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суббота, 9 марта 2024 г.

The Five Most Common Mistakes in Product Development and How to Prevent Them

 


By JANA PAULECH

New products fail all the time. On average, about 40% of the products launched by organisations fail to meet their intended objectives.

Some quotes put this higher – even up to 95% – but 40% is what empirical evidence indicates (see Castellion & Markham 2013). Even if this is an underestimate, that makes product failure an even bigger issue for organisations.

“Now, hold on a minute,” you might say. “Isn’t product failure just the inevitable cost of product innovation?”

To that, I unequivocally say NO!

Developing and launching a product only to have it fail is the complete antithesis of the ‘Fail Fast’ innovation motto. You have just invested thousands of work hours and millions of dollars in developing and launching this product. In no way, shape or form is that fast.

On the other hand, a high volume of failing ideas (i.e., ideas killed before they are developed or launched) should instead be thought of as the signpost of strong product innovation. Conversely, however, we are not failing enough ideas.

Even if we took the oft-quoted “95% of products fail” (most commonly attributed to Clayton Christensen) to mean “95% of ideas fail”, then that means we’re still taking far too many ideas through to production and launch.

Estimates indicate it takes about 3000 raw ideas to make one commercially successful product (Stevens & Burley, 1997), and in some industries much more. In reality, most companies are reviewing and failing ideas several orders of magnitude less than this.

We are not failing enough ideas, and we are launching too many failing products.

Something is occurring in the broad spectrum of product development between thought and launch, leading us to keep making the same mistakes.

Below is an attempt to categorise the five most common mistakes seen in product failures with the benefit of hindsight (and maybe a sprinkling of common sense).

#1 - A Lack Of Customer Benefit

A product or product improvement needs to provide genuine benefits to a customer. These benefits will come from solving a deep problem a customer has.

Product Management 101 is ‘problem before solution’, but it still appears the message is not getting through, as too many products and product improvements are launched without a real benefit to customers.

Think of the last time someone said “we’ll put AI/ML into this”. A secondary concern is whether these benefits are enough to justify the cost. But no amount of cost-cutting or even a freemium model will solve the failure point of delivering no benefits to customers.

Juicero is a widely mocked example of a product that provides no benefit. A Wi-Fi-enabled juice dispenser that presses juice from single-serve packets is an example of a technology solution searching for a problem.

In 2017, when a Bloomberg article showed the packets could be more effectively squeezed by hand rather than with the $400 machine, this was the last blow in a 4-year journey that saw investors lose over $200 million to this failure point.

#2 - Inadequate Customer Research

A product or product improvement needs to fulfil an unmet need for a sufficiently large group of people who are willing to pay for it.

If PM 101 is ‘problem before solution’, then PM 102 must be ‘who will pay and why?’
This lesson is still frequently forgotten, as evidenced by the most common answer to the question “Who is your product for?” still inevitably being “Everyone”.

General purpose products rarely succeed, and product managers need to do the research upfront to identify whom they are solving a problem for, whether are there enough customers who want this solved, and if they will pay to have it solved.

recent survey estimates that less than half of product development ideas are validated with customers at all, which still doesn’t guarantee that the right questions are being asked to identify a suitable target market or willingness to pay.

Segway is a well-known example of a general purpose product that no one actually needed. Most people’s transportation needs were already sufficiently solved by the current methods of transport – foot, bicycle, motorcycle, car, etc. – yet Segway touted it would solve all individual transportation needs.

In other words, this is a target market equalling ‘everyone who moves’. In reality, its use was relegated to low-volume, niche transportation cases in urban settings like police, postal services and tourists.

#3 - No Clear Differentiation In Market

A product needs to be sufficiently different enough in a buyer’s mind to sway them to purchase.

In a world where your product is never the only solution to a problem, you are asking a customer to choose you over another solution that may provide similar benefits.

It may be that even if your product has no direct competitors, the competitor is customers ‘doing things the way they have always done things’, which offers much less activation energy to change than ‘doing things with your product’.

One final consideration is how your product will differentiate within your own product portfolio.

Coca-Cola C2 was a costly lesson in product differentiation within a portfolio. It was marketed as having the same Coke taste but with only 50% of the calories, and was targeted at a young male demographic concerned by calories but not interested in the perceived femininity of Diet Coke.

As it turned out, the benefit of fewer calories wasn’t distinctive enough from the current Coke offerings to sway behaviour. Low sales – primarily the result of the cannibalisation of Coke & Diet Coke sales – led to the discontinuation of the product in less than 12 months.

A year later, the more differentiated “zero calories, full flavour” product, Coke Zero, was launched successfully, making C2 a short but costly lesson in product differentiation.

#4 - Poor Design & Execution

A product or product improvement needs to be ready to meet customer demand & expectations at launch.

Untested or faulty products diminish the product’s reputation over the long term, and it may never recover. Worse yet, faults may do long-term damage to the organisational brand if it goes against a customer perception of brand quality, safety or security.

Unlike previous failure points, a successful launch can precede a product failure if a product fails to scale to demand. Performance issues or delivery delays can harm a product’s commercial success even if the original product is not faulty.

Windows Vista is a well-known punchline for how not to design and develop a software product. A host of compatibility and performance problems lead to a revolt in even their most loyal customer base.

This discontent even allowed their competitor, Apple, to monopolise – making the situation appear even worse with their advertising campaign featuring “I’m a Mac… and I’m a PC”.

While some issues with Vista were able to be solved, the Vista product never recovered its reputation and arguably cost Microsoft some of its reputation too.

#5 - Ineffective Product Marketing

A product or product improvement needs to create positive sentiment & awareness in the customer’s mind at launch.

There are about 30,000 products launched every year, so getting mindshare at the critical time of launch is imperative. The most common issue here is a lacklustre launch due to a lack of forward planning and support.

A poorly planned launch is unlikely to make the news (in fact, that is the point), but worse yet is product marketing launches that make the news for all the wrong reasons.

Launching products at the wrong time or with the wrong message may cause reputational damage. The saying “no publicity is bad publicity” doesn’t hold if significant customer loyalty, positive sentiment or goodwill is lost.

Airbnb’s campaign for ‘floating world’ stays launched amid Hurricane Harvey, which flooded large swathes of the USA. This is a great example of poor timing.

Sony launched the PSP white console with a print advertisement featuring an angry-looking woman dressed in all white grabbing the face of a terrified black woman alongside the words “White is coming” – never a good message.


How To Avoid Making These Mistakes

So, now that you’re aware of the five most common mistakes made in product development, how do you avoid making these mistakes?

It all comes down to having a process that focuses on addressing these failure points before they can derail your product development.

Most Lethal Failure Points Occur In Product Discovery

It is important to note that of the five failure points above, some are inherently more lethal to the future of a product than others. If you have a product that solves a deep problem for a defined target market and delivers true benefits, it may be able to outlast some hiccups with execution or product marketing to grow over time.

This assumes that those issues don’t fundamentally debase the customer perception of the product or organisation’s brand.

However, the converse is not true.

No amount of flawless technical execution or product marketing will save a product that solves no problems, provides no benefits, and has no customers.

This means the most critical thing that can be done to avoid these product failure points is to cover the ‘product thinking’ basics every time:

  • Who is the product for?
  • What problem does it solve for them?
  • What benefit does it provide to them?
  • What benefit does it provide to us (e.g., will they pay)?

Validating these basics with real customers rather than assuming that you know what the customers want avoids stacking the case with false data. Finding and talking to customers will help validate if you have the right target market and if the problem is one they want to be solved and would pay for.

Your Product Process Should Focus On Checking
 For Failure Points

If most product failures could be avoided by sticking to the product thinking basics, then why do we still launch so many failing products and fail too few ideas?

The most likely culprit is the lack of a repeatable and structured product process that emphasises the basics of product thinking and embeds checks for product failure points along the way.

A successful product management process should:
1. Test for each of the product failure points during the process.
2. Provide structured decision points when an idea can be culled or continued.
3. Provide a common language for stakeholders to understand how decisions are made.

Dividing your product management process into phases or stages can help to identify failure points and provide a common language for where an idea is in the process.

Ensuring the most lethal failure points are tested early also helps assess more ideas and reduces any sunk cost or anchoring bias.

Take the Brainmates product management process for example, which occurs over three phases:


Innovate Phase

A structured process for innovation & discovery that focuses on testing many ideas fast. This phase is key to avoiding the most lethal failure points. Structuring product thinking – for who, what problem, what benefits and positioning – into this phase and testing with customer research will help to remove bad ideas early. The majority of ideas should be removed in this phase. Remember, for every successful product, there are about 2999 failed ideas. We need to fail more ideas earlier in our product management process.

Design Phase

A phase focused on deep ‘as is’ current state customer understanding. The aim is to identify real problems for real people, and guardrails to guide solution design and development. Guardrails should be focused on the customer and market needs required to solve the problem, rather than what can be delivered by a specific date. Prioritisation of these guardrails can reduce scope creep in the final phase.

Implement Phase

A phase to focus on preparing for product launch and testing solution readiness against the design phase guardrails. A common understanding of customer and market guardrails across the solutions team means solutions are tested throughout development and avoid poor customer outcomes on release. Product managers spend the majority of their time in this phase preparing for a successful launch in collaboration with their marketing colleagues.

Fail More Ideas To Launch Fewer Failing Products

In summary, failure will happen – but failing where others have failed before doesn’t have to!

Having a process that focuses on avoiding the most common failure points is the best way to avoid making the same mistakes and minimise the cost of failure to your organisation.

Weed out the most lethal failure points early with a process focused on the basic elements of product thinking – who is our customer, what problem are we solving and for what benefit (for us & them). Most ideas will fail the test, which is to be expected with strong product innovation.

The final failure points can then be avoided with strong customer and market-centric guardrails for solution design and development and increased focus across product and marketing on preparing early for launch, because you can never be too prepared.


https://bitly.ws/3frjQ

суббота, 25 апреля 2020 г.

16 Content Marketing Mistakes You May Be Making (and How to Avoid Them)






Having just embarked on your entrepreneurial journey, you’ve thrown yourself into content marketing. Everyone is telling you that it’s essential for building your audience and growing your business. But there’s so much work involved, and you’re barely keeping up. What’s worse is that you haven’t been seeing the results you were promised, and you’re starting to worry that this is all a massive waste of time.
If this sounds familiar, you’re not alone.
Let me assure you right off the bat: Content marketing can lead to spectacular results — much better results, in fact, than traditional marketing methods. But your success isn’t guaranteed. And there are many content marketing mistakes that may be sabotaging your efforts.

These are the most common content marketing mistakes, and how you can avoid them

  1. You start without a plan
According to the 2019 B2B Content Marketing Research report, 97 percent of the most successful B2B marketers have a content marketing strategy (compared to only 47 percent of the least successful).
Your end goal for content marketing is to grow your business. But if you want to succeed, your content strategy should align with your business objectives.
Are you hoping to increase sales of a particular product or service? Is your goal to grow a specific audience? The right content marketing plan can help you do that.
  1. You make assumptions about your audience
You can’t produce content that resonates with your audience if you don’t understand who that audience is, what they’re trying to accomplish, and the challenges that they’re hitting along the way.
Case in point: I created great content in the early days of my own blog around striking font pairings that you can download for free. The post was extremely popular among amateur graphic designers. The only problem? Amateur graphic designers are not at all likely to buy my services.
Your content should do more than just attract visitors. It should attract the right visitors — visitors who have the potential to become customers.
I recommend developing at least one buyer persona to represent your dream customer, and then choosing content topics to help that person. Personas aren’t just great for choosing blog topics, either. They’ll also help you produce more engaging content. While you’re writing your post, picture your persona and write specifically to that person to make your writing more natural and engaging.
  1. You ignore your persona’s customer journey
If you don’t understand what a prospect needs to know before they make a purchase from you, then you’re likely missing out on some great content opportunities.
Try to uncover the questions buyers have on their path to purchasing a product or solution like yours. Then, create content to answer those questions and nudge them along their journey.
There are at least three stages to a buyer’s journey:
  • The awareness stage: Prospects become aware of a problem they need to solve. For example, if your company sells payroll software, your content topics for the awareness stage may include posts about “common payroll errors and how to fix them,” or “the cost of government penalties for filing payroll taxes late.”
  • The consideration stage: Buyers become aware of the different types of approaches they could use to solve their problems, and the pros and cons of each. For example, if you provide SEO services, your content for this stage may include “the pitfalls of doing your own SEO” or “why you should outsource your SEO.”
  • The decision stage: At this stage, buyers are validating that you’re the best option for them and are putting any doubts to rest. If your company makes interior design software, your content for this stage might include topics like “must-have features in your interior design software” or “how to choose the right interior design software” or “is interior design software worth the cost?”
Crafting content for each step of the buyer journey will help you go deeper with your content and connect with prospects earlier in the process.
  1. You talk about yourself too much
It’s certainly fair to produce some content around your specific offering. In fact, that type of content is essential to convert prospects and retain existing customers. (Think tutorials, how-to guides, demo videos, etc… all examples of perfectly useful content!)
But, if you want to be successful in content marketing, you also need a lot of content that focuses primarily on serving your audience, not your brand.
In fact, studies show that 90 percent of the most successful B2B content marketers give priority to the audience’s informational needs over their own promotional messaging.
By contrast, the same studies indicate that only 56 percent of the least successful B2B content markers do the same.
Here are just a couple of reasons why educational content is essential, even when it never mentions your offering:
  • It creates brand authority
  • It builds trust with your audience
  • It helps you connect with prospects earlier in their buyer journey so that they’re thinking of you when they’re ready to buy
  1. You try to achieve too much
So many content marketers make this mistake. I’ve met content marketers who, right out of the gate, set out to create original content every single day and maintain a presence on every social network. It’s a bit of a recipe for disaster, and too often leads to the next two mistakes: poor-quality or inconsistent content.
  1. You produce poor quality content
There is no point in creating content if it’s of low quality. Poor quality content won’t resonate with your audience, build trust or win you customers. Plus, Google weeds out low-quality content in its results.
To elevate the quality of your content, make sure it:
  • Offers real value to its readers
  • Fills a gap in the information already available on the topic
  • Isn’t poorly written or riddled with typos (Use tools like Grammarly and Hemingway for additional proofreading)
  • Use enticing headlines and introductions to capture your readers’ attention (You’ll find great tips over at Copyblogger)
  1. You’re inconsistent
Consistency is key when it comes to content marketing. It creates a habit and builds anticipation with your audience. You’re better off publishing less often but on a regular schedule, than starting with an aggressive and unrealistic publication calendar that you just can’t keep up with. Sticking to a schedule means your audience knows what they can expect from you and can look forward to your next installment.
  1. You skip the visuals
If you’re not absolutely convinced that your online content should include visuals, these 45 stats from HubSpot might change your mind.
Visuals will make your content easier to digest. And as an added fringe benefit, your in-post images can also help people find your content, thanks to Google’s image search.
In addition to adding images, you can make your content easier to digest by foregoing run-on sentences and dense paragraphs of text.
Instead, embrace:
  • Short sentences
  • Bullets and numbered lists
  • Headings and sub-headings
  1. You stick to the same format
If your audience has a preference for a particular content format, then that’s the format you should favor.
For example:
  • Are your visitors analytical types that get juiced on data? Feed them infographics.
  • Do they spend their days clicking through YouTube and IGTV? Make videos part of the plan.
Prioritizing certain formats doesn’t mean you shouldn’t dabble in others, though. Everyone likes variety! Test out different content formats and measure your audience’s reaction to them. You may learn some valuable lessons.
  1. You over-rely on original content
It can be difficult (read: unrealistic) to create high quality original content every single time. You can lighten the load for yourself by mixing in some additional types of content, such as:
  • Guests posts from other writers (but keep your quality standards high!)
  • Repurposed content. For example, you can:
    • Turn an old blog post into a SlideShare
    • Transcribe a podcast episode into blog post
    • Create a hefty “ultimate guide” from several smaller posts
  • Updated content. You can breathe new life into old content by giving it an update, and boost your search engine rankings in the process
  1. You skip out on promotions
It’s a mistake to think that if you create quality content, the rest will take care of itself. Many a great piece of content have lived and died in obscurity.
Once you’ve created your content, follow these essential steps to make sure it gets seen:
  • SEO each new piece of content
  • Promote it on social media
  • Use social share plugins to make it easier for readers to share your content
  • Share your content with the people you cited in the piece, as well as with influencers who’ve shared similar content
  • Write guest posts on popular websites and link back to relevant articles on yours
  1. You make it too easy for visitors to leave
Give readers of each of your posts a reason to stick around and see the other great content you have to offer by strategically linking between posts. Internal linking can be a very effective way to gently nudge your prospects through their buyer journey.
For example, let’s assume again that your company produces payroll software.
You’ve created these two posts:
  • “Why you should buy payroll software instead of developing your own” (for the consideration stage of the buyer journey)
  • “How to choose the best payroll software for your small business” (for the decision stage of the buyer journey)
You can help your prospects move from the consideration stage to the decision stage by adding a link from the first post to the second.
  1. You don’t nurture the relationship
When you’re creating top-of-funnel content, you can expect that many of your visitors won’t be prepared to purchase on their first visit. But once they leave, they may never come back.
Unless, of course, they sign up for your email list. If they do, you can continue to nurture your relationship with them, one-on-one, via email.
How do you get them to sign up? Produce free, high-quality resources (or lead magnet) that are so irresistible that your visitors can download in exchange for their email address.
  1. You miss the opportunity to plug your offering
I know, I know. I said that you shouldn’t talk about yourself too much. But, that doesn’t mean you should miss the chance to drop a passing mention of what you do, so that when visitors are ready to make a purchase, they think of you.
Within each post, try to include:
  • A link to one of your product or service pages
  • A call to action inviting them to contact you for more information
  1. You try to re-invent the wheel every time
There’s no denying it: Content marketing can be hard work.
What’s more, the results are great but not immediate. You have to be able to tough it out long term. Look for ways to make the work more efficient and manageable, without compromising quality.
Here are a few quick tips:
  • Batch create your content
  • Accumulate a bank of content ideas in advance so that you can get right down to writing when it’s time
  • Create quick-reference checklists around repeatable tasks
  • Automate tasks whenever possible (for example, for sharing and re-sharing evergreen content on social media)
  • Create reusable templates (e.g. for your social images)
  • Delegate what you can so you can focus on what you do best
  1. You make assumptions about what’s working and what’s not
You know what they say about best laid plans. Even if you think you’ve done everything right, you’ll face some surprises along the way. Some good (“who knew that post would be such a huge hit?”) and some not so good (“I never knew a bounce rate could be that high!”)
Those surprises are a gift. Learn from them, and use them to up your content marketing game.
Here are just a few examples of valuable insights you can glean from monitoring your web analytics:
  • Identify high-performing content so that you can produce more content like it
  • Identify low-traffic content that converts really well… and drive more traffic to it
  • Find long-form content that some visitors are spending a long time on but that has a high exit rate. Create a downloadable PDF version that people can read later… after leaving their email address
  • Identify landing pages with a high volume of organic traffic but a high bounce rate and look at the queries that are driving the traffic. Can you improve the post to better answer those questions?
Customize your web analytics dashboard to answer these questions and more on a monthly basis.
Final thoughts
Your content marketing strategy will not be perfect on day one. What’s important is to get started, learn from your mistakes and improve as you go.
Do you have any other common mistakes you’d like to add to the list? I’d love to hear from you in the comments.