Product Vision

Before planning or taking any action, it is important to first have a bird’s eye view of what your general aims should be.

Sit down, either alone, or with your vision-minded partners, and hash things out using the product vision table below (or something similar that works optimally for your team). 

Be tactile – use a white board (the bigger the better), and/or physical sheets of paper or large note cards or post-it notes and a product vision board.  Some teams, especially those who must work remotely, will use dedicated electronic tools to approximate this process.

Go over the essentials of your product.

Essential Questions

Note: use a product vision board, or something like it, to go over these questions and to record your hashed-out plan.
  • What is our minimum viable product – the main problem that our idea will solve?
  • Are we certain that this problem has not already been solved by an existing tool or product?
  • Is it partially solved?  If so, would it be more strategic to use what exists and add to it, or to start completely over with a competing product?
  • What components of our idea are absolutely essential to solving the main problem?
  • What aspects of our initial plan are “great ideas” (and probably worth implementing at some point) but not exactly essential?
  • Are we certain that solving this problem will have “business value,” i.e., generate sustainable revenue?
  • Who will use this product or plan?
  • Are there different user types who will use it in different ways?
  • If we will rely on users for your revenue, how much would they probably be willing/able to pay, and how many will we need to get (and keep) to be sustainable?

The Product Vision is not

  • a set-in-stone plan
  • a wish list
  • a collection of requirements previously set forth by various leaders in an organization
  • a set of steps tied to a specific finish / release date

The Product Vision is

  • an organized brainstorm
  • a chance to put all good ideas on the table and refine them based on practical needs and strategies
  • a chance to get collaboration and buy-in from all relevant stake holders
  • a chance to set out objectives with confidence that they are strategic and that it’s normal for some of them to change

With these answered, write up a Vision Statement that incorporates your answers.

Here is a classic version:

Remember: keep it simple.  Some of your ideas won’t be as good as you think they are. Expect and prepare for changes.  Take a fluid approach.  Only hesitate to change one: “what is the main problem that our idea will solve.”

The sample below is from Roman Pichler, a well-known Agile author.  This Product Vision board is a good starting-point.  Adapt it to your own team’s preferences and your own project’s needs.

https://www.romanpichler.com/tools/vision-board/

Tips for Improvement

  • Be(come) the owner of the Product vision
  • Share your Product vision, often
  • Develop your vision iteratively and incrementally
  • Focus on value for customers and users, not on technology

Taken from Ten Tips for Product Owners On The Product Vision

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Product Vision in

MANDAROON