Culture matters. And for the record, ping pong tables, free soda, and a lax dress code are not the same thing as culture (although they are nice). Tomorrow my team and I will be attending Culture Camp DC, an unconference focused on exploring how we can more consciously build incredible company culture. It will be a great experience, and I’ve had a blast helping organize the event. I hope to see you there!
Revving the Engine
I recently had the pleasure of talking about my experience with Lean Starutp and Agile for the Innovation Engine podcast. I had a blast recording, and am happy to step through any of the content that we discussed. Please feel free to reach out to me at elliot.susel@gmail.com
#RealTalk
Gill and I were thrilled to present this week at the Agile DC Executive Summit! I’ve included a copy of the presentation below, and although it’s is better with our descriptions, it’s still meaningful. Please do not hesitate to contact me to discuss.
3 Crucial Missteps Made by Product Management
1) Not managing hypotheses
You have beliefs about your products, services, and features. Start by writing them down and then test them. Hypothesis management is how you win by with talent rather than by luck or by “placing bets”. NOTE: You don’t have to spend thousands of dollars or even engage your colleagues to execute insightful experiments; start by talking to your customers.
2) Focusing on features
If you focus on features you’ll have an organization obsessed with features. At the end of the day, the features don’t actually matter; What mattered was their impact. The mantra should be, “[XY% metric] by [date]” rather than, “Launch [random feature] by [date]”. Focusing on quantifiable impacts unleashes your entire team’s potential against those impacts.
3) Slacking on documentation
You can have the best idea in the world, but with poor documentation, you’ll get poor execution. What is good documentation? It succinctly explains what you want accomplish, for whom, and why (see the User Story). It starts a conversation, explains or shows what success looks like, and allows your engineers to innovate on solutions. Note: This is a complex topic, but worth further reading. See Specification by Example.
Getting these things correct will drive your company’s success and boost everyone’s engagement.