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Day 2: Product Conceptualization

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Section A-Product Pragmatic Sprint Accelerated MVP-1 Week
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day 2: product conceptualization0%
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Morning (Value Proposition and MVP Definition): Apply the Value Proposition Canvas (Strategyzer) to refine your USP and MVP features. This helps focus on what’s truly important for the customer.

Objective Utilize the Value Proposition Canvas to fine-tune your product's USP and identify the essential MVP features that will deliver real value to your customers.

Method: Value Proposition Canvas (VPC) 1. Customer Segment Analysis: - Outline your target customer segments. Deeply understand their jobs-to-be-done, pains, and gains in relation to your product concept. - Understand the Customer Side of the Canvas - Customer Jobs: Start by identifying the main tasks your target customers need to accomplish that your product can assist with. Think about both the practical and emotional jobs they're trying to complete. - Customer Pains: List out the specific problems, obstacles, or annoyances your customers face while trying to accomplish these jobs. - Customer Gains: Identify the benefits or outcomes your customers hope to achieve by completing their jobs. 2. Value Proposition Definition: - Align your product's features, advantages, and benefits with the customer's pains and gains, ensuring that your solution effectively addresses the core needs of your target market. - Connect to the Value Proposition Side - Pain Relievers: For each pain point identified, brainstorm how your product could alleviate this pain. These are potential features or aspects of your product that specifically target and resolve customer frustrations or challenges. - Gain Creators: Similarly, for each desired gain, determine how your product can contribute or enhance these outcomes. These are features that provide additional value, going beyond just solving a problem to enhancing the customer's experience or results. 3. MVP Feature Identification: - From the alignment identified in the VPC, select the key features that your MVP must have to solve the core problems and deliver the promised benefits to your customers. - Define MVP Features - Prioritize High-Impact Features: Look at your list of pain relievers and gain creators. Prioritize features based on their potential impact on the customer's experience and their feasibility. The key here is to focus on the most critical features that directly address the primary pains and gains. These become your MVP features. - Consider Simplicity and Viability: The MVP should be as simple as possible while still being viable. It means focusing on fewer, high-impact features that can be developed and launched quickly to start learning from real user interactions. - Iterate and Validate: Remember, the MVP is not the final product but a starting point. Be prepared to iterate on your feature list as you receive feedback and learn more about your customer's needs.

Tools 1. Value Proposition Canvas Template: - A structured tool to visually map out and test how your product's value proposition aligns with customer needs and expectations. - Sections include: Customer Jobs, Pains, Gains, Products & Services, Pain Relievers, Gain Creators. 2. Strategyzer Access (Optional): - For teams preferring digital collaboration, Strategyzer’s online platform provides interactive tools to work on the VPC in a collaborative, real-time manner.

Example VPC for a Hydration Tracking App Customer Jobs: Stay hydrated easily - Pains: Forgetting to drink water - Gains: Achieving daily hydration goals - Product & Services: Hydration tracking app - Pain Relievers: Reminders and tracking - Gain Creators: Gamification and rewards Customer Jobs: Monitor health - Pains: Hard to track water intake - Gains: Improving overall wellness - Product & Services: Integration with health apps - Pain Relievers: Syncs with fitness trackers - Gain Creators: Provides health insights Customer Jobs: Enjoy drinking water - Pains: Boredom with plain water - Gains: Fun hydration experience - Product & Services: Flavor recommendations - Pain Relievers: Suggests recipes based on preferences - Gain Creators: Offers challenges and milestones This structured approach, utilizing the Value Proposition Canvas, you have a clear USP and a defined set of MVP features that are tightly aligned with your target customers' needs and expectations. This alignment is critical for moving forward with a product concept that is both viable in the market and valuable to your customers.

Using VPC to define MVP features

Practical Example: Hydration Tracking App MVP Using the Value Proposition Canvas, you've identified that your target customers (busy professionals) need a simple yet effective way to stay hydrated (Customer Job). They forget to drink water (Pain) and want to improve their daily water intake habits (Gain). - Pain Reliever: A feature that sends customizable, context-aware reminders to drink water, addressing the forgetfulness issue. - Gain Creator: A tracking feature that visually represents their daily water intake progress and rewards them for meeting goals, enhancing their motivation and satisfaction. For the MVP of the hydration tracking app, prioritize developing these two features: customizable reminders and a visually engaging tracking system with rewards. This approach directly addresses the primary customer pain and gain identified, making it a solid foundation for your MVP. Wrapping Up This structured approach to using the Value Proposition Canvas for defining MVP features ensures that the development focus remains tightly aligned with solving real customer problems and enhancing their experience. By prioritizing features based on the VPC, you can develop a more targeted, viable product that is ready to meet the market's needs right from its initial launch.

Afternoon (User Persona and Customer Journey Mapping): Create user personas with Xtensio and draft a simplified customer journey map using Miro or Lucidchart to visualize user interactions with the MVP.

Drafting a Customer Journey Map with Miro or Lucidchart or Figma Step 1: Define Stages of the Journey Begin by outlining the key stages of the customer journey with your product, from initial awareness through to adoption and loyalty. Common stages include Awareness, Consideration, Decision, and Retention. Step 2: Choose Your Tool - Tools: Miro (https://miro.com) or Lucidchart (https://lucidchart.com) - Selection: Choose based on your preference for real-time collaboration features (Miro) or more detailed diagramming options (Lucidchart). Step 3: Create the Journey Map - Use the chosen tool to create a new document or board for your journey map. - Lay out the stages of the journey you've defined as columns or steps in the process. - For each stage, add rows or layers that detail the user's actions, thoughts, emotions, pain points, and moments of delight. Use the information from your user personas to inform these details. - Incorporate touchpoints where the user interacts with your product and any opportunities for improvement you've identified. Step 4: Analyze and Apply Insights Review the completed journey map to identify critical touchpoints, areas where users might experience friction, and opportunities to exceed expectations. Use these insights to refine your MVP features and overall product strategy.

Example Reference For inspiration and a more in-depth guide on creating user personas, the Figma Community Plugin "Indian Personas" can be a valuable reference, offering ready-made persona templates that cater to various user demographics. By completing these activities, you'll have a solid foundation of user insights represented in engaging, visual formats. These tools not only help in conceptualizing the user experience but also serve as constant reminders of who you're designing for, keeping the user at the heart of your product development journey.