Synopses & Reviews
How do you develop products that people will actually use and buy? This practical guide shows you how to validate product and company ideas through customer development research—before you waste months and millions on a product or service that no one needs or wants.
With a combination of open-ended interviewing and fast and flexible research techniques, youll learn how your prospective customers behave, the problems they need to solve, and what frustrates and delights them. These insights may shake your assumptions, but theyll help you reach the "ah-ha!" moments that inspire truly great products.
- Validate or invalidate your hypothesis by talking to the right people
- Learn how to conduct successful customer interviews play-by-play
- Detect a customers behaviors, pain points, and constraints
- Turn interview insights into Minimum Viable Products to validate what customers will use and buy
- Adapt customer development strategies for large companies, conservative industries, and existing products
Synopsis
How do you develop products that people will actually use and buy?
Customer development research is a method for validating your product and company ideas—before you waste months and millions on solving a problem no one needs.
Through customer development, you'll learn how your customers behave, what problems they need to solve, and what frustrates and delights them. Through a combination of open-ended interviewing and fast and flexible research techniques, this book provides rich insights that can take you beyond incremental improvements and to the "a-ha!" moments that inspire truly great products and sustainable businesses.
This book will serve as an intensely practical guide to customer development that will get you talking and discovering valuable insights within days.
About the Author
Cindy Alvarez is a product manager who turns understanding the customer into competitive advantage. Currently the Director of User Experience and Product Design for Yammer (a Microsoft company), she has worked with early- and mid-stage startups as well as Fortune 500 companies to make customer development an ingrained part of company culture and product development process.
Table of Contents
Praise for Lean Customer Development; Foreword; Preface; Who Is This Book For?; Who Can Practice Customer Development?; How Does This Book Fit into O'Reilly's Lean Series?; Why I Wrote This Book; What You'll Learn; A Word of Thanks; Chapter 1: Why You Need Customer Development; 1.1 The First Challenge Is Inside the Building; 1.2 What Is Customer Development?; 1.3 What Is Lean Customer Development?; 1.4 What Customer Development Is Not; 1.5 Why You Need Customer Development; 1.6 Answering Common Objections; 1.7 Let's Make This Work; 1.8 Next Step: Get Started; Chapter 2: Where Should I Start?; 2.1 Exercise 1: Identify Your Assumptions; 2.2 Exercise 2: Write Your Problem Hypothesis; 2.3 Exercise 3: Map Your Target Customer Profile; 2.4 Next Step: Find Your Target Customers; Chapter 3: Who Should I Be Talking To?; 3.1 How Can I Find Customers Before I've Even Built a Product?; 3.2 The Importance of Earlyvangelists; 3.3 Three Things That Motivate People; 3.4 How Can I Find My Customers?; 3.5 How Should I Conduct My Interviews?; 3.6 Following Up; 3.7 Interview Troubleshooting; 3.8 Next Step: Get Ready for Customer Development Interviews; Chapter 4: What Should I Be Learning?; 4.1 Get Started with These Customer Development Questions; 4.2 Customers Don't Know What They Want!; 4.3 What You Should Be Listening For; 4.4 Next Step: Get Ready to Do Your Customer Development Interviews; Chapter 5: Get Out of the Building; 5.1 The Practice Interview; 5.2 To Record or Not to Record?; 5.3 Taking Great Notes; 5.4 Immediately Before the Interview; 5.5 The First Minute; 5.6 The Next Minute; 5.7 Keeping the Conversation Flowing; 5.8 Tangents Happen; 5.9 Avoiding the Wish List; 5.10 Avoiding Product Specifics; 5.11 Going Long; 5.12 The Last Few Minutes; 5.13 After the Interview; 5.14 Get Out (Now!); Chapter 6: What Does a Validated Hypothesis Look Like?; 6.1 Maintaining a Healthy Skepticism; 6.2 Keeping Organized Notes; 6.3 Rallying the Team Around New Information; 6.4 How Many Interviews Do You Need?; 6.5 What Does a Validated Hypothesis Look Like?; 6.6 Now What?; Chapter 7: What Kind of Minimum Viable Product Should I Build?; 7.1 What Should My MVP Do for Me?; 7.2 MVP Types; 7.3 Pre-Order MVP; 7.4 Audience Building MVP; 7.5 Concierge MVP; 7.6 Wizard of Oz MVP; 7.7 Single Use Case MVP; 7.8 Other People's Product MVP; 7.9 We've Built an MVP, Now What?; Chapter 8: How Does Customer Development Work When You Already Have Customers?; 8.1 Adapting the MVP Concept; 8.2 Finding the Right Customers; 8.3 Customers Say the Magic Words; 8.4 Once You've Found Your Customers, Explain, Explain, Explain; 8.5 The Storytelling Demo; 8.6 Incognito Customer Development; 8.7 Show Me How You're Using Our Product; 8.8 Here's How to Use Our Product; 8.9 It Can Work For You, Too; Chapter 9: Ongoing Customer Development; 9.1 Who's Already Out of the Building?; 9.2 Who Can It Be, Knocking at Your Door?; 9.3 Closing the Loop; 9.4 Now You're Ready; Questions That Work; Questions for Any Customer Development Interview; Questions for an Existing Product; If It Works, Keep Asking It;