The Lean Product Playbook. Olsen Dan

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guide because you have to get so many things right to build a great product. I cover a range of important topics in addition to the Lean Product Process. The book walks you through detailed explanations of UX design and Agile development. It also provides in-depth coverage of analytics and how to use metrics to optimize your product.

      The Lean Product Process and the rest of the advice in this book come from hands-on experience and lessons learned throughout my career of building high-tech products – both successes and failures.

      About Me

      My background is a mix of technical and business skills that I began to develop when my parents gave me my first computer at the age of 10. I started my first business a few years later. I studied electrical engineering at Northwestern University and then started my high-tech career designing nuclear-powered submarines. While working, I earned a Master's degree in industrial engineering from Virginia Tech at night, where I learned about the Lean manufacturing principles that inspired the Lean Startup movement.

      I moved to Silicon Valley to attend Stanford Business School and then joined Intuit, which provided an incredible post-MBA training ground in product management, product development, customer research, user experience design, and marketing. I led and grew the Quicken product team to record sales and profit. As I learned more, I had a growing desire to take what I had learned and apply it at startups. Since leaving Intuit, I've spent a lot of time working at and with startups.

      For years now, I have consulted to numerous companies, helping them apply Lean principles to create successful products. I take a hands-on approach in my consulting: I work closely with CEOs and their management teams and also get in the trenches with product managers, designers, and developers. I usually serve as interim VP of Product for my clients and am often the first product person on their team.

      I've tested and refined the advice in this book while working with a wide range of companies. My client list includes Facebook, Box, YouSendIt (now Hightail), Microsoft, Epocrates, Medallia, Chartboost, XING, Financial Engines, and One Medical Group. I've found these ideas applicable to all my clients, even though they vary in size from small early stage startups to large public companies and span a variety of vertical industries, target customers, product types, and business models.

      I enjoy sharing and discussing my Lean Product ideas with as many people as I can. I regularly give talks and workshops and post my slides on SlideShare at http://slideshare.net/dan_o/presentations. I also host a monthly Lean Product meetup in Silicon Valley, which I invite you to check out at http://meetup.com/lean-product. The audiences in those forums have also helped me hone the guidance provided in this book with their questions, suggestions, and feedback.

      Who Is This Book For?

      If you are interested in Lean Startup, Customer Development, Lean UX, Design Thinking, product management, user experience design, Agile development, or analytics, then this book is for you. It will equip you with the “how-to” manual you need, and provide a step-by-step process you can follow to ensure you're building a product that customers will find valuable.

      This book is for:

      • Anyone trying to build a new product or service

      • Anyone trying to improve their existing product or service

      • Entrepreneurs

      • Product managers, designers, and developers

      • Marketers, analysts, and program managers

      • CEOs and other executives

      • People working in companies of any size

      • Anyone who is passionate about building great products

      The guidance in this book is most valuable for software products. However, it is also relevant to other product categories such as hardware and wearables, and even nontechnical products. The guidance in this book is also applicable to a wide range of business contexts, including business-to-consumer (B2C) and business-to-business (B2B).

      How This Book Is Organized

      The book is organized in three parts. Part I, “Core Concepts,” explains the foundational ideas of product-market fit and problem space versus solution space.

      Part II of this book, “The Lean Product Process,” describes each of the six steps of the process in detail, devoting a chapter to each step. Part II also includes chapters on:

      • The principles of great UX design

      • How to iteratively improve your product-market fit

      • A detailed, end-to-end case study using the Lean Product Process

      Part III, “Building and Optimizing Your Product,” provides guidance that applies after you have validated product-market fit with your MVP prototype. It includes a chapter on how to build your product using Agile development, which also covers testing, continuous integration, and continuous deployment. In addition, it contains two chapters on analytics, which describe a methodology for using metrics to optimize your product and include another in-depth, real-world case study.

      Writing this book has given me the opportunity to share the ideas, lessons learned, and advice accumulated over my career with a broader audience. My experience has been informed and influenced by my mentors, colleagues, and many other people passionate about sharing ideas and comparing notes on the discipline of building great products. Our field continues to evolve, with new ideas emerging all the time. That's why I'll use the companion website for this book, http://leanproductplaybook.com, as a place to share and discuss those new ideas. I invite you to visit the website to read the latest information and contribute to the conversation.

Part I

      Core Concepts

      Chapter 1

      Achieving Product-Market Fit with the Lean Product Process

      Product-market fit is a wonderful term because it captures the essence of what it means to build a great product. The concept nicely encapsulates all the factors that are critical to achieving product success. Product-market fit is one of the most important Lean Startup ideas, and this playbook will show you how to achieve it.

      Given the number of people who have written about product-market fit, you can find a range of interpretations. Real-world examples are a great way to help explain such concepts – throughout this book, I walk through many examples of products that did or didn't achieve product-market fit. But let's start out by clarifying what product-market fit means.

      What Is Product-Market Fit?

      As I mention in the introduction, Marc Andreessen coined the term product-market fit in a well-known blog post titled “The only thing that matters.” In that post he writes, “Product-market fit means being in a good market with a product that can satisfy that market.” My definition of product-market fit – which is consistent with his – is that you have built a product that creates significant customer value. This means that your product meets real customer needs and does so in a way that is better than the alternatives.

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