Every one of these items will make you more fluent in today’s product design best practices. The links in the ‘How?’ section of each item will open a new tab where you’ll work toward completion of the objective.
This format’s purpose is to help you develop your practical intuition about these techniques with a minimum of time, seeing how they might be relevant for you in as little time as possible. I recommend moving through as many as possible once (as opposed to creating a lot of personas and then moving to the next item)
Can you really do these things in 20 minutes? Yes. Students regularly do it in half that time during my workshops and I’ve validated these items with new users online. The output will be rough but plenty functional.
Learning these items for yourself is the first step. Embedding them in the way your organization does things is the second. If you’re looking for something more structured and sequential, try the Venture Design page or Startup Sprints program.
Every one of these items will make you more fluent in today’s product design best practices. The links in the ‘How?’ section of each item will open a new tab where you’ll work toward completion of the objective.
# | What? | Why? | How? |
1 | Personify your customer | So you can base your actions, decisions, and discussions on a specific, customer-centric, testable format. |
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2 | Describe customer problem scenarios and alternatives; then tie those to your value proposition | So you can make sure you’re building and describing your product(s) in a way that delivers on things that matter |
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3 | Illustrate the relationship between your personas and your value propositions with the Business Model Canvas | So you can talk about what’s fundamentally driving the business in clear, simple terms |
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4 | Identify and prioritize your key assumptions (ala Lean Startup) | So you understand what stands between an interesting idea and a thriving new business |
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5 | Design experiments to prove or disprove your assumptions | So you make sure that the things you do everyday actually help determine whether you’re innovating toward a great business or something that no one wants. |
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6 | Illustrate the rest of the venture/project with the Business Model Canvas | So you’re looking at the validity of the whole business coherently (without writing a 50+ page plan that no one will read) |
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7 | Storyboard a customer problem scenario with and without your product’s value proposition | So you have a vivid, testable, complete view of how you think your product matters |
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8 | Storyboard a customer journey using AIDAOR- attention, interest, desire, action, onboarding, retention | So you have a vivid, testable, complete view of the customer journey, helping you focus promotion, onboarding and metrics |
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9 | Detail your assumptions & experiments against AIDA(OR) | So you have a more tactical, testable set of assumptions on customer acquisition & retention | (COMING SOON)
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10 | Design a concierge MVP | So you’ve maxed out lightweight opportunities to learn about your customer and if/how your hypothetical offering matters to them | (COMING SOON)
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11 | Storyboard an epic agile user story | So you can maximize the effectiveness of your development team by providing them clear, vivid, actionable pictures of the customer and what you’re doing for them. |
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12 | Create 4 agile stories under your epic | So that you make sure your view of the implementation is sufficiently detailed to be discussable and actionable between you and your implementation team |
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13 | Pick a design pattern for your prototype | So that you leverage best practice, pre-validated patterns that minimize the cost and risk of your execution |
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14 | Sketch a prototype | So that you think through how you really want the product to work, describing your ideas in a way that’s discussable and actionable for you and your implementation team |
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15 | Plant a strong hook for users and a create habits that deepen involvement with your product | So that you have a vivid, testable definition of why and how users engage with your product | (COMING SOON)
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16 | Design a process | So that you have an effective definition of how and why you (or your customers if you’re in B2B) work and what defines success |
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