Deciding new Products, Services or Features

This week I received Tuned In from Pragmatic Marketing.

I’m about a third of the way through the book right now and enjoying it. There are a lot of hands-on examples of how business hubris has lead them down the path of poor decisions because they weren’t ‘Tuned In’ to their prospects. By not figuring out what their prospects needed, the companies were launching products, services or features that were stinkers.

With the advent of social media and the web, I think there’s a balance when you’re deciding new products, services, or features, though, that extends beyond the prospect. Now that the customer is a strong marketing medium, you need to pay attention to them as well. The book inspired this post.

Here’s the approach that I take to deciding the priority for new products, services or features where I work:

Any of these factors might supersede another. At times, we’ve developed new features simply at the demand of very large prospects. It was a gamble, but we recognized that the investment would pay off even if we didn’t snag that particular client. I believe that a great roadmap should have all four of these initiatives in it.

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