Product Management - Maturity Model
Product Management - Maturity Model
Product
Excellence
Maturity
Model
A guide to building customer-centric products
Table of CONTENTS
CHAPTER ONE
CHAPTER TWO
22
CONCLUSION
truly use
But what exactly is an excellent product?
and love—
are those Excellent products—products that people truly
that solve use and love—are those that solve real
real problems and cater to the needs of users.
problems
and cater to The product teams behind excellent products
4
We’ve coined these pillars
the Product Excellence
methodology
5
“ Simply knowing what
these three pillars are
isn’t enough
GREA
DELIVE
There must be a culture and processes in place
that give product teams the room to put the
methodology into practice. And Product
Excellence isn’t a one-and-done achievement, it
is an ongoing process—one that organizations
must persist in to continuously deliver great
products that customers need.”
6
The Product Excellence Maturity Model is a
framework that helps product teams develop
the foundations they need to build excellent,
customer-centric products. The model codifies
effective product management processes,
helping to identify where an organization falls
along the three pillars of Product Excellence
along with next steps for improvement.
7
8
CHAPTER ONE
The five
levels of the
Product
Excellence
Maturity
Model
9
LEVEL ONE
Intuition-
driven
As the co-founder of a three-year-old SaaS company, Sarah often
wears the hat of a product manager. Her company has seen
moderate success, and they're edging their way towards
profitability but can't quite make it over their current revenue
plateau. Sarah is excited to move forward with a new product idea
that she is sure will wow the market. Unfortunately, there is
considerable disagreement amongst the founding team & the
product team on what to build next.
10
“
A lot of At Level 1, product managers dream of
11
LEVEL TWO
Introducing
process
12
Level 2 product organizations understand that they
“Only about
need to interface with users. They have basic
10% of
processes for talking to customers and recording
institutional
feature requests, but still analyze inputs at face
knowledge
value rather than digging deeper into underlying
[about the
needs.
product] makes
it to a
Additionally, due to a lack of a formal system to centralized
gather and synthesize product feedback from place. 90%
diverse sources, there is no real collaboration stays in email,
between the product team and customer-facing Slack, in
teams, resulting in valuable insights slipping through people’s
the cracks. Because the product team works in a personal notes,
silo, there is a fundamental disconnect between in people’s
product objectives, overall company strategy, and heads, or on
the broader organization. And, while there may be the whiteboard.
some effort to prioritize features, frameworks usually This is a huge
don't go beyond quantifying value vs. effort. missed
opportunity.
Lack of clear objectives is apparent in the roadmap.
13
LEVEL THREE
Listening to
customers
Sarah spends her time thinking more about the underlying needs
behind what customers tell her in interviews and begins to
document everything in the company's internal wiki. Sarah's also
invested in training her colleagues, helping them understand how
to dig deeper into the issues that customers face. Her product
team has a clear direction and defined KPIs to hold themselves
accountable for moving the product forward. That said, they are
still having a hard time translating insights into a coherent product
vision and strategy.
14
While product managers start talking to users at Level 2, Level 3 is
and needs. These insights then inform product vision & strategy.
“Get into Now, PMs are learning how to ask the right probing questions,
that curious, and are beginning to document and pass on necessary context
mindset and with enough patience to ask why. Instead of rushing through
away from conversations, biasing users with leading questions, and skipping
15
LEVEL FOUR
Aligned on
user needs
Sarah and her team are 100% in alignment with their customers'
needs. Everyone works together to gather deep user insights,
cross-reference new product ideas against a wealth of customer
data, and update the vision and strategy according to findings. And
the team is all moving forward together. When asked about their
direction, everyone can clearly articulate why certain features are
prioritized over others and how each step of the journey builds
towards their long-term product and business goals.
16
“
Great product At this point, product teams have a deep
trajectory—go research.
beyond merely
At Level 4, each member of the product team has
translating user
the experience and training they need to conduct
insights into
valuable product discovery and user interviews.
product
The team is empowered to ask better questions,
requirements.
and there are rigorous processes in place to
They treat them as
validate potential solutions. All features going into
critical inputs,
production are prioritized based on real needs
applying their
and aligned top-down as well as bottom-up.
deep expertise
Everyone on the product team holds themselves
around the
accountable for their role in the product.
market, the trends,
the technology, Product objectives tie to broader business
and their team’s outcomes and goals, and the entire product team
unique strengths moves collectively towards the company North
to form a clear Star. For the first time, product roadmaps
product vision and simultaneously communicate why some ideas
strategy for how to are prioritized over others. All this is codified in a
get there.” living document—one that shifts and evolves with
John Cutler
Head of Product Maturing to a Level 5 product organization is
Research & Education about sharing this context so every single person
17
LEVEL FIVE
A thriving
product
culture
18
“ The best product
teams and
organizations operate
with a high degree of
unity and cohesion
ACHIEV
”
of product strategy, and alignment around
execution. Only then do you see teams achieving
Level 5 of Product Excellence maturity.
19
Level 5 is the pinnacle of Product
Here’s what this
Excellence maturity, and companies at this
looks like in
stage have achieved a deep understanding
practice:
of customer needs. This makes it easy for
product and understands their role in the encouraging them to renew; they
members share product ownership and the gap between customer needs
individual level, pulling in the requisite clarifying where the product falls
data and context to inform decisions. short for the product team.
staying updated.
20
“ Great product teams
have empathy and a
deep understanding of
what customers want.
DEE
SaaS helps bring companies closer to their customers
because if you fail to deliver, it’s very easy for a customer to
churn. To deliver Product Excellence as a product
organization, you need to develop empathy at scale. This is
why it is mission critical for product teams to pull data and
insights from a wide range of sources and applications,
including sales, support, success and surveys, not to mention
internal teammates. Your product team can synthesize these
inputs to ensure they have the pulse of the market.”
Bella Renney
Head of Product
21
CHAPTER TWO
Three steps
to achieve
Product
Excellence
maturity
Reaching Level 5 of Product Excellence maturity requires an
authentic curiosity about your users, strategic focus,
transparent communication, and buy-in from your team—
and that only grows over time.
22
“ Visitor expectations
are constantly
increasing
VISITO
They covet lightning-fast speed, brilliant design,
and proactive support. Winning digital companies
have to adapt an ongoing, user-focused mindset
in order to build excellent products and deliver a
high-quality user experience...anything less is
leaving money on the floor.”
SPEED
DESIGN Scott Voigt
CEO
23
STEP ONE
Janelle Estes
Chief Insights Officer
24
Here’s how product teams can start
gathering and leveraging deep user insights
Audit all existing user and product inputs. Consider all the different
speak to a wide range of users via interviews, sit in on sales calls, and
continuous access to fresh insights and easily track and make sense of
“why” behind customer insights and use that knowledge to inform the
Learn more:
How to gather and leverage deep user insights: A guide
to becoming a customer-driven organization
25
STEP TWO
26
To start, create a living document that
codifies product vision and strategy that
considers the following questions
Where should your organization be in 3-5 years? Base this long-term
product be in the mid-term and how does the team aim to get there?
What objectives can you pursue in the short-run to advance your mid-
platform reliability, everyone working on the product knows why their work
matters. What objective will you define for your team’s next cycle?
insight or data point surfaced can have direct implications on the kind of
Learn more:
Defining objectives and key results for your product team
Why you need a product strategy framework to build a great product
27
STEP THREE
Involve stakeholders in
product development
When the product teams roll out their strategy and roadmap to the
company, the goal is not to inspire shock and surprise. People
need to be bought into the whole process and feel like they’ve
contributed along the way. After all, everyone’s success—from top-
level executives to individual contributors—is tied in one way or
another to the product.
Establishing regular rituals and processes can help the product team
engage stakeholders across the company and ensure that they feel
heard. Additionally, roping in stakeholders unlocks knowledge,
expertise, and insights normally outside of the product team’s
domain. This broadened perspective can lead to better products.
Anna Boyarkina
Head of Product
28
How to involve stakeholders in product
development
• Establish clear processes for submitting feature ideas, relaying
analyses.
meetings.
These rituals will become the core drivers of a mature product team.
And they ensure that lines of communication stay open and flowing at
all times.
29
CONCLUSION
Build excellent
products by
leveling up
your team
Product Excellence is all about creating an environment where
every part of the organization can execute together toward shared
product goals. Once product makers understand where their
company currently stands, they can define the best path forward
when it comes to vision, strategy, and execution.
30
About
productboard
productboard is a customer-driven product management
system that empowers teams to get the right products to
market, faster. It provides a complete solution for product
teams to understand user needs, prioritize what to build
next, align everyone on the roadmap, and engage with their
customers. productboard is easy to use, enables company-
wide collaboration, and integrates into existing workflows.