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Practical Product Management for Product Owners: Creating Winning Products with the Professional Product Owner Stances

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Description

  • Copyright 2023
  • Edition: 1st
  • eBook
  • ISBN-10: 0-13-794718-6
  • ISBN-13: 978-0-13-794718-8

Hone Agile Product Owner Behaviors that Lead to Marketplace Winners

Organizations pour vast resources into building new products and services. Yet too many are poorly conceived, don't delight (or even satisfy) customers, and fail in the marketplace. The solution is more effective agile product ownership and product management. This book is an expert guide to the behaviors, stances, and practices of world-class agile product development, reflecting deep in-the-trenches experience from world-renowned experts.

Chris Lukassen and Robbin Schuurman introduce powerful tools, ideas, and skills for delivering superior products and services, and for avoiding pitfalls that keep you from seeing what customers really need and want. Learn through a start-to-finish, Scrum-based case study, drawing on concepts the authors created for their breakthrough Scrum.org Professional Scrum Product Owner-Advanced (PSPO-A) training course. This innovative approach has already helped thousands of product owners excel--and it can transform the way you create products.

  • Replace negative product owner behaviors with approaches that lead to excellence
  • Represent customers more empathetically and effectively
  • Connect customers, values, and features more coherently
  • Tell better stories, set clearer goals, and create more valuable roadmaps
  • Innovate business models, run better experiments, and scale products more successfully
  • Make more successful decisions, involve the right people, and rely on better data
  • Become a great agile collaborator, across governance, budgeting, contracting, and beyond
  • Influence customers, users, stakeholders, and teams to improve your overall effectiveness
  • Optimize every organizational role related to product ownership

Product owners, managers, and team leads will find this guide indispensable along with Agile/Scrum coaches, consultants, and executives wanting to generate more value from product management across the organization.

Sample Content

Table of Contents

Foreword by Dave West     xvii

Introduction     xxi

Part I.   The Stances of the Product Owner     1

Chapter 1. Agile Product Management     3

      Is It Product Owner or Product Manager? 3

      What Is Product Management? 4

      Working in a Product-Led, Sales-Led, or Marketing-Led Organization 6

      What Is a Product Owner? 7

      Different Types of Product Owners 9

Chapter 2. Introducing the Product Owner Stances     3

      The Misunderstood Stances of a Product Owner 17

      The Preferred Stances of a Product Owner 27

Part I Summary     35

Part II. The Customer Representative     37

Chapter 3. How to Identify and Define Product     39

      Introducing the Customer Representative 39

      What Is a Product? 43

Chapter 4. Building Customer Empathy     49

      Talking to Customers 49

      Observing Customers 49

      Effectively Dealing with Biases When Collaborating with Customers 51

Chapter 5. Capture Your Customer Insights Via Personas     55

      User Personas 55

      Creating Personas 56

Chapter 6. Identifying and Expressing Customer Value     61

      The Functional Elements of Value 63

      Emotional Elements of Value 64

      Life-Changing Elements of Value 64

      Social-Impact Element of Value 65

Chapter 7. Connecting Product Features to Outcomes and Impacts     67

      Connecting Goals, Impacts, Outcomes, and Features 68

Part II Summary     73

Part III. The Visionary     77

Chapter 8. Creating and Communicating Product Vision     79

      Introducing: The Visionary 79

      Connecting the Product Vision to the Company Mission, Vision, and Values 83

      A Product Vision Aligned with the Company Mission and Vision 87

      Elements of an Inspiring Product Vision 90

Chapter 9. Communicating the Product Vision Effectively     93

      The 3x3 Storytelling Framework 95

      The Power of Reasoning 99

      Make It SEXI 100

Chapter 10. Crafting Product Goals That Align Stakeholders and Teams     103

      What Is a Product Goal? 104

      Characteristics of Great Product Goals 106

      How to Create Product Goals 108

      Inspect and Adapt Product Goals 109

      Having Multiple Product Goals: Is That an Option? 110

Chapter 11. Creating the Right Product Roadmap for Your Audience     113

      Introduction to Product Roadmaps 113

      Types of Product Roadmaps 117

      Roadmap 1: The Goal-Oriented Roadmap 118

      Roadmap 2: The Now-Next-Later Roadmap 120

      Roadmap 3: The User Story Map 122

      Roadmap 4: The Visual Roadmap 124

      Roadmap 5: The Gantt Chart Roadmap 126

      Eleven Tips for Roadmap Creation 128

Chapter 12. Identification of Company Value and Impact     131

      Understanding Company Value and Impact 131

      Expressing Company Impact 137

      Key Value Area 1: Current Value 139

      Key Value Area 2: Unrealized Value 141

      Key Value Area 3: Time to Market 145

      Key Value Area 4: Ability to Innovate 147

Chapter 13. Maximizing Value through Effective Pricing Strategies and Tactics     151

      Introduction to Product Pricing 151

      The Product Pricing Process 153

Part III Summary     165

Part IV. The Experimenter     169

Chapter 14. Driving Inside-Out Product Innovation     171

      Introducing: The Experimenter 171

      Inside-Out Innovation Sources 175

Chapter 15. Driving Outside-In Product Innovation     183

      Outside-In Innovation Sources 183

      Market Segmentation 184

Chapter 16. Thinking Differently: Driving Business Model Innovation     189

      Market Analysis and Trends 189

      Getting Inspiration from Other Companies 191

      The Impact on Your Business 196

      The Return of the Business Model Canvas 197

Chapter 17. Selecting Product Experiments to Run     199

      The Truth Curve: Select the Right Experiments and Tests 199

      Experimentation Techniques Explained 203

Chapter 18. How to Design and Evaluate Experiments and Tests     215

      Defining Hypothesis 216

      Capture Learnings 218

Chapter 19. Approaches for Scaling Successful Products and Teams     221

      Scaling Approaches for People and Teams 221

      Typical Antipattern for Scaling People and Teams 224

      A Better Approach for Scaling People and Teams 227

      Approaches to Scaling the Product or Service 229

      Focus on the Product First, Then on People and Teams 230

      Eight Effective Strategies for Scaling a Product 232

      How Product Owners Contribute to Product Scaling 235

Part IV Summary     237

Part V.  The Decision Maker     241

Chapter 20. Improving Accountability, Maturity, and Authority     243

      Introducing: The Decision Maker 243

Chapter 21. Evaluating Your Product Decisions     255

      Product Management: A Game of Poker or Chess? 255

      Evaluating Decisions in an Honest and Transparent Way 258

Chapter 22. Make Better Decisions: Thinking in Bets     259

      The Buddy System or Decision Pod 260

      Accepting Uncertainty in Decision Making 261

Chapter 23. Navigating Product, Process, and Team Dilemmas and Decisions     263

      Making Choices 263

      Navigating Dilemmas 265

Chapter 24. Improving the Speed and Quality of Decisions     269

      The Cost of Delaying Decisions 269

      Fast Decisions Are More Successful than Slow Decisions 270

      Special Snowflake Syndrome 273

      Why You Should Probably Make Decisions Fast(er) 274

      How to Speed Up Your Decision Making 274

      Empowered Product Owners 275

Part V Summary     277

Part VI. The Collaborator     281

Chapter 25. How Agile Governance Affects Product Owners     283

      Introduction to the Collaborator 283

      Introducing Agile Governance 287

      Organizational Governance Entails Many Elements 291

      Effectively Dealing with Governance 295

Chapter 26. Product Budgeting Done in an Agile Way     297

      Three Horizons 298

      Budgeting Is Like Product Backlog Management 300

      A Strategy and Market Perspective on Budgeting 304

Chapter 27. Creating Contracts That Enable Great Product Ownership and Teamwork     309

      What Is a Contract? 310

      Who Takes the Risk? 313

      Two-Stage Contracts 314

      Joe's Bucket 316

      Money for Nothing 317

      Change for Free 318

      Elements of an Agile Contract 319

Part VI Summary     323

Part VII. The Influencer     327

Chapter 28. Stakeholder Management in Complex Environments     329

      Introducing: The Influencer 329

      Definition of Stakeholder 333

      Stakeholder Classification/Categorization 335

      Information and Insights to Gather on Stakeholders 338

      The Influence of the Stakeholder 340

Chapter 29. Tools for Stakeholder Classification and Grouping     343

      The Stakeholder Map 344

      The Stakeholder Radar 351

      Alternative Stakeholder Identification and Grouping Techniques 357

Chapter 30. Applying Stakeholder Management Strategies and Tactics in Practice     359

      Creating a Communication Strategy 359

      Tips for Improving Your Stakeholder Management in Practice 362

Chapter 31. How to Influence Stakeholders on All Levels     369

      Being a Lyrebird 369

      The Process of Communication 371

      Four Layers of Communication 374

      Building Relationships with Stakeholders 375

      Adapting Your Tune to Your Audience 382

Chapter 32. Mastering the Art of No to Optimize Value Creation for the Product     387

      What Makes Saying No So Hard? 388

      Five Steps toward Saying No Effectively 389

      The Jedi Mind Trick 392

Chapter 33. Negotiating With Stakeholders, Customers, and Users     393 

      Be a Mirror 394

      Label Emotions 395

      Getting to Yes! 396

      How to Tell If a Yes Is Real 398

      Bend Their Reality 398

      Create the Illusion of Control 400

      Guarantee Execution 400

      Bargain Hard 401

      Find the Black Swan 402 

Part VII Summary     405

Closing Summary     409

Index     413

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