the rise of the saas product manager - why product management is more important than ever
Post on 13-Sep-2014
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DESCRIPTION
As the Software as a Service (SaaS) market continues to grow and change the landscape of IT products, some people are saying that the software product manager is an irrelevant and dying breed. While SaaS has changed some aspects for the Product Manager, such as the pace of new releases, the opportunity for increased influence of the user community and the ability to collect more useful data, these changes do not make the SaaS product manager irrelevant, but they do require the SaaS Product Manager to learn new skills and to use new tools in order for them to be effective and valuable in the world of SaaS. In this presentation that I presented at SaaS University in Oct 2012, I have demonstrate how the principles of product management continue to apply to SaaS companies and then present a survey of effective product management practices currently being used by SaaS Product Managers.TRANSCRIPT
The Rise of the SaaS
Product Manager Why Product Management Is More Important Than Ever!
Tom Evans
Lûcrum Marketing
@compellingpm
Discussion Agenda
• What Product Management Isn’t
• What Is Product Management?
• Product Management Practices in Saas Companies
This Isn’t Product Management
http://www.luminomagazine.com/mw/storyimages/1021_wide.jpg
• So what you do is you take the
specifications from the
customers and you bring them
down to the software
engineers?
• That, that's right.
• Well, then I gotta ask, then
why can't the customers just
take the specifications directly
to the software people, huh?
• Well, uh, uh, uh, because, uh,
engineers are not good at
dealing with customers.
These Aren’t Product Management Either
• PM sits in office and determines what they think the
customer wants.
• PM creates thick requirements document and expects that
engineering has all of the information they need.
• PM collects all requirements and gets cross-functional team
to prioritize.
• PM only writes technical specs and tries to tell engineering
how to do their job.
What is Product Management?
“Product Management ensures the
company delivers products that are
valuable for the customer, company and
partners throughout the entire product
lifecycle”
Managing Throughout the Product Lifecycle
What Does Product Management Do?
• Conduct market & competitive research
• Solicit, validate and clarify requirements from stakeholders
• Develop business case for major product investments
• Create product strategy and communicate requirements
• Define and defend the product positioning
• Prioritize/order requirements (User Stories)
• Validate resulting product with market
• Support marketing, sales team, channel (sales tools)
• Communicate clear & consistent market messages.
• Help achieve key business metrics
Most Important Aspect of Product Management
The aim of marketing is to know and understand the
customer so well that the product or service fits him and
sells itself.
Peter Drucker
Discover Market Needs That are Worthy of Solving!
Discovering/Understanding Market/User Needs
• User communities /
user groups
• Usage analytics
• A/B testing
• Feature requests
• Product advisory
committees
• Customer calls/visits
• Win/Loss analysis
• Social media
• Competitive analysis
• Support issues
• Industry analysts
• Potential customers
• RFPs
• Etc.
Balancing Needs of Multiple Constituents
The role of a product
manager is to serve as a
communications "hub" for
a publisher's software,
coordinating the different
and frequently conflicting
wishes, needs and
priorities of development,
sales, marketing and
customers. – Merrill R.
(Rick) Chapman (2004)
http://www.amazon.com/review/R3SJS38JIQMU8L
Creating a Profitable Product Strategy!
Product Management Practices for SaaS
• Define and improve key product metrics
• Create dynamic interactions with customer community
• Align customer feedback with product strategy
• Represent customers with development
• Apply usage analytics appropriately
• Create buzz around new capabilities
Improve Key Product Metrics
• Metrics that drive your business model (e.g.)
– Conversion ratios/times
– Usage statistics
– Net Promoter Score®
– Support issues
– Implementation time
– Time to usage
– Cost of Acquisition
– Etc.
Dynamic Interactions with Community
• Participate in the conversation
• Actively solicit feedback
• Present new ideas for feedback
• Develop consensus
• Identify customers for working groups
• Build buzz about new features, capabilities, etc.
Represent Customers with Development
• User Stories are a start of a conversation around a need to
be met.
– Elaborate via a grooming process
– Engage customer working groups to elaborate
requirements
• Regularly demonstrate working software to customer
working groups (after each iteration)
• Give customer working group first access to final version
Align Customer Feedback with Strategy
• Case Study - Mint.com
• Many users requesting Quicken/MS Money type features.
• Not their value proposition, not their target market
• Clearly understood their key user persona & thus their
product strategy.
• What if they had responded to customer requests (not
their target market, would have changed their positioning,
etc.)
Apply Usage Analytics
• Application of analytics depends on user interaction
– How often and how complex of interaction
• Simple workflows
– Analytics provide valuable insight
– Easy to do A/B testing
• Complex interactions
– Analytics is an important indicator, but in and of itself is
not usually sufficient
– Must understand context via customer discovery
Create Buzz Around New Capabilities
• Challenge: no major launch events to build buzz
• Active participation in online community and other
online/social media
• Plan schedule of new capabilities to create bundles that
synergistically increase customer value
• Make major announcements around bundle of new
capabilities
Characteristics of a Successful Product Manager
• Passionate about understanding market needs
• Engages well with customers & non-customers at all levels
• Provides leadership (vision, strategy) for their products
• Works well with and develops respect with all parts of the
organization
• Understands how their product supports corporate
strategy, goals, objectives
• Delivers requirements to development supported by
market evidence
Acknowledgements
• Tom Hale, Chief Product Office, HomeAway
• Erik Huddleston, Executive VP, Products and CTO, Dachis
Group
• Audrey Montgomery, Senior PM – SaaS Products,
Blackbaud (Convio)
• Denny Lecompte, VP – Products, SolarWinds
Copyright 2012 - LÛCRUM MARKETING
Thank You!
Tom Evans
Lûcrum Marketing
+1.512.961.5267
@compellingpm