Technology has become a commodity. With enough resources we can build anything — from neural networks to a live-action “Cats” movie. The real question is, does anyone need it?To help honestly answer this question — and tackle — I distilled my hands-on observations related to product development into three points.
We’re Selling a Story
Usually, we don’t have to invest months of work and write countless lines of code to discover if anyone needs our product. We need a good story, a relevant experiment and participants for that experiment. We are shaped by narratives -- the blend of stories, myths, facts and half-truths that we buy into throughout our lives. They define our beliefs and who we connect with, even more so than our DNA.When it comes to product development, narrative often gets sidelined and the emphasis is usually put on technology or design. Yet, it’s safe to say that we’re neither trying to sell code nor pixels. We are trying to sell a story.
Product vision doesn’t care about Material Design or the cool thing you did with Redux. Users can appreciate value proposition, even if they don’t understand how API works. I noticed they are not concerned with the 2-pixel border radius on buttons, but they fancy a product if it can solve a pain point. While chasing growth, we’re perfecting the story for user acquisition or a sales pitch.
Embrace the Experiment
When we expose an idea to the world, it can either evolve, cease to exist, or leech off of wishful thinking and fallacies. We should accept the facts stoically, because fighting against the facts and reality is futile. Take communism, for example. It fought the reality and failed to get a happy ending. Organizing an experiment and interpreting data is demanding, but falling for confirmation bias and investing time in a non-viable product is just tragic.And the truth is --
Instead of diving straight into development, we should ask ourselves, “What data do we need to validate the idea?” followed by, “What experiment do we need to collect the data?” Since we’re dealing with complexity, the outcome of the experiment might not be predictable or self-evident.
Some years ago, I had an idea to create a visual website builder for SMEs. I set up a landing page explaining the product and paid $20 to promote it on Facebook. Several companies signed up, but I soon discovered they were not able to write a value proposition, create a cover image or an explainer video. Because, you see, the real problem didn’t come from website development -- it came from the inability to create good content. And as you noticed, the cost of a lesson can either be months of development or $20 for Facebook ads. To maximize an experiment’s success and objectiveness, we should be familiar with certain research principles:
● We make irrational decisions -- no one needed a fidget spinner, but at some point in human history, everyone had a fidget spinner.● We don’t always do what we say -- avoid studying behavior with surveys or other attitudinal research methods.● Avoid asking about future behavior, as we tend to overestimate ourselves or have projection bias.● Always consider the context in which a specific behavior occurs.● It’s usually more useful to ask “how” rather than “why”. “Why you do something” is a philosophical question, whereas “How you do something” can help us recognize an opportunity for improvement.
● Don’t lead users to an answer, don’t fish for compliments.● -- be careful when analyzing data, we inherently try to frame it into a narrative or recognize causality when there is none.
There Are No Absolutes
In the context of websites and cloud apps, there is no such thing as the final product.The co-evolution between a product and users never ends -- a product improves a user’s well-being and the user influences that product’s features. Thanks to approach, we can embrace the pivot points while releasing quickly and frequently. Is it better to have a product that’s good enough every day or a perfect product on most days? It's a trick question, really, because there is no such thing as the perfect product.
User experience is subjective. Some people like iPhones, some like Android -- de gustibus non disputandum est. A German businessman and a Korean schoolgirl might appreciate different things.
Design plays an important role in marketing and the perception of the quality of a product, yes, but the product requires a certain balance between form and function. Usability will always trump aesthetics -- except in Apple’s case. I don’t like my e-banking app, but I still use it every day because I don’t have to visit the bank office. Sometimes, we might do everything just right -- validate the market and have a working product -- and still fail. When dealing with complexity, there are no best practices to rely on. If an experiment played out well in the past, it doesn’t mean the same thing will happen in a different context. If a solution worked well yesterday, it doesn't mean it will work tomorrow.
I translate human needs into the product features. I published a few articles about and . In my spare time, I like to compose music and write fiction. I don’t talk much, but feel free to reach out and chat me up on .