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Despite the wide acceptance of Lean approaches and
customer-development strategies, many product teams still have
difficulty putting these principles into meaningful action.
That’s where The Customer-Driven Playbook comes in. This
practical guide provides a complete end-to-end process that will
help you understand customers, identify their problems,
conceptualize new ideas, and create fantastic products they’ll
love. To build successful products, you need to continually test
your assumptions about your customers and the products you build.
This book shows team leads, researchers, designers, and managers
how to use the Hypothesis Progression Framework (HPF) to formulate,
experiment with, and make sense of critical customer and product
assumptions at every stage. With helpful tips, real-world examples,
and complete guides, you’ll quickly learn how to turn Lean theory
into action. Collect and formulate your assumptions into hypotheses
that can be tested to unlock meaningful insights Conduct
experiments to create a continual cadence of learning Derive
patterns and meaning from the feedback you’ve collected from
customers Improve your confidence when making strategic business
and product decisions Track the progression of your assumptions,
hypotheses, early ideas, concepts, and product features with
step-by-step playbooks Improve customer satisfaction by creating a
consistent feedback loop
If you're striving to make products and services that your
customers will love, then you'll need a customer-driven
organization. As companies transform their businesses to meet the
demands of the digital age, they find themselves grappling with
uniquely human challenges. Organizational knowledge becomes siloed,
employees move to safeguard their expertise, and customer data
creates polarization and infighting between teams. All of these
challenges widen the distance between the people who make your
products and the customers who use them. To meet today's
challenges, companies need to do more than build processes for
customer-driven products. They need to create a customer-driven
culture. With the help of his friend and mentor Monty Hammontree,
Travis Lowdermilk takes readers through the cultural transformation
of the Developer Division at Microsoft. This book shows readers how
to "hack" their culture and reduce the distance between them and
their customers' needs. It's a uniquely personal story that's told
amidst a cultural revolution at one of the largest software
companies in the world. This story acts as your guide. You'll learn
how to: Establish a Common Language: Help employees change their
thinking and actions Build Bridges, Not Walls: Treat product
building as a team sport Encourage Learning Versus Knowing: Help
your team understand their customers Build Leaders That Build Your
Culture: Showcase star employees to inspire others Meet Teams Where
They Are: Make it easy for teams to to adopt vital behavior changes
Make Data Relatable: Move beyond numbers and focus on empathizing
with customers
How do you design engaging applications that people love to use?
This book demonstrates several ways to include valuable input from
potential clients and customers throughout the process. With
practical guidelines and insights from his own experience, author
Travis Lowdermilk shows you how usability and user-centered design
will dramatically change the way people interact with your
application. Learn valuable strategies for conducting each stage of
the design process - from interviewing likely users and discovering
your application's purpose to creating a rich user experience with
sound design principles. User-Centered Design is invaluable no
matter what platform you use or audience you target. Explore
usability and how it relates to user-centered design Learn how to
deal with users and their unique personalities Clarify your
application's purpose, using a simple narrative to describe its use
Plan your project's development with a software development life
cycle Be creative within the context of your user experience goals
Use visibility, consistency, and other design principles to enhance
user experience Collect valuable user feedback on your prototype
with surveys, interviews, and usability studies
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