Postscript
Index
  • ← Prev
  • Back
  • Next →
  • ← Prev
  • Back
  • Next →

Chief Librarian: Las Zenow <zenow@riseup.net>
Fork the source code from gitlab
.

This is a mirror of the Tor onion service:
http://kx5thpx2olielkihfyo4jgjqfb7zx7wxr3sd4xzt26ochei4m6f7tayd.onion