//pragmatic leaders

Need Analysis

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SDR Fundamentals
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The actual job is to uncover what your customers truly need — not what you think they need. Need analysis is the bridge from assumptions to evidence.
Talvinder Singh, from a Pragmatic Leaders MVP sprint session

Need analysis is not a guess. It is a systematic process of discovering what your prospects really want, what problems they face, and where current solutions fall short. If you do not do this, you are building on a hypothesis, not a foundation.

Without clear knowledge of your customer's needs, your product risks missing the mark — no matter how slick the features or how aggressive the sales pitch.

The trap of assuming you know what the customer needs

As salespeople and product builders, it is tempting to believe your product answers your prospects' problems. But that is just a hypothesis — one that requires validation.

The actual job is to break down the prospect’s problem and grasp their needs and goals clearly. Only then can you confidently position your product as the right solution.

This is where need analysis comes in: a sales and product process designed to identify specific needs and determine how your company can help solve those problems.

The need analysis process: four steps to clarity

A solid need analysis process moves methodically through four stages: Assessment, Assignment, Analysis, and Agreement. Each step builds on the last to ensure alignment with your prospect and your product’s capabilities.

1. Assessment: uncover the desired business results

Start by evaluating what your prospect wants to accomplish. Do not settle for the first answer — dig deeper to uncover multiple desired results that matter to the business.

Ask questions like:

  • What options do you want to capitalize on?
  • Are there growth areas showing strong promise?
  • What critical business results are you focused on this year?
  • Which results are currently difficult to achieve?

This step surfaces the real outcomes your prospect is chasing — the foundation for meaningful conversations.

2. Assignment: agree on the business outcomes to address

Next, compile a list of intended business outcomes discovered so far. Then:

  • Check if anything important is missing.
  • Ask the prospect to prioritize the list: what is most urgent? Most important?
  • Understand existing plans, budget, and timeline for solutions.
  • Gain agreement on one or more assignments where you will collaborate.

This step ensures that you and the prospect are aligned on what success looks like and where your solution fits.

3. Analysis: diagnose the problem to solve

With assignment clarity, analyze the problem in detail. Identify obstacles preventing the desired outcomes and understand the customer journey.

Key questions include:

  • What is currently getting in the way?
  • Who is the target customer?
  • How will customer behavior need to change to reach the outcome?

This diagnostic work reveals the true pain points and areas where your product can provide leverage.

4. Agreement: define success measures

Finally, agree with the prospect on how success will be measured. This builds accountability and shared understanding.

Ask:

  • How would you describe success in measurable terms?
  • What ROI do you expect?
  • What are early indicators of progress?

This agreement sets expectations and enables tracking progress towards impact.

Why asking the right questions matters

The salesperson who asks thoughtful need analysis questions becomes a problem solver and trusted consultant — not just a vendor.

When you help prospects understand their problems more clearly, they are more likely to buy from you. You move from selling a product to solving a problem.

This approach builds long-term relationships and positions your company as a valuable partner.

Benefits of a thorough need analysis

A rigorous need analysis delivers multiple advantages:

  • A detailed roadmap for improving performance and prioritizing solutions
  • Clarity on how sales challenges interrelate and how to address them
  • Validation of sales strategy effectiveness and accuracy
  • Alignment of resources with current initiatives
  • Improved communication and understanding among stakeholders
  • Identification of leverage points and resource needs for turnaround
  • Clear objectives, goals, and milestones for success
  • Proper inputs for ongoing assessment and adaptation

These benefits reduce risk and increase your chances of closing deals that stick.

Implementing need analysis in product discovery

Need analysis is not just a sales step. It is foundational to product discovery and development.

Here is a practical framework to guide your product discovery using need analysis insights.

Step 1: Summarize user feedback

Aggregate insights from your user research — interviews, surveys, observations.

Focus on specific needs, preferences, and challenges users mention repeatedly.

Highlight acute pain points not addressed well by existing solutions.

Step 2: Conduct gap analysis

Use a structured gap analysis template to compare user needs against current market offerings.

The template includes:

SectionDescription
User NeedPrimary needs and challenges your target audience faces
Current SolutionsHow existing competitors or products address those needs
Gap (Unmet Need)Where current solutions fail or user needs have evolved
OpportunityHow your solution can better meet needs or create new value

This systematic approach aligns product development with real market demand.

Example: Hydration tracking app

User NeedCurrent SolutionsGap (Unmet Need)Opportunity for New Solution
Engaging trackingBasic reminder appsLack of engagement and personalizationGamified tracker with personalized goals and rewards
Integration with fitness goalsSeparate hydration and fitness appsNo holistic wellness integrationCombine hydration and fitness tracking in one app
Real-time monitoringManual input requiredUsers forget or misestimate intakeSmart bottle that auto-tracks water intake

By identifying these gaps, you highlight unique value propositions that differentiate your product.

The salesperson’s role in need analysis

Your job is to go beyond surface-level conversations. You must:

  • Listen carefully to understand explicit and implicit needs
  • Ask probing questions to uncover hidden challenges
  • Validate assumptions through evidence and data
  • Align solutions with prioritized business outcomes
  • Set clear success metrics with the customer

This discipline separates good salespeople from great consultants.

MeetingScene: A sales call illustrating need analysis

// scene:

Discovery call with a mid-size Indian SaaS company in Mumbai

You (Salesperson): “Can you share what business goals you're aiming to achieve this quarter?”

Prospect: “We want to reduce customer churn by 15% and improve onboarding speed.”

You (Salesperson): “What challenges are currently preventing that?”

Prospect: “Our onboarding is manual and inconsistent. Customers get confused early on and drop off.”

You (Salesperson): “Have you tried any solutions so far?”

Prospect: “We use generic tutorials and emails, but engagement is low.”

You (Salesperson): “If we help you automate onboarding with personalized guidance, how would you measure success?”

Prospect: “We'd track time to first value and churn rates monthly.”

Through these questions, the salesperson uncovers the real pain points, current gaps, and success criteria — laying the groundwork for a tailored solution.

// tension:

Aligning product capabilities with real business needs

SlackChat: Discussing need analysis insights with the product team

// thread: #product-team — Translating sales insights into product requirements
Rahul (Sales)From my calls, prospects want faster onboarding with less manual handholding.
Meera (Product)That matches the feedback from our user interviews. They find the current flow confusing.
Anjali (Engineering)We can build a guided onboarding flow with checkpoints and adaptive help.
Rahul (Sales)Also, customers want measurable improvements — like time to first transaction.
Meera (Product)Let's add analytics to track that and validate impact.
You (PM)Great. This need analysis will guide our MVP features and success metrics.

FieldExercise: Conduct a gap analysis for your product idea

  1. Gather recent user feedback — surveys, interviews, or support tickets.
  2. List the primary user needs and challenges mentioned.
  3. Research existing solutions in your market and how they address these needs.
  4. Identify gaps — where users remain underserved, frustrated, or where needs have evolved.
  5. Outline opportunities your product could pursue to fill these gaps.
  6. Share your findings with your team to align on product focus.

This exercise will help you ground your product decisions in real user needs and market realities.

FromTheField: Why need analysis is the foundation of successful products

JudgmentExercise

// learn the judgment

You are a PM at an early-stage fintech startup in Bangalore. Your sales team reports that prospects want better fraud detection, faster loan approvals, and seamless KYC. Your product currently offers basic KYC and manual fraud checks. You have limited engineering capacity for the next quarter.

The call: How do you prioritize which customer need to address first based on need analysis? What criteria guide your decision?

Your reasoning:

PracticeExercise

// practice

You are a PM at an early-stage fintech startup in Bangalore. Your sales team reports that prospects want better fraud detection, faster loan approvals, and seamless KYC. Your product currently offers basic KYC and manual fraud checks. You have limited engineering capacity for the next quarter.

Your task: How do you prioritize which customer need to address first based on need analysis? What criteria guide your decision?

your reasoning:

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