The Product Manager's Desk Reference
Leadership
Produktentwicklung
Produktstrategie

The Product Manager's Desk Reference

Steven Haines, 2021

Inhaltsverzeichnis des Buches

  • Illustrations
  • Preface
  • Introduction
  • MODULE 1: Foundations of Product Management
  • Introduction to Module 1
  • CHAPTER 1
  • What Is Product Management?
  • Question 1: What Is a Product?
  • Product Lines
  • Product Portfolios
  • Solutions, Bundles, and Systems
  • Product Elements and Modules
  • Platforms
  • Question 2: What Is Management?
  • What Does a Product Manager Really Do?
  • The Product Management Life Cycle Model
  • Question 3: What Is Product Management?
  • Product Management: A Holistic Activity
  • Summary: Why Product Management Matters
  • CHAPTER 2: The Product Master Plan
  • The Purpose of a Master Plan
  • Plans Change
  • The Format of the Product Master Plan
  • The Value of a Product Master Plan
  • An Insurance Policy for Consistent Communication
  • The Basic Construction of the Product Master Plan
  • Product Business Documents
  • Organizational Information
  • Product Business Information
  • Customer and Market Data
  • Financial Information
  • Resources and Tools
  • A Personal Library
  • A Product Management Library
  • Summary
  • CHAPTER 3: Leadership: Creating Influence
  • You Are Always on Stage
  • Stay Calm, Even When Your Hair’s on Fire
  • Transformation
  • Important Leadership Values
  • Leadership Behaviors and Mindset
  • Your Leadership Experiences
  • Evaluation and Personal Development
  • Summary
  • CHAPTER 4: Leveraging Teams to Get Things Done
  • Product Teams vs. Project Teams
  • Agile Project Teams
  • Team Membership
  • Teaming Is Not Always Easy
  • Building Blocks of a Cross-Functional Product Team
  • Team Membership
  • Multicultural Product Team Issues
  • Distributed Development Teams
  • Product Team Responsibilities
  • Cross-Functional Product Team Membership
  • Clarifying Roles and Responsibilities
  • The Functional Support Plan
  • Team Membership Across the Life Cycle
  • Cross-Functional Teams in the Global Arena
  • Cross-Functional Team Leadership
  • Summary
  • CHAPTER 5: Problem-Solving, Decision-Making, and Prioritizing
  • The Importance of Decision-Making
  • Decision-Making and Problem Solving
  • Saving Grace: a Case Study About Decision-Making
  • Decision-Making Techniques
  • Combining Options
  • The Morphologic Box
  • The Decision Matrix
  • The Decision Tree
  • Analysis Paralysis and Rational Ignorance
  • Gut-Feel Decision-Making
  • Business Intelligence
  • Summary
  • CHAPTER 6: Finance for the Product Manager: Keeping Score
  • The Language of Business
  • The Basic Financial Statements
  • The Income Statement
  • The Balance Sheet
  • Cash Flow
  • Demystifying Discounted Cash Flow
  • Financial Planning for Product Managers
  • Creating Business Cases for Product Investments
  • Assembling Forecasts
  • Testing Planning Assumptions Using Sensitivity Analysis
  • Deriving Product Cost Models
  • Establishing Pricing Models
  • Preparing Product Budgets
  • Managing the Business
  • Making Sure the Product Is Achieving Its Financial Goals
  • Financial Ratios
  • Last Words on Ratios
  • Maturity Assessment: Placing the Product on the Life Cycle Curve
  • sing Scorecards and Other Evaluative Tools
  • Summary
  • MODULE 2: Building Insights and Driving Strategies by Making the Market Your Primary Focus
  • Introduction to Module 2
  • Market Data Matters
  • Customer and Market Insights Are Vital
  • A Market Insights Development Process
  • CHAPTER 7: The Playing Field and the Players: Analyzing the Industry and Competition
  • Becoming the Expert
  • What Is an Industry?
  • Putting Industry Evolution into Perspective
  • Carrying Out Industry Research
  • Securing Additional Data
  • Competitive Environment
  • Competitive Positioning
  • Gaining an Edge: Performance Counts
  • Competitive Intelligence in Your Company
  • Competitive Intelligence in Your World
  • Ethics in Competitive Intelligence
  • With Whom Do You Compete?
  • Competitor SWOT
  • How Do They Do What They Do?
  • Sizing Up the Competitive Landscape
  • The Final Analysis
  • Summary
  • CHAPTER 8: Finding Markets to Conquer by Understanding Customer Needs and Market Segments
  • The Common Denominator in Segmentation: Customer Needs
  • How Markets Are Segmented
  • Market Segments Are Dynamic
  • Describing the Target Market
  • They Don’t Know What They Don’t Know
  • Planning and Carrying Out Customer Visits
  • Capturing the Voice of the Customer
  • Conducting Customer Interviews
  • Using Personas and Customer Narratives to Capture Needs
  • Capturing the Customer’s Journey
  • Associating Customer Needs with Product Features
  • Summary
  • CHAPTER 9: Preparing to Set Your Mileposts: Forecasting for the Product Manager
  • Forecasting and Market Potential
  • Forecasts Are Built on Beliefs About the Future
  • Validating Assumptions and Applying Customer Preferences
  • Forecasting Is a Cross-Functional Exercise
  • Sales Forecasting
  • Validating the Forecast
  • Demand Planning
  • Summary
  • CHAPTER 10: Product Strategy Formulation
  • Strategy Is a Dynamic Continuum
  • Strategizing Is Like Solving a Puzzle
  • Cascading Strategies
  • Dynamic Strategy for the Product Manager
  • Strategy in Your World
  • The Product Strategy Formulation Process
  • Using the Product Strategy Formulation Process
  • Baselining the Business of the Product
  • Organizing the Data
  • External Data: Industry and Competition
  • Customer Activity
  • Organizational Capabilities and Financial Health
  • Capturing Product Performance Data
  • Life Cycle State
  • The Marketing Mix
  • Company Resources That Contribute to the Product’s Business
  • Synthesizing Data and Identifying Opportunities
  • Your Product’s Future
  • Establishing Goals
  • Identifying Strategic Options
  • Linking Your Strategy to a Roadmap
  • Did We Get There?
  • Summary
  • MODULE 3: The Start of the Product’s Journey
  • Introduction to Module 3
  • Limits and Benefits of Processes
  • Importance of the Right Cadence
  • Faster Is Not Always Better, but It Can’t Hurt
  • Organization of the Chapters in This Module
  • CHAPTER 11: Making a Molehill Out of a Mountain: Linear Product Planning and Prioritization
  • Linear Product Planning
  • What’s the Big Idea?
  • Categorization of Product Ideas
  • Sorting Out Opportunities
  • “So What?”: The Value Proposition for the Opportunity
  • Clarifying Your Identity with a Positioning Statement
  • Selection and Prioritization
  • Managing Rejected Opportunities
  • Securing Approval to Move to the Next Phase: The Concept Review
  • Is There Really a Business Here? Assessing Feasibility
  • Clarifying Roles, Responsibilities, and Deliverables
  • Marketing
  • Product Development/Engineering/IT
  • Finance
  • Customer Service
  • Sales/Account Management
  • Operations
  • Supply Chain
  • Legal/Regulatory/Compliance
  • The Business Case
  • Characteristics of Strong Business Cases
  • Activities and Sequencing
  • Business Case Structure
  • Section 1: Framing
  • Section 2: Customer Context and Problems
  • Section 3: Industry and Competitive Environment
  • Section 4: Overall Market Context
  • Section 5: Product or Solution
  • Section 6: Forecast and Pricing
  • Section 7: Scenario Planning
  • Section 8: Financial Analysis
  • Section 9: Operations and Integration
  • Section 10: Go to Market/Launch
  • Section 11: Risk Assessment
  • Section 12: Review and Recommendation
  • Make Versus Buy
  • Carrying Out a Make Versus Buy Analysis: An Example
  • The Decision Matrix for the Feasibility Phase
  • Summary
  • CHAPTER 12: Appearances Are Everything: Defining and Designing the Product
  • Product Definition Documents
  • The PRD Outline and Template
  • Managing Requirements
  • Eliciting Requirements
  • Defining Requirements
  • Organizing Documents
  • Managing Requirements from Beginning to End
  • Prioritizing Requirements
  • Inspections and Peer Reviews
  • Requirements Management and the Product Life Cycle
  • The Evolving Product Design
  • The Product Definition Phase Review
  • Summary
  • CHAPTER 13: Product Planning and Prioritizing in the Digital World
  • Perspective
  • Customers First
  • Designs and Prototypes
  • Customer Value Drivers
  • Verification of Strategic Fit and Prioritization of Features
  • Staging Features for Development and Release Planning
  • Summary
  • CHAPTER 14: Execution and Oversight During Product Development
  • The Product Manager’s Role During Development
  • Truth Mixed with Humility
  • Product Managers Must Understand Execution and Mitigate Conflicts
  • Surfacing Conflicts and Realities with “How” Questions
  • Linear Product Development
  • Managing Project Plans Helps Manage Risk
  • Progress Validation Is Essential
  • Product Testing
  • The Beta Test
  • Product Documentation
  • Managing Change and Scope: Trade-Offs and Prioritization
  • Iterative Product Development
  • Priming the Pump
  • Kanban
  • Product Managers Versus Product Owners
  • Connecting the Processes
  • Summary
  • CHAPTER 15: To Market, to Market: Launching and Releasing Products
  • Launch Benchmarking Outcomes
  • Putting the Launch into Perspective
  • The Launch Plan
  • Launch Execution
  • Executive Champions Need to Lead Important Product Launches
  • Confirm the Market Window
  • Review Market and Beta Tests—or Conduct Them If Necessary
  • Prerelease/Early Adopter Reviews
  • Product Availability Ratings
  • Provide Adequate Sales Training
  • Sales Goals and Compensation
  • Ensure Readiness of Marketing Collateral, Website, and Promotional Programs
  • Leverage Digital Marketing
  • Arrange Coverage by Industry or Market Analysts
  • Make Sure Distribution Channels Are Able to Sell and Deliver the Product
  • Ensure Readiness of Operational Systems
  • Preparing for the Internal Launch
  • Launch Metrics Must Be Assembled and Ready to Track
  • Risk Management
  • Be Willing to Recommend Go or No-Go for Launch
  • The Announcement
  • Summary
  • MODULE 4: Continuing the Journey: Post-Launch Performance Management
  • Introduction to Module 4
  • CHAPTER 16: Auditing Results After the Launch
  • After the Launch
  • Using an Impartial Auditor
  • Market Window Compliance
  • Executive Sponsorship
  • Business Case Synchronization
  • Adequacy and Timing of Marketing Material
  • Adequacy of Sales Training
  • Reviewing Operational Readiness
  • Conformance to Launch Metrics
  • Make Sure to Capture Lessons Learned
  • Win–Loss Audits
  • Internal Win–Loss Auditing
  • External Win–Loss Auditing
  • Assembling a Report
  • Summary
  • CHAPTER 17: Post-Launch Performance Management
  • Running the Business
  • The Importance of Measuring Performance
  • Creating a Data-Driven Fact Base
  • Data and Metrics
  • Market Metrics
  • Financial Metrics
  • Sales, Service, and Operations Metrics
  • Evaluation: What’s Happening Now with the Product?
  • Assessing the Impact of Your Cross-Functional Product Team
  • Identifying the Life Cycle State of the Product
  • Evaluating Financial and Business Data Using Product Scorecards
  • Using a Product Dashboard and a Product Health Report
  • Pricing and Product Performance
  • Updating Your Product Roadmap
  • Summary
  • CHAPTER 18: Product Portfolio Management
  • Dispelling Some Myths About Product Portfolio Management
  • What Is Life Cycle Product Portfolio Management?
  • A Portfolio Reference Model
  • The Ideal Work Structure for Product Portfolio Management
  • The Cross-Functional Product Review Board
  • A Life Cycle Product Portfolio Model
  • Methodology
  • Further Analysis: Current Products
  • Create Your Own Product Portfolio Model
  • Portfolio Decision-Making
  • Availability of Data Is Critical
  • Summary
  • CHAPTER 19: Enough’s Enough! Discontinuing the Product
  • Barriers to Discontinuation
  • The Discontinuation Decision
  • Product Discontinuation Documentation
  • The Cross-Functional Team
  • Other Types of “Discontinuation”
  • The Discontinuation Notice
  • Summary
  • Index