Tag Archives: agile development methodology

Product Marketing for an Agile World

At this month’s OCRI Zone5ive meeting I delivered a presentation entitled Product Marketing for an Ever-changing World. [The Ottawa Centre for Research and Innovation (OCRI) is Ottawa’s leading member-based economic development corporation for fostering the advancement of the region’s globally competitive knowledge-based institutions and industries.] The goal of this presentation was to educate the Zone5ive membership on how they can become more effective as the development team shifts to Agile development. This transition does not just impact the development team, it also impacts Product Marketing, Product Management and Marketing.

The net result is that product marketing (and product management) teams will have the ability to engage customers early and often throughout the project which will increase the chances of a successful product (or release) launch. In other words, by engaging customers during the project, they will feel like they helped shape the release (or capability or feature) and so will be in a better position to talk to the press and industry analysts. They will also help you with your messaging, i.e. they will provide with real value statements.

Clearly Define your Product Manager Role!

As software product companies adopt agile principles, the role of the Product Manager is changing and therefore needs to be clearly defined and established. As more and more companies adopt agile principles, people aspiring to be Product Managers need to understand what’s in store for them over the next 5 – 10 years. Looking back over the past 5 – 10 years the greatest influencer on developing products is the increase in the amount of change. It used to be that Waterfall methodologies actually worked well. Why? The reason is that once all the up-front requirements gathering and design was completed the amount of change over the course of the implementation phase was negligible. Projects that lasted a year and delivered product that was still relevant, were quite common.

Times are different, we as consumers love choices; we love changing our minds; we love new and innovative products. Even users of B2B products see what’s happening with the technology in our private lives – for example, searching for information on the Web where variations in search terms are easily handled and returns the highest relevant item has become standard – so why can’t my B2B product have the same capabilities? This all ripples up to the developer of the product. Bottom-line is that the ability to embrace change is key to surviving … and with the amount of change increasing, this is becoming quite a challenge.

So the trend of switching from Waterfall methodologies to Agile methodologies as a way of embracing change continues. More and more software product companies (and hardware product companies with a software component to them) are adopting, to some degree, an Agile methodology (Scrum, XP, etc.) to help them gracefully embrace the change that will inevitably happen. How this happens is that the amount of up-front activity is reduced to the bare minimum (as compared to the Waterfall methodology) – essentially what’s required to support the first sprint/iteration is completed up-front. The consequence, however, is that the up-front work for each feature/enhancement takes place when needed during the project – more of a Kanban (pull) approach.

Agile methodologies (Scrum in particular) introduces the role of Product Owner. There is much debate as to whether this new role is in fact the Product Manager or what activities the Product Manager now performs. The Product Manager role is very broad – it encompasses strategic activities related to the current and future target markets, technical activities related to the actual product and communications/training/support activities related to launch and sales. The technical activities of the Product Manager role are very closely aligned with the activities of the Product Owner. In smaller companies these roles can be supported by a single person and as the company grows multiple people will be needed; split between Technical Product Manager and Product Owner where they work very closely together. Companies that already have an established Technical Product Manager role are in a good position to make this transition. The key is that this role must extend from the customer/users to the development team – user intimacy, feature prioritization, requirements definition and prioritization, customer validation, etc. are all part of the role. Technical Product Managers that are too deep into requirements and design need to “move” towards the users – i.e. they need to be more engaged with the users of the product.

Companies that do not have the role of Product Managers crisply defined, will struggle in their transition. Product Managers that do (or attempt to do) all of the activities encompassed by all segments of the role will not be able to properly embrace the cadence and needs of the Agile methodology. In other words, the ability to provide the up-front work at a just-in-time pace during the project will be severely hampered. Companies need to clearly define this “customer/user to development” role and staff it properly. Responding to change throughout the entire project is vital … customer feedback comes quickly, business objectives/situations change – all of which needs to be handled very quickly and in time so that development is always busy and working on the most important items.

So the bottom-line is that product companies need to staff a role – Technical Product Manager – that spans the length between the users and the development team. Whether this role is the same as the Product Owner, depends on the size of the company. Companies also need to staff a role – Marketing Product Manager – that looks for and understands the markets that are suitable for the company to embrace. For start-up companies that only have the resources to staff one position – staff the Technical Product Manager role (as defined above) first – understanding your users and building your product that delights them will pay huge dividends in the long run.

Transitioning from Waterfall to Agile

Is your transition plan in place? Are you thinking ahead to that inevitable moment? Summer holidays are starting to happen. I can, with almost 100% certainty, state that a product manager in some company will return from holidays to hear that familiar refrain – ” we have switched to agile … oh by the way where’s the backlog”.

So before that happens when you, Mr. Product Manager, return from your fabulously relaxing holiday and you get even further behind, here are some important ideas to ponder and some key items to have at the ready before you head out on your holidays.

  1. Make sure that you have a system and process in place to easily and quickly manage your list of enhancements (the requests from customers and what you need to do to your product to help increase sales in current and potential markets). In the old methodology you were able to assemble and debate the features on the list early in the project and that’s what development agreed to build over an agreed upon timeframe. Now however the cadence of your development team (e.g. the sprint or iteration length) is short and so you need to be able to re-prioritize your list very quickly; you need to add and prioritize new items easily and quickly; and you need to be able to handle changes in business priorities very quickly. Before every sprint your list needs to be up-to-date.
  2. Make sure you reset the expectations of your executive team. In the old methodology the executive either fully participated in creating the list of features or they were peripheral to the process but kept their finger on the status of the meetings. In any event, the result was a list of features that development agreed to build within the agreed timeframe. Now with an agile methodology your executive has visibility at the sprint level. In other words, the horizon of agreement is far shorter with this new methodology; they do not have the full list of features that will be in the release – it is revealed sprint by sprint. The upside for your executive team is that the ability to embrace and react to change is far easier than with the old methodology.
  3. Make sure that you have a system in place that gives as much visibility of the project status as possible to as many stakeholders as possible. Your system should be easy to update from one sprint to the next. Executives like the high level picture – what enhancements are done, which ones are underway and which ones are ‘on deck’. Make this information available to them in real-time and make sure that the status is updated as soon as the state changes.
  4. Make sure that you have the ability and a process to assess when you have developed enough value for the release. Early in the project define the objectives of the release. Then later in the project, evaluate what has been completed against the objectives at the end of every sprint. At some point you will need to decide that you have enough value to go to market with. Everyone needs to be in agreement as to how this will be evaluated.
  5. Make sure that you gain an understanding with development on the product manager vs. product owner roles. Understand the product owner role and the differences / similarities with your role as a product manager. If you take on the product owner role then make sure that development understands that you still need to leave the office and visit customers – maybe at the most inopportune time.

If you think through these points and come up with an action plan, your transition will be relatively smooth.

Are you now a Product Manager or a Product Owner?

Agile has certainly changed the way Product Managers are perceived. In fact it raises the question within organizations that are moving to an Agile environment about what Product Management does. It raises the role of the product manager and the need for product management to the executive ranks – if it was not there already. But even though product managers have that title, are they really performing this role in an Agile environment. There are many blogs and tweets about this topic; my goal is to determine how many product managers in companies that use an Agile methodology actually perform the tasks of a product manager or do they in fact perform the tasks of a product owner.

Before we get too far ahead of ourselves, let’s look at some of the key activities for a product manager and for a product owner.

Product Managers own the product roadmap and the release strategy – they worry about the big picture. They work with all the stakeholders to maintain the roadmap and thus each of the releases and the vision for those releases are part of their responsibility. To do this effectively they need to get out and visit customers and be “plugged-in” to their target markets and the problems these markets have. They define the priority of the enhancements needed for the product based on meeting business objectives. To them the success of the product is paramount. They look for new markets for the product or ways to expand the reach of the product in existing markets.

Product Owners are responsible for delivering to the release plan – they are heavily involved in the day-to-day operations. Their focus is iteration by iteration. They write/elaborate user stories and prioritize them for each iteration so that iteration deadlines can be met. They virtually “live” with the development team(s), attending all stand-up meetings through each of the iterations. They understand the user stories extremely well and deep.

So now onto the poll.

[poll id=”3″]

If you picked that you are a Product Manager and primarily perform product owner activities, please answer the following.

[poll id=”4″]

Both roles are key to delivering products. Smaller companies in most cases cannot staff both positions. But it’s imperative that all companies understand the difference in the roles and make sure that both are adequately covered and that clear lines of delineation are drawn between the roles.

Thanks for participating.

Is your Product Management process Agile?

I’ve read many articles on whether product managers need to become agile as the development team embraces an Agile development methodology. Saeed wrote a great article for the March ’09 pragmaticmarketing.com newsletter proving that, in accordance with the Agile Manifesto, product managers have been living the elements of the Manifesto for some time (but may not have known it). Having been with companies that decided to ditch non-Agile methods and embrace Agile development the biggest challenge for my PM team was not for the product managers to become agile (or more agile) but instead the timing of when they perform their activities. Long gone where the days of a 6-8 week planning cycle where product managers brought everything to the table and the horse-trading began. It now meant that the team had to on a regular, timely basis (synchronized with the iteration cycle) prioritize new requests for the backlog, analyze the current backlog, and describe the usage scenario and key requirements as quickly as possible … as well as meeting with customers, performing market research, liaising with the development team on the work items of the current iteration, etc.

It also meant that the team became engaged with the project throughout its lifecycle on a more consistent basis instead of cyclical as was the case with the non-Agile method – i.e. the PM resource loading for the project remained relatively constant. It also meant that they needed to iterate through the requirements gathering / analysis / documentation process. First was to understand the top 5 requirements that meet the request and convey that to the development team. Next was to drill a little deeper in areas where dev neede more understanding. And lastly was to stop, when dev understood what was needed (I recommend reading Lean Software Development by Poppendieck – it provides a great discipline for this type of an environment).

In order to become business-driven in an agile world, product management processes need to be tuned so that product managers can perform all the activities that are needed so that business objectives are met.