productcamp rtp 2010 - strategy round table - wyatt isabel
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TRANSCRIPT
Leading Product StrategyA Facilitated Roundtable Discussion
Wyatt K. Isabel
October 30, 2010
Thank you to our sponsors:
Abstract
• Is your process for leading product strategy a competitive advantage or a hindrance? In this highly interactive discussion, we will explore current best practices of successful companies and pose key questions to all attendees to gain a greater understanding of what we, as practitioners, see as the most successful methods for leading product strategy, and together find answers to this perplexing question.
• As a resource, attendees may want to review Ch. 10 of ‘The Product Manager’s Desk Reference’ by Steven Haines, published 2009 by McGraw-Hill
Agenda
• Introductions• Expectations of participants• Discuss ‘What is Product Strategy?’• Use the Haines model as a discussion framework• The floor is always open for sharing of best practices!• Discuss SWOT model• Review of expectations and summarize
What is Product Strategy?
• “A strategy defines what is going to be done and how it’s going to be done.”
• “Strategies formulated by the product manager propose the execution parameters for a product or for the portfolio of products.”
• “Well-formulated strategies set the stage for robust, ongoing planning and decision making throughout the product life cycle.”
The Dynamic Continuum• “Strategy addresses an entire chain of events or actions that may be
separated in space and time along the value chain.”– Michael Porter suggests:
• Product team structure should follow product strategy (with the PM at the epicenter)
• Generic strategies can play a key role in any product strategy:– Product differentiation– Cost minimization– Market focus
• “Every product or business opportunity has a starting point and an objective.”– To be successful, you must know:
• Where you’ve been• Where you are now• Where you want to go
• “Dynamic strategic thinking helps product managers to process and accommodate higher levels of risk and uncertainty.”
Mastering the Waterfall
Corporate
Divisional
Product Line
• “Corporate strategy must interlock with division or business unit strategy which must, in turn, cascade into portfolio, product line, and product strategies”
• “Sorting out (or even adjusting) this cascade is one of the larger responsibilities of the product manager.”
• “Functional strategies tend to introduce elements that result in sub-optimization, which is the bane of good (product) strategy because it inhibits overall performance.”
Strategy in Your World
• “All too often, strategic plans are created to satisfy some corporate edict.”– Do you agree?
• “Strategic planning for products should not be a once-a-year event if your goal is success.”– Who drives and how often?
• “Another challenge for product managers…is reconciling strategic product planning with the annual budgeting process.”– Does strategy drive the budget, or vice versa?
The ‘Product as a Business’ Strategic Planning Model
Past and Current Period Product and ProductPerformance Data
Synthesis of Product And Product
Performance Data
Create or Refine the Vision for
The Product
Determine Strategic Options andOpportunities
Concept Feasibility Definition
New Product PlanningBaseline
A
B
C
D
The ‘Product as a Business’ Strategic Planning Model
• A. Establish a Baseline: compare where you’ve been to where you are now– How do you gather, organize and analyze the data?
– How do you synthesize the data into useful information?
– How do you organize and conduct product strategy reviews?
• B. Formulate or reformulate your vision for the product based on A. and cast it as the driving force for your product.
– How do you formulate where you want to go?
• C. Identify your strategic options by specifying how you will employ all elements of the marketing mix and other supporting business functions to achieve your market objectives.
– How do you leverage your cross functional team to assist you in this task?
• D. Link your strategic options to the Product Management Life Cycle Model– How effectively does your team feed the strategy into the PMLCM?
Using The SWOT Model
Strengths Opportunities
Weaknesses Threats
Using the SWOT Model
• Strengths: How is your product positively differentiated from its rivals?
• Weaknesses: Identify the causals that explain why a product is performing poorly against its rivals.
• Threats: What factors/events in the marketplace can cost you customers and/or market share?
• Opportunities: How will you leverage strengths, overcome weaknesses and respond to threats to achieve success?
Summary• “Product Managers have the responsibility of
creating a vision and strategy for their products, consistent with division and company strategy.”
• “What is involved is a lot of hard work in collecting and using data to reveal secrets about the markets within which you operate, the customers you serve, the internal stakeholders who are supposed to deliver the systems and infrastructure elements that support the business, and excellent service in support of customers”.
• Have we met your session expectations?
Thank you to our sponsors: