How to achieve product-market fit in six steps: webinar recap

Written by 
Annelise Schoups
 and 
  —  
October 16, 2017

Defining and developing your product can feel like an elusive task. But it doesn’t have to.

Instead of treating it like an art form, you can turn the process into a scientific one, where theories are defined, tried and tested before the product ever gets to market. Better yet, you can do it in only six steps and still improve your overall odds of success.

Product-Market-Fit.png

Dan Olsen, a product management consultant, speaker and author, works product leaders to build great products and strong product teams. He recently joined us for a webinar to share advice from his book, The Lean Product Playbook, on how to achieve product-market fit.

During the session, Dan described his Lean Product Process, a six-step methodology, and illustrated the concept with real-world examples and case studies.

For more details, watch the replay below.

Develop a Successful Product for Your Market

Using practical examples, like NASA's zero-gravity space pen, Dan stresses the importance of beginning your product development process in the problem space instead of the solution space. Or, by stating a customer need or problem, rather than the specific implementation needed to address the assumed need.

Space.png

According to Dan, one of the keys to achieving product-market fit lies in starting your Lean product development process with hypothesizing rather than building. This approach maximizes efficient learning and leads to the development of a product your market actually needs.

Hypothesize.png

He recommends using a matrix that maps user needs against their satisfaction with current product offerings to identify the greatest areas of opportunity.

Opportunity Chart.png

You can create your own Importance-Satisfaction Matrix using the MURAL template below:

matrix-template
Open to create a mural from this template in your workspace. Powered by MURAL

And, finally, even though your minimum viable product should be relatively simple, he argues against cutting corners. It should still cover each of the MVP bases, including being delightful, usable, reliable and functional.

mvp.png

In short, his six-step method for achieving success with your product includes:

  1. Determining your target customer
  2. Identifying underserved customer needs
  3. Defining your value proposition
  4. Specifying your Minimum Viable Product (MVP) feature set
  5. Creating your MVP prototype
  6. Testing your MVP with customers

Ready to get started? Learn more about The Lean Product Playbook or kickoff your product launch in MURAL.

Learn More:

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About the authors

About the authors

Annelise Schoups

Annelise Schoups

Annelise is a writer and wanderer, passionate about storytelling and the spread of honest information.

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