SlideShare a Scribd company logo
1 of 70
Prioritization 301
   Advanced Roadmapping Class


         Bruce McCarthy
   Chief Product Person, Reqqs
         bruce@reqqs.com
          www.reqqs.com
           @d8a_driven
Why roadmaps matter
R
“Did [Previous PM] send you his
 spreadsheet of [5 trillion un-
 prioritized] feature requests?”
          - VP Product Management
“We need this to close
[big deal] this quarter!”
             - Key Sales Person
“37% of our Support calls are about
 [oldest, hairiest part of the code].
           Can’t we fix it?”
                   - Support Manager
“[Shiny tech thing] will make
[your top priority] much easier!”
                       - Tech Lead
“[Previously irrelevant competitor]
just shipped [shiny feature]. How are
     we going to leapfrog them?”
                        - VP Marketing
“We gotta drop everything and work
  on [meaningless buzzword]. It’s
         gonna be huge!”
                         - VP Sales
“If you don’t support [obscure
platform] I can’t buy your stuff.”
               - Key Customer CTO
“Why would anybody schedule [easy
feature] before [hard feature]? Who
  approved that [expletive] idea?”
                               - CEO
“What’s your business case for [CEO’s
  pet project]? When do we make
              money?”
                               - CFO
“You can’t add work without
subtracting something? What, is your
         whole team lazy?”
                               - CEO
Roadmap Process
1.   Set Goals
2.   Collect Ideas
3.   Set Priorities
4.   Get Buy-in
5.   Define Releases
6.   Communicate Roadmap
7.   Build Product
8.   Launch Product
9.   Repeat
Roadmap Process
1.   Set Goals
2.   Collect Ideas Today’s
3.   Set Priorities focus
4.   Get Buy-in
5.   Define Releases
6.   Communicate Roadmap
7.   Build Product
8.   Launch Product
9.   Repeat
Prioritization
Prioritization
Important
 Basis of your roadmap

 Can determine success

 Inspires confidence

 Grooms your backlog

 Key PM skill
Prioritization
Important                Hard
 Basis of your roadmap    Big backlogs

 Can determine success    Competing goals

 Inspires confidence       Multiple stakeholders

 Grooms your backlog      Vocal customers

 Key PM skill             Dependencies

                          Risks
Methods I Don’t
 Recommend
Methods I Don’t
 Recommend
Methods I Don’t
    Recommend
Engineer   How to build the perfect solution no one will buy
Methods I Don’t
    Recommend
Engineer   How to build the perfect solution no one will buy


  CEO      How to build a buzzword
Methods I Don’t
    Recommend
Engineer   How to build the perfect solution no one will buy


  CEO      How to build a buzzword


 Sales     How to never finish anything (and lose your devs)
Methods I Don’t
    Recommend
Engineer   How to build the perfect solution no one will buy


  CEO      How to build a buzzword


 Sales     How to never finish anything (and lose your devs)


  PM       How long can you tread water?
Methods I Don’t
    Recommend
Engineer   How to build the perfect solution no one will buy


  CEO      How to build a buzzword


 Sales     How to never finish anything (and lose your devs)


  PM       How long can you tread water?


Customer   How to stop growing
Methods I Don’t
    Recommend
Engineer   How to build the perfect solution no one will buy


  CEO      How to build a buzzword


 Sales     How to never finish anything (and lose your devs)


  PM       How long can you tread water?


Customer   How to stop growing


Analyst    How to miss the market window
Math makes (almost)
 everything better
Value / Effort = Priority
High




Value




  Low

         High            Low
                Effort
High




Value




  Low

         High            Low
                Effort
Value / Effort = Priority


     Value = Expected
  Contribution to Defined
           Goals
Typical Goals
Typical Goals
Grow the user base
Typical Goals
Grow the user base
Increase customer satisfaction
Typical Goals
Grow the user base
Increase customer satisfaction
Improve performance
Typical Goals
Grow the user base
Increase customer satisfaction
Improve performance
Increase referrals
Typical Goals
Grow the user base
Increase customer satisfaction
Improve performance
Increase referrals
Validated learning
Typical Goals
Grow the user base
Increase customer satisfaction
Improve performance
Increase referrals
Validated learning
Increase revenue this year
Typical Goals
Grow the user base
Increase customer satisfaction
Improve performance
Increase referrals
Validated learning
Increase revenue this year
Transformation (revenue in future years)
Typical Goals
Grow the user base
Increase customer satisfaction
Improve performance
Increase referrals
Validated learning
Increase revenue this year
Transformation (revenue in future years)
Generate buzz
Value / Effort = Priority
Value / Effort = Priority



   Value = V1+V2+V3...
Value / Effort = Priority
Value / Effort = Priority


 (V1+V2+V3) / (E1+E2) x
      Certainty = P
Contribution
Contribution
Exact numbers
Contribution
Exact numbers
Contribution
Exact numbers

1-10
Contribution
Exact numbers

1-10

1-100
Contribution
Exact numbers

1-10

1-100

Fibonacci
Contribution
Exact numbers

1-10

1-100

Fibonacci

1 to 5 stars
Contribution
Exact numbers

1-10

1-100

Fibonacci

1 to 5 stars

0,1,2
Contribution
Exact numbers

1-10

1-100

Fibonacci

1 to 5 stars

0,1,2
Feature   V1   V2   E   Raw    C    Score


  A       1    1    2    1    75%   0.75


  B       1    0    2   0.5   90%   0.45


  C       2    -1   1    1    40%    0.4
(V1+V2)/E = Raw


Feature   V1   V2   E   Raw       C    Score


  A       1    1    2    1       75%   0.75


  B       1    0    2   0.5      90%   0.45


  C       2    -1   1    1       40%    0.4
Feature   V1   V2   E   Raw    C    Score


  A       1    1    2    1    75%   0.75


  B       1    0    2   0.5   90%   0.45


  C       2    -1   1    1    40%    0.4
(V1+V2)/E x C = Score


Feature   V1   V2   E    Raw     C    Score


  A       1    1    2      1    75%   0.75


  B       1    0    2    0.5    90%    0.45


  C       2    -1   1      1    40%    0.4
Feature   V1   V2   E   Raw    C    Score


  A       1    1    2    1    75%   0.75


  B       1    0    2   0.5   90%   0.45


  C       2    -1   1    1    40%    0.4
Are We There Yet?
Roadmap Process
1.   Set Goals
2.   Collect Ideas
3.   Set Priorities
4.   Get Buy-in
5.   Define Releases
6.   Communicate Roadmap
7.   Build Product
8.   Launch Product
9.   Repeat
Roadmap Process
1.   Set Goals
2.   Collect Ideas
3.   Set Priorities    w/o this, you
4.   Get Buy-in          are f***ed
5.   Define Releases
6.   Communicate Roadmap
7.   Build Product
8.   Launch Product
9.   Repeat
Shuttle Diplomacy

 “I’ve got a draft set of
priorities. Would you help
       me refine it?”
Collaboration

“I’ll present our priorities
to the executive team on
           Friday”
Feature   V1   V2   E   Raw    C    Score



         1    1    2    1    75%   0.75



  ?       1    0    2   0.5   90%   0.45



         2    -1   1    1    40%    0.4
Use Tools
(Don’t let them use you.)
Discussion
For Slides & Excel
     Template

         Bruce McCarthy
   Chief Product Person, Reqqs
         bruce@reqqs.com
    www.reqqs.com/resources
           @d8a_driven

More Related Content

What's hot

Roadmapping the Product Roadmap (ProductCamp Boston 2016)
Roadmapping the Product Roadmap (ProductCamp Boston 2016)Roadmapping the Product Roadmap (ProductCamp Boston 2016)
Roadmapping the Product Roadmap (ProductCamp Boston 2016)
ProductCamp Boston
 

What's hot (20)

Bullet journal method
Bullet journal methodBullet journal method
Bullet journal method
 
Protecting Intellectual Property in the Cannabis Industry (Series: Cannabis L...
Protecting Intellectual Property in the Cannabis Industry (Series: Cannabis L...Protecting Intellectual Property in the Cannabis Industry (Series: Cannabis L...
Protecting Intellectual Property in the Cannabis Industry (Series: Cannabis L...
 
Swagger - make your API accessible
Swagger - make your API accessibleSwagger - make your API accessible
Swagger - make your API accessible
 
Pitch Deck Template for startups
Pitch Deck Template for startupsPitch Deck Template for startups
Pitch Deck Template for startups
 
Quality Content at Scale Through Automated Text Summarization of UGC
Quality Content at Scale Through Automated Text Summarization of UGCQuality Content at Scale Through Automated Text Summarization of UGC
Quality Content at Scale Through Automated Text Summarization of UGC
 
Company Builder
Company BuilderCompany Builder
Company Builder
 
A New Introduction to Jira & Agile Product Management
A New Introduction to Jira & Agile Product ManagementA New Introduction to Jira & Agile Product Management
A New Introduction to Jira & Agile Product Management
 
Designing APIs with OpenAPI Spec
Designing APIs with OpenAPI SpecDesigning APIs with OpenAPI Spec
Designing APIs with OpenAPI Spec
 
Roadmaps That Inspire
Roadmaps That InspireRoadmaps That Inspire
Roadmaps That Inspire
 
Más Mujeres en SEO: Herramientas y tips para analizar competidores
Más Mujeres en SEO: Herramientas y tips para analizar competidoresMás Mujeres en SEO: Herramientas y tips para analizar competidores
Más Mujeres en SEO: Herramientas y tips para analizar competidores
 
Product Roadmap
Product RoadmapProduct Roadmap
Product Roadmap
 
Product Discovery At Google
Product Discovery At GoogleProduct Discovery At Google
Product Discovery At Google
 
Je ne suis pas qu'un bloc de contenu - Que Du Web 2019
Je ne suis pas qu'un bloc de contenu - Que Du Web 2019Je ne suis pas qu'un bloc de contenu - Que Du Web 2019
Je ne suis pas qu'un bloc de contenu - Que Du Web 2019
 
Product Management 101: Techniques for Success
Product Management 101:  Techniques for SuccessProduct Management 101:  Techniques for Success
Product Management 101: Techniques for Success
 
Agile Product Owner in Wonderland!
Agile Product Owner in Wonderland!Agile Product Owner in Wonderland!
Agile Product Owner in Wonderland!
 
Customer Discovery Skills
Customer Discovery Skills Customer Discovery Skills
Customer Discovery Skills
 
The Art & Science of Seductive Interactions
The Art & Science of Seductive InteractionsThe Art & Science of Seductive Interactions
The Art & Science of Seductive Interactions
 
MuleSoft Singapore Meetup - Number 6 - September 24, 2020
MuleSoft Singapore Meetup - Number 6 - September 24, 2020MuleSoft Singapore Meetup - Number 6 - September 24, 2020
MuleSoft Singapore Meetup - Number 6 - September 24, 2020
 
How to create your Minimum Viable Product - Raff Paquin
How to create your Minimum Viable Product - Raff PaquinHow to create your Minimum Viable Product - Raff Paquin
How to create your Minimum Viable Product - Raff Paquin
 
Roadmapping the Product Roadmap (ProductCamp Boston 2016)
Roadmapping the Product Roadmap (ProductCamp Boston 2016)Roadmapping the Product Roadmap (ProductCamp Boston 2016)
Roadmapping the Product Roadmap (ProductCamp Boston 2016)
 

Viewers also liked

Cracking the Facebook Coding Interview
Cracking the Facebook Coding InterviewCracking the Facebook Coding Interview
Cracking the Facebook Coding Interview
Gayle McDowell
 

Viewers also liked (20)

FMCG / CPG Consumer Trends 2015 - Product Innovations of the Year
FMCG / CPG Consumer Trends 2015 - Product Innovations of the YearFMCG / CPG Consumer Trends 2015 - Product Innovations of the Year
FMCG / CPG Consumer Trends 2015 - Product Innovations of the Year
 
BIOLOGICAL DIVERSITY
BIOLOGICAL DIVERSITYBIOLOGICAL DIVERSITY
BIOLOGICAL DIVERSITY
 
Diabetes in Pregnancy
Diabetes in PregnancyDiabetes in Pregnancy
Diabetes in Pregnancy
 
Internet of Things (IOT) - Technology and Applications
Internet of Things (IOT) - Technology and ApplicationsInternet of Things (IOT) - Technology and Applications
Internet of Things (IOT) - Technology and Applications
 
AUTISM ppt
AUTISM  pptAUTISM  ppt
AUTISM ppt
 
Key Passages in Jane Eyre
Key Passages in Jane EyreKey Passages in Jane Eyre
Key Passages in Jane Eyre
 
The Future of Work
The Future of WorkThe Future of Work
The Future of Work
 
BUSINESS QUIZ -Round 1
 BUSINESS QUIZ -Round 1 BUSINESS QUIZ -Round 1
BUSINESS QUIZ -Round 1
 
Introduction To Software Engineering
Introduction To Software EngineeringIntroduction To Software Engineering
Introduction To Software Engineering
 
Biofertilizer
BiofertilizerBiofertilizer
Biofertilizer
 
What Do Real Women Look Like? 100 Stock Photos of Real Women
What Do Real Women Look Like? 100 Stock Photos of Real WomenWhat Do Real Women Look Like? 100 Stock Photos of Real Women
What Do Real Women Look Like? 100 Stock Photos of Real Women
 
Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA) report on Rampal 1320MW coal-based powe...
Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA) report on Rampal 1320MW coal-based powe...Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA) report on Rampal 1320MW coal-based powe...
Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA) report on Rampal 1320MW coal-based powe...
 
Web Trends to Watch in 2014
Web Trends to Watch in 2014Web Trends to Watch in 2014
Web Trends to Watch in 2014
 
BCG Matrix of Engro foods
BCG Matrix of Engro foodsBCG Matrix of Engro foods
BCG Matrix of Engro foods
 
4. heredity and evolution
4. heredity and evolution4. heredity and evolution
4. heredity and evolution
 
The Power of Color in Branding
The Power of Color in BrandingThe Power of Color in Branding
The Power of Color in Branding
 
Deep Learning through Examples
Deep Learning through ExamplesDeep Learning through Examples
Deep Learning through Examples
 
Political Development of the Philippine Government
Political Development of the Philippine GovernmentPolitical Development of the Philippine Government
Political Development of the Philippine Government
 
Plate tectonics slides re
Plate tectonics slides   rePlate tectonics slides   re
Plate tectonics slides re
 
Cracking the Facebook Coding Interview
Cracking the Facebook Coding InterviewCracking the Facebook Coding Interview
Cracking the Facebook Coding Interview
 

Similar to Prioritization 301: An Advanced Roadmapping Class for Product People

Webinar agile-spring-maximum-roi
Webinar agile-spring-maximum-roiWebinar agile-spring-maximum-roi
Webinar agile-spring-maximum-roi
Cygnet Infotech
 
Agile for Startups
Agile for StartupsAgile for Startups
Agile for Startups
Jim Murphy
 

Similar to Prioritization 301: An Advanced Roadmapping Class for Product People (20)

Agile Marketing Approach PowerPoint Presentation Slides
Agile Marketing Approach PowerPoint Presentation SlidesAgile Marketing Approach PowerPoint Presentation Slides
Agile Marketing Approach PowerPoint Presentation Slides
 
Scrum Market Management PowerPoint Presentation Slides
Scrum Market Management PowerPoint Presentation SlidesScrum Market Management PowerPoint Presentation Slides
Scrum Market Management PowerPoint Presentation Slides
 
Marketing Scrum PowerPoint Presentation Slides
Marketing Scrum PowerPoint Presentation SlidesMarketing Scrum PowerPoint Presentation Slides
Marketing Scrum PowerPoint Presentation Slides
 
Board Deck Templates for Startups
Board Deck Templates for StartupsBoard Deck Templates for Startups
Board Deck Templates for Startups
 
Saying No with Confidence - The Customer Centric Way by TIER Mobility VP of P...
Saying No with Confidence - The Customer Centric Way by TIER Mobility VP of P...Saying No with Confidence - The Customer Centric Way by TIER Mobility VP of P...
Saying No with Confidence - The Customer Centric Way by TIER Mobility VP of P...
 
Scrum Methodology For Marketing PowerPoint Presentation Slides
Scrum Methodology For Marketing PowerPoint Presentation SlidesScrum Methodology For Marketing PowerPoint Presentation Slides
Scrum Methodology For Marketing PowerPoint Presentation Slides
 
O365 Practical Adoption Strategies - HDI Regina Chapter
O365 Practical Adoption Strategies - HDI Regina ChapterO365 Practical Adoption Strategies - HDI Regina Chapter
O365 Practical Adoption Strategies - HDI Regina Chapter
 
Webinar agile-spring-maximum-roi
Webinar agile-spring-maximum-roiWebinar agile-spring-maximum-roi
Webinar agile-spring-maximum-roi
 
Build Innovation into Your Admin Routine
Build Innovation into Your Admin RoutineBuild Innovation into Your Admin Routine
Build Innovation into Your Admin Routine
 
Learn to see, measure and automate with value stream management
Learn to see, measure and automate with value stream managementLearn to see, measure and automate with value stream management
Learn to see, measure and automate with value stream management
 
Get Your Product to Market with Less: Paradigms for Innovation
Get Your Product to Market with Less: Paradigms for InnovationGet Your Product to Market with Less: Paradigms for Innovation
Get Your Product to Market with Less: Paradigms for Innovation
 
Scrum Marketing Methodology PowerPoint Presentation Slides
Scrum Marketing Methodology PowerPoint Presentation SlidesScrum Marketing Methodology PowerPoint Presentation Slides
Scrum Marketing Methodology PowerPoint Presentation Slides
 
Agile for Startups
Agile for StartupsAgile for Startups
Agile for Startups
 
Jan de Vries - How to convince your boss that it is DevOps that he wants
Jan de Vries - How to convince your boss that it is DevOps that he wantsJan de Vries - How to convince your boss that it is DevOps that he wants
Jan de Vries - How to convince your boss that it is DevOps that he wants
 
How to Rock Your Next Presentation and Demo
How to Rock Your Next Presentation and Demo How to Rock Your Next Presentation and Demo
How to Rock Your Next Presentation and Demo
 
Data Solutions for Products by Leadspace Director of Analytics
Data Solutions for Products by Leadspace Director of AnalyticsData Solutions for Products by Leadspace Director of Analytics
Data Solutions for Products by Leadspace Director of Analytics
 
Dev ops
Dev opsDev ops
Dev ops
 
Mike long-portfolio-presentation
Mike long-portfolio-presentationMike long-portfolio-presentation
Mike long-portfolio-presentation
 
Mike long-portfolio-presentation
Mike long-portfolio-presentationMike long-portfolio-presentation
Mike long-portfolio-presentation
 
Portfolio Presentation
Portfolio PresentationPortfolio Presentation
Portfolio Presentation
 

More from UpUp Labs

More from UpUp Labs (6)

Curing Shiny object syndrome
Curing Shiny object syndromeCuring Shiny object syndrome
Curing Shiny object syndrome
 
Awesomeness demystified
Awesomeness demystifiedAwesomeness demystified
Awesomeness demystified
 
The Dirty Dozen Roadmap Roadblocks
The Dirty Dozen Roadmap RoadblocksThe Dirty Dozen Roadmap Roadblocks
The Dirty Dozen Roadmap Roadblocks
 
4 Effective Product Roadmap Formats
4 Effective Product Roadmap Formats4 Effective Product Roadmap Formats
4 Effective Product Roadmap Formats
 
Transitioning from Tech to Product Management
Transitioning from Tech to Product ManagementTransitioning from Tech to Product Management
Transitioning from Tech to Product Management
 
Product Management 101
Product Management 101Product Management 101
Product Management 101
 

Recently uploaded

Cloud Frontiers: A Deep Dive into Serverless Spatial Data and FME
Cloud Frontiers:  A Deep Dive into Serverless Spatial Data and FMECloud Frontiers:  A Deep Dive into Serverless Spatial Data and FME
Cloud Frontiers: A Deep Dive into Serverless Spatial Data and FME
Safe Software
 

Recently uploaded (20)

A Year of the Servo Reboot: Where Are We Now?
A Year of the Servo Reboot: Where Are We Now?A Year of the Servo Reboot: Where Are We Now?
A Year of the Servo Reboot: Where Are We Now?
 
A Domino Admins Adventures (Engage 2024)
A Domino Admins Adventures (Engage 2024)A Domino Admins Adventures (Engage 2024)
A Domino Admins Adventures (Engage 2024)
 
Powerful Google developer tools for immediate impact! (2023-24 C)
Powerful Google developer tools for immediate impact! (2023-24 C)Powerful Google developer tools for immediate impact! (2023-24 C)
Powerful Google developer tools for immediate impact! (2023-24 C)
 
From Event to Action: Accelerate Your Decision Making with Real-Time Automation
From Event to Action: Accelerate Your Decision Making with Real-Time AutomationFrom Event to Action: Accelerate Your Decision Making with Real-Time Automation
From Event to Action: Accelerate Your Decision Making with Real-Time Automation
 
Polkadot JAM Slides - Token2049 - By Dr. Gavin Wood
Polkadot JAM Slides - Token2049 - By Dr. Gavin WoodPolkadot JAM Slides - Token2049 - By Dr. Gavin Wood
Polkadot JAM Slides - Token2049 - By Dr. Gavin Wood
 
TrustArc Webinar - Stay Ahead of US State Data Privacy Law Developments
TrustArc Webinar - Stay Ahead of US State Data Privacy Law DevelopmentsTrustArc Webinar - Stay Ahead of US State Data Privacy Law Developments
TrustArc Webinar - Stay Ahead of US State Data Privacy Law Developments
 
Automating Google Workspace (GWS) & more with Apps Script
Automating Google Workspace (GWS) & more with Apps ScriptAutomating Google Workspace (GWS) & more with Apps Script
Automating Google Workspace (GWS) & more with Apps Script
 
Connector Corner: Accelerate revenue generation using UiPath API-centric busi...
Connector Corner: Accelerate revenue generation using UiPath API-centric busi...Connector Corner: Accelerate revenue generation using UiPath API-centric busi...
Connector Corner: Accelerate revenue generation using UiPath API-centric busi...
 
Workshop - Best of Both Worlds_ Combine KG and Vector search for enhanced R...
Workshop - Best of Both Worlds_ Combine  KG and Vector search for  enhanced R...Workshop - Best of Both Worlds_ Combine  KG and Vector search for  enhanced R...
Workshop - Best of Both Worlds_ Combine KG and Vector search for enhanced R...
 
Apidays Singapore 2024 - Building Digital Trust in a Digital Economy by Veron...
Apidays Singapore 2024 - Building Digital Trust in a Digital Economy by Veron...Apidays Singapore 2024 - Building Digital Trust in a Digital Economy by Veron...
Apidays Singapore 2024 - Building Digital Trust in a Digital Economy by Veron...
 
Understanding Discord NSFW Servers A Guide for Responsible Users.pdf
Understanding Discord NSFW Servers A Guide for Responsible Users.pdfUnderstanding Discord NSFW Servers A Guide for Responsible Users.pdf
Understanding Discord NSFW Servers A Guide for Responsible Users.pdf
 
Tata AIG General Insurance Company - Insurer Innovation Award 2024
Tata AIG General Insurance Company - Insurer Innovation Award 2024Tata AIG General Insurance Company - Insurer Innovation Award 2024
Tata AIG General Insurance Company - Insurer Innovation Award 2024
 
HTML Injection Attacks: Impact and Mitigation Strategies
HTML Injection Attacks: Impact and Mitigation StrategiesHTML Injection Attacks: Impact and Mitigation Strategies
HTML Injection Attacks: Impact and Mitigation Strategies
 
AWS Community Day CPH - Three problems of Terraform
AWS Community Day CPH - Three problems of TerraformAWS Community Day CPH - Three problems of Terraform
AWS Community Day CPH - Three problems of Terraform
 
Cloud Frontiers: A Deep Dive into Serverless Spatial Data and FME
Cloud Frontiers:  A Deep Dive into Serverless Spatial Data and FMECloud Frontiers:  A Deep Dive into Serverless Spatial Data and FME
Cloud Frontiers: A Deep Dive into Serverless Spatial Data and FME
 
🐬 The future of MySQL is Postgres 🐘
🐬  The future of MySQL is Postgres   🐘🐬  The future of MySQL is Postgres   🐘
🐬 The future of MySQL is Postgres 🐘
 
The 7 Things I Know About Cyber Security After 25 Years | April 2024
The 7 Things I Know About Cyber Security After 25 Years | April 2024The 7 Things I Know About Cyber Security After 25 Years | April 2024
The 7 Things I Know About Cyber Security After 25 Years | April 2024
 
Manulife - Insurer Innovation Award 2024
Manulife - Insurer Innovation Award 2024Manulife - Insurer Innovation Award 2024
Manulife - Insurer Innovation Award 2024
 
Bajaj Allianz Life Insurance Company - Insurer Innovation Award 2024
Bajaj Allianz Life Insurance Company - Insurer Innovation Award 2024Bajaj Allianz Life Insurance Company - Insurer Innovation Award 2024
Bajaj Allianz Life Insurance Company - Insurer Innovation Award 2024
 
Mastering MySQL Database Architecture: Deep Dive into MySQL Shell and MySQL R...
Mastering MySQL Database Architecture: Deep Dive into MySQL Shell and MySQL R...Mastering MySQL Database Architecture: Deep Dive into MySQL Shell and MySQL R...
Mastering MySQL Database Architecture: Deep Dive into MySQL Shell and MySQL R...
 

Prioritization 301: An Advanced Roadmapping Class for Product People

Editor's Notes

  1. I’m Bruce McCarthy, CPP of Reqqs - the smart roadmap tool for product people. I’ve been in product management for 16 years at companies like iMarket (bought by Dun & Bradstreet) and ATG (bought by Oracle). My day job currently is VP of Product at NetProspex in Waltham. \n\nI’m here to talk about how to do prioritization in an objective and collaborative way so that you can get the buy-in you need to put together a roadmap that will stick. This is the advanced class because you guys are well beyond the basics of H-M-L.\n\nI developed this methodology over time in various jobs. I’ve seen it work over and over again where gut instinct or endless meetings fail. In talking with other product people, I’ve found the good ones usually develop something similar. I’ve really just tried to standardize it and genericize it a bit so everyone can benefit.\n
  2. In today’s agile world, do roadmaps still matter? Aren’t we allowed to change direction after each sprint? Actually, I think roadmaps are needed even more in an agile world. Yes, you can correct course after each sprint, but you should be correcting course toward something - toward a vision of where you want your product or your company to be in a year or 2 or 3. You need to stake out that vision and then you need to work out what you think is the best path to get there. That’s your roadmap.\n
  3. Your roadmap is also a shield against the constant onslaught of potentially diverting requests from all quarters.\n
  4. \n
  5. \n
  6. \n
  7. \n
  8. \n
  9. \n
  10. \n
  11. \n
  12. \n
  13. This is my favorite - actually heard - CEO quote.\n
  14. Your roadmap isn’t much of a shield unless you have buy-in from your stakeholders on it. Before you can get that, though, you need priorities. To set priorities you need ideas, and you need goals to test those ideas against. I want to talk about priorities first because your roadmap is really a reflection - a timeline view - of your priorities.\n
  15. Your roadmap isn’t much of a shield unless you have buy-in from your stakeholders on it. Before you can get that, though, you need priorities. To set priorities you need ideas, and you need goals to test those ideas against. I want to talk about priorities first because your roadmap is really a reflection - a timeline view - of your priorities.\n
  16. \n
  17. \n
  18. The PM’s gut is near and dear to my heart, of course, but it can only take you so far. Sooner or later you need data. Even more, though, you need consensus from all of these stakeholders.\n
  19. The PM’s gut is near and dear to my heart, of course, but it can only take you so far. Sooner or later you need data. Even more, though, you need consensus from all of these stakeholders.\n
  20. The PM’s gut is near and dear to my heart, of course, but it can only take you so far. Sooner or later you need data. Even more, though, you need consensus from all of these stakeholders.\n
  21. The PM’s gut is near and dear to my heart, of course, but it can only take you so far. Sooner or later you need data. Even more, though, you need consensus from all of these stakeholders.\n
  22. The PM’s gut is near and dear to my heart, of course, but it can only take you so far. Sooner or later you need data. Even more, though, you need consensus from all of these stakeholders.\n
  23. The PM’s gut is near and dear to my heart, of course, but it can only take you so far. Sooner or later you need data. Even more, though, you need consensus from all of these stakeholders.\n
  24. The PM’s gut is near and dear to my heart, of course, but it can only take you so far. Sooner or later you need data. Even more, though, you need consensus from all of these stakeholders.\n
  25. There is a better way.\n
  26. A simple equation. It’s really the familiar ROI calculation. Effort is the investment you make to generate value in return. The items in your backlog that have the highest ROI are the ones you should do first, right?\n
  27. Analysts and some requirements tools like to plot value vs. effort on the classic 2x2 grid. You do the things that fall in the upper right quadrant, right? That works fine when you have 5 or 10 things to prioritize, but most of us are dealing with hundreds. How do you figure out which is closest to the corner here? And don’t most of us have several projects running in parallel?\n
  28. Analysts and some requirements tools like to plot value vs. effort on the classic 2x2 grid. You do the things that fall in the upper right quadrant, right? That works fine when you have 5 or 10 things to prioritize, but most of us are dealing with hundreds. How do you figure out which is closest to the corner here? And don’t most of us have several projects running in parallel?\n
  29. Analysts and some requirements tools like to plot value vs. effort on the classic 2x2 grid. You do the things that fall in the upper right quadrant, right? That works fine when you have 5 or 10 things to prioritize, but most of us are dealing with hundreds. How do you figure out which is closest to the corner here? And don’t most of us have several projects running in parallel?\n
  30. Analysts and some requirements tools like to plot value vs. effort on the classic 2x2 grid. You do the things that fall in the upper right quadrant, right? That works fine when you have 5 or 10 things to prioritize, but most of us are dealing with hundreds. How do you figure out which is closest to the corner here? And don’t most of us have several projects running in parallel?\n
  31. Analysts and some requirements tools like to plot value vs. effort on the classic 2x2 grid. You do the things that fall in the upper right quadrant, right? That works fine when you have 5 or 10 things to prioritize, but most of us are dealing with hundreds. How do you figure out which is closest to the corner here? And don’t most of us have several projects running in parallel?\n
  32. Analysts and some requirements tools like to plot value vs. effort on the classic 2x2 grid. You do the things that fall in the upper right quadrant, right? That works fine when you have 5 or 10 things to prioritize, but most of us are dealing with hundreds. How do you figure out which is closest to the corner here? And don’t most of us have several projects running in parallel?\n
  33. Analysts and some requirements tools like to plot value vs. effort on the classic 2x2 grid. You do the things that fall in the upper right quadrant, right? That works fine when you have 5 or 10 things to prioritize, but most of us are dealing with hundreds. How do you figure out which is closest to the corner here? And don’t most of us have several projects running in parallel?\n
  34. Analysts and some requirements tools like to plot value vs. effort on the classic 2x2 grid. You do the things that fall in the upper right quadrant, right? That works fine when you have 5 or 10 things to prioritize, but most of us are dealing with hundreds. How do you figure out which is closest to the corner here? And don’t most of us have several projects running in parallel?\n
  35. Analysts and some requirements tools like to plot value vs. effort on the classic 2x2 grid. You do the things that fall in the upper right quadrant, right? That works fine when you have 5 or 10 things to prioritize, but most of us are dealing with hundreds. How do you figure out which is closest to the corner here? And don’t most of us have several projects running in parallel?\n
  36. Analysts and some requirements tools like to plot value vs. effort on the classic 2x2 grid. You do the things that fall in the upper right quadrant, right? That works fine when you have 5 or 10 things to prioritize, but most of us are dealing with hundreds. How do you figure out which is closest to the corner here? And don’t most of us have several projects running in parallel?\n
  37. Analysts and some requirements tools like to plot value vs. effort on the classic 2x2 grid. You do the things that fall in the upper right quadrant, right? That works fine when you have 5 or 10 things to prioritize, but most of us are dealing with hundreds. How do you figure out which is closest to the corner here? And don’t most of us have several projects running in parallel?\n
  38. Analysts and some requirements tools like to plot value vs. effort on the classic 2x2 grid. You do the things that fall in the upper right quadrant, right? That works fine when you have 5 or 10 things to prioritize, but most of us are dealing with hundreds. How do you figure out which is closest to the corner here? And don’t most of us have several projects running in parallel?\n
  39. Analysts and some requirements tools like to plot value vs. effort on the classic 2x2 grid. You do the things that fall in the upper right quadrant, right? That works fine when you have 5 or 10 things to prioritize, but most of us are dealing with hundreds. How do you figure out which is closest to the corner here? And don’t most of us have several projects running in parallel?\n
  40. Analysts and some requirements tools like to plot value vs. effort on the classic 2x2 grid. You do the things that fall in the upper right quadrant, right? That works fine when you have 5 or 10 things to prioritize, but most of us are dealing with hundreds. How do you figure out which is closest to the corner here? And don’t most of us have several projects running in parallel?\n
  41. Analysts and some requirements tools like to plot value vs. effort on the classic 2x2 grid. You do the things that fall in the upper right quadrant, right? That works fine when you have 5 or 10 things to prioritize, but most of us are dealing with hundreds. How do you figure out which is closest to the corner here? And don’t most of us have several projects running in parallel?\n
  42. Analysts and some requirements tools like to plot value vs. effort on the classic 2x2 grid. You do the things that fall in the upper right quadrant, right? That works fine when you have 5 or 10 things to prioritize, but most of us are dealing with hundreds. How do you figure out which is closest to the corner here? And don’t most of us have several projects running in parallel?\n
  43. Analysts and some requirements tools like to plot value vs. effort on the classic 2x2 grid. You do the things that fall in the upper right quadrant, right? That works fine when you have 5 or 10 things to prioritize, but most of us are dealing with hundreds. How do you figure out which is closest to the corner here? And don’t most of us have several projects running in parallel?\n
  44. Analysts and some requirements tools like to plot value vs. effort on the classic 2x2 grid. You do the things that fall in the upper right quadrant, right? That works fine when you have 5 or 10 things to prioritize, but most of us are dealing with hundreds. How do you figure out which is closest to the corner here? And don’t most of us have several projects running in parallel?\n
  45. Analysts and some requirements tools like to plot value vs. effort on the classic 2x2 grid. You do the things that fall in the upper right quadrant, right? That works fine when you have 5 or 10 things to prioritize, but most of us are dealing with hundreds. How do you figure out which is closest to the corner here? And don’t most of us have several projects running in parallel?\n
  46. Analysts and some requirements tools like to plot value vs. effort on the classic 2x2 grid. You do the things that fall in the upper right quadrant, right? That works fine when you have 5 or 10 things to prioritize, but most of us are dealing with hundreds. How do you figure out which is closest to the corner here? And don’t most of us have several projects running in parallel?\n
  47. Analysts and some requirements tools like to plot value vs. effort on the classic 2x2 grid. You do the things that fall in the upper right quadrant, right? That works fine when you have 5 or 10 things to prioritize, but most of us are dealing with hundreds. How do you figure out which is closest to the corner here? And don’t most of us have several projects running in parallel?\n
  48. Analysts and some requirements tools like to plot value vs. effort on the classic 2x2 grid. You do the things that fall in the upper right quadrant, right? That works fine when you have 5 or 10 things to prioritize, but most of us are dealing with hundreds. How do you figure out which is closest to the corner here? And don’t most of us have several projects running in parallel?\n
  49. Analysts and some requirements tools like to plot value vs. effort on the classic 2x2 grid. You do the things that fall in the upper right quadrant, right? That works fine when you have 5 or 10 things to prioritize, but most of us are dealing with hundreds. How do you figure out which is closest to the corner here? And don’t most of us have several projects running in parallel?\n
  50. Analysts and some requirements tools like to plot value vs. effort on the classic 2x2 grid. You do the things that fall in the upper right quadrant, right? That works fine when you have 5 or 10 things to prioritize, but most of us are dealing with hundreds. How do you figure out which is closest to the corner here? And don’t most of us have several projects running in parallel?\n
  51. Analysts and some requirements tools like to plot value vs. effort on the classic 2x2 grid. You do the things that fall in the upper right quadrant, right? That works fine when you have 5 or 10 things to prioritize, but most of us are dealing with hundreds. How do you figure out which is closest to the corner here? And don’t most of us have several projects running in parallel?\n
  52. Analysts and some requirements tools like to plot value vs. effort on the classic 2x2 grid. You do the things that fall in the upper right quadrant, right? That works fine when you have 5 or 10 things to prioritize, but most of us are dealing with hundreds. How do you figure out which is closest to the corner here? And don’t most of us have several projects running in parallel?\n
  53. Analysts and some requirements tools like to plot value vs. effort on the classic 2x2 grid. You do the things that fall in the upper right quadrant, right? That works fine when you have 5 or 10 things to prioritize, but most of us are dealing with hundreds. How do you figure out which is closest to the corner here? And don’t most of us have several projects running in parallel?\n
  54. Analysts and some requirements tools like to plot value vs. effort on the classic 2x2 grid. You do the things that fall in the upper right quadrant, right? That works fine when you have 5 or 10 things to prioritize, but most of us are dealing with hundreds. How do you figure out which is closest to the corner here? And don’t most of us have several projects running in parallel?\n
  55. Analysts and some requirements tools like to plot value vs. effort on the classic 2x2 grid. You do the things that fall in the upper right quadrant, right? That works fine when you have 5 or 10 things to prioritize, but most of us are dealing with hundreds. How do you figure out which is closest to the corner here? And don’t most of us have several projects running in parallel?\n
  56. Analysts and some requirements tools like to plot value vs. effort on the classic 2x2 grid. You do the things that fall in the upper right quadrant, right? That works fine when you have 5 or 10 things to prioritize, but most of us are dealing with hundreds. How do you figure out which is closest to the corner here? And don’t most of us have several projects running in parallel?\n
  57. Analysts and some requirements tools like to plot value vs. effort on the classic 2x2 grid. You do the things that fall in the upper right quadrant, right? That works fine when you have 5 or 10 things to prioritize, but most of us are dealing with hundreds. How do you figure out which is closest to the corner here? And don’t most of us have several projects running in parallel?\n
  58. Analysts and some requirements tools like to plot value vs. effort on the classic 2x2 grid. You do the things that fall in the upper right quadrant, right? That works fine when you have 5 or 10 things to prioritize, but most of us are dealing with hundreds. How do you figure out which is closest to the corner here? And don’t most of us have several projects running in parallel?\n
  59. Analysts and some requirements tools like to plot value vs. effort on the classic 2x2 grid. You do the things that fall in the upper right quadrant, right? That works fine when you have 5 or 10 things to prioritize, but most of us are dealing with hundreds. How do you figure out which is closest to the corner here? And don’t most of us have several projects running in parallel?\n
  60. Analysts and some requirements tools like to plot value vs. effort on the classic 2x2 grid. You do the things that fall in the upper right quadrant, right? That works fine when you have 5 or 10 things to prioritize, but most of us are dealing with hundreds. How do you figure out which is closest to the corner here? And don’t most of us have several projects running in parallel?\n
  61. Analysts and some requirements tools like to plot value vs. effort on the classic 2x2 grid. You do the things that fall in the upper right quadrant, right? That works fine when you have 5 or 10 things to prioritize, but most of us are dealing with hundreds. How do you figure out which is closest to the corner here? And don’t most of us have several projects running in parallel?\n
  62. Analysts and some requirements tools like to plot value vs. effort on the classic 2x2 grid. You do the things that fall in the upper right quadrant, right? That works fine when you have 5 or 10 things to prioritize, but most of us are dealing with hundreds. How do you figure out which is closest to the corner here? And don’t most of us have several projects running in parallel?\n
  63. Analysts and some requirements tools like to plot value vs. effort on the classic 2x2 grid. You do the things that fall in the upper right quadrant, right? That works fine when you have 5 or 10 things to prioritize, but most of us are dealing with hundreds. How do you figure out which is closest to the corner here? And don’t most of us have several projects running in parallel?\n
  64. Analysts and some requirements tools like to plot value vs. effort on the classic 2x2 grid. You do the things that fall in the upper right quadrant, right? That works fine when you have 5 or 10 things to prioritize, but most of us are dealing with hundreds. How do you figure out which is closest to the corner here? And don’t most of us have several projects running in parallel?\n
  65. Analysts and some requirements tools like to plot value vs. effort on the classic 2x2 grid. You do the things that fall in the upper right quadrant, right? That works fine when you have 5 or 10 things to prioritize, but most of us are dealing with hundreds. How do you figure out which is closest to the corner here? And don’t most of us have several projects running in parallel?\n
  66. Analysts and some requirements tools like to plot value vs. effort on the classic 2x2 grid. You do the things that fall in the upper right quadrant, right? That works fine when you have 5 or 10 things to prioritize, but most of us are dealing with hundreds. How do you figure out which is closest to the corner here? And don’t most of us have several projects running in parallel?\n
  67. Analysts and some requirements tools like to plot value vs. effort on the classic 2x2 grid. You do the things that fall in the upper right quadrant, right? That works fine when you have 5 or 10 things to prioritize, but most of us are dealing with hundreds. How do you figure out which is closest to the corner here? And don’t most of us have several projects running in parallel?\n
  68. Analysts and some requirements tools like to plot value vs. effort on the classic 2x2 grid. You do the things that fall in the upper right quadrant, right? That works fine when you have 5 or 10 things to prioritize, but most of us are dealing with hundreds. How do you figure out which is closest to the corner here? And don’t most of us have several projects running in parallel?\n
  69. Analysts and some requirements tools like to plot value vs. effort on the classic 2x2 grid. You do the things that fall in the upper right quadrant, right? That works fine when you have 5 or 10 things to prioritize, but most of us are dealing with hundreds. How do you figure out which is closest to the corner here? And don’t most of us have several projects running in parallel?\n
  70. Analysts and some requirements tools like to plot value vs. effort on the classic 2x2 grid. You do the things that fall in the upper right quadrant, right? That works fine when you have 5 or 10 things to prioritize, but most of us are dealing with hundreds. How do you figure out which is closest to the corner here? And don’t most of us have several projects running in parallel?\n
  71. Analysts and some requirements tools like to plot value vs. effort on the classic 2x2 grid. You do the things that fall in the upper right quadrant, right? That works fine when you have 5 or 10 things to prioritize, but most of us are dealing with hundreds. How do you figure out which is closest to the corner here? And don’t most of us have several projects running in parallel?\n
  72. Analysts and some requirements tools like to plot value vs. effort on the classic 2x2 grid. You do the things that fall in the upper right quadrant, right? That works fine when you have 5 or 10 things to prioritize, but most of us are dealing with hundreds. How do you figure out which is closest to the corner here? And don’t most of us have several projects running in parallel?\n
  73. Analysts and some requirements tools like to plot value vs. effort on the classic 2x2 grid. You do the things that fall in the upper right quadrant, right? That works fine when you have 5 or 10 things to prioritize, but most of us are dealing with hundreds. How do you figure out which is closest to the corner here? And don’t most of us have several projects running in parallel?\n
  74. Analysts and some requirements tools like to plot value vs. effort on the classic 2x2 grid. You do the things that fall in the upper right quadrant, right? That works fine when you have 5 or 10 things to prioritize, but most of us are dealing with hundreds. How do you figure out which is closest to the corner here? And don’t most of us have several projects running in parallel?\n
  75. Analysts and some requirements tools like to plot value vs. effort on the classic 2x2 grid. You do the things that fall in the upper right quadrant, right? That works fine when you have 5 or 10 things to prioritize, but most of us are dealing with hundreds. How do you figure out which is closest to the corner here? And don’t most of us have several projects running in parallel?\n
  76. Analysts and some requirements tools like to plot value vs. effort on the classic 2x2 grid. You do the things that fall in the upper right quadrant, right? That works fine when you have 5 or 10 things to prioritize, but most of us are dealing with hundreds. How do you figure out which is closest to the corner here? And don’t most of us have several projects running in parallel?\n
  77. Analysts and some requirements tools like to plot value vs. effort on the classic 2x2 grid. You do the things that fall in the upper right quadrant, right? That works fine when you have 5 or 10 things to prioritize, but most of us are dealing with hundreds. How do you figure out which is closest to the corner here? And don’t most of us have several projects running in parallel?\n
  78. Analysts and some requirements tools like to plot value vs. effort on the classic 2x2 grid. You do the things that fall in the upper right quadrant, right? That works fine when you have 5 or 10 things to prioritize, but most of us are dealing with hundreds. How do you figure out which is closest to the corner here? And don’t most of us have several projects running in parallel?\n
  79. Analysts and some requirements tools like to plot value vs. effort on the classic 2x2 grid. You do the things that fall in the upper right quadrant, right? That works fine when you have 5 or 10 things to prioritize, but most of us are dealing with hundreds. How do you figure out which is closest to the corner here? And don’t most of us have several projects running in parallel?\n
  80. Analysts and some requirements tools like to plot value vs. effort on the classic 2x2 grid. You do the things that fall in the upper right quadrant, right? That works fine when you have 5 or 10 things to prioritize, but most of us are dealing with hundreds. How do you figure out which is closest to the corner here? And don’t most of us have several projects running in parallel?\n
  81. Analysts and some requirements tools like to plot value vs. effort on the classic 2x2 grid. You do the things that fall in the upper right quadrant, right? That works fine when you have 5 or 10 things to prioritize, but most of us are dealing with hundreds. How do you figure out which is closest to the corner here? And don’t most of us have several projects running in parallel?\n
  82. Analysts and some requirements tools like to plot value vs. effort on the classic 2x2 grid. You do the things that fall in the upper right quadrant, right? That works fine when you have 5 or 10 things to prioritize, but most of us are dealing with hundreds. How do you figure out which is closest to the corner here? And don’t most of us have several projects running in parallel?\n
  83. Analysts and some requirements tools like to plot value vs. effort on the classic 2x2 grid. You do the things that fall in the upper right quadrant, right? That works fine when you have 5 or 10 things to prioritize, but most of us are dealing with hundreds. How do you figure out which is closest to the corner here? And don’t most of us have several projects running in parallel?\n
  84. Analysts and some requirements tools like to plot value vs. effort on the classic 2x2 grid. You do the things that fall in the upper right quadrant, right? That works fine when you have 5 or 10 things to prioritize, but most of us are dealing with hundreds. How do you figure out which is closest to the corner here? And don’t most of us have several projects running in parallel?\n
  85. Analysts and some requirements tools like to plot value vs. effort on the classic 2x2 grid. You do the things that fall in the upper right quadrant, right? That works fine when you have 5 or 10 things to prioritize, but most of us are dealing with hundreds. How do you figure out which is closest to the corner here? And don’t most of us have several projects running in parallel?\n
  86. Analysts and some requirements tools like to plot value vs. effort on the classic 2x2 grid. You do the things that fall in the upper right quadrant, right? That works fine when you have 5 or 10 things to prioritize, but most of us are dealing with hundreds. How do you figure out which is closest to the corner here? And don’t most of us have several projects running in parallel?\n
  87. Analysts and some requirements tools like to plot value vs. effort on the classic 2x2 grid. You do the things that fall in the upper right quadrant, right? That works fine when you have 5 or 10 things to prioritize, but most of us are dealing with hundreds. How do you figure out which is closest to the corner here? And don’t most of us have several projects running in parallel?\n
  88. Analysts and some requirements tools like to plot value vs. effort on the classic 2x2 grid. You do the things that fall in the upper right quadrant, right? That works fine when you have 5 or 10 things to prioritize, but most of us are dealing with hundreds. How do you figure out which is closest to the corner here? And don’t most of us have several projects running in parallel?\n
  89. Analysts and some requirements tools like to plot value vs. effort on the classic 2x2 grid. You do the things that fall in the upper right quadrant, right? That works fine when you have 5 or 10 things to prioritize, but most of us are dealing with hundreds. How do you figure out which is closest to the corner here? And don’t most of us have several projects running in parallel?\n
  90. Analysts and some requirements tools like to plot value vs. effort on the classic 2x2 grid. You do the things that fall in the upper right quadrant, right? That works fine when you have 5 or 10 things to prioritize, but most of us are dealing with hundreds. How do you figure out which is closest to the corner here? And don’t most of us have several projects running in parallel?\n
  91. Analysts and some requirements tools like to plot value vs. effort on the classic 2x2 grid. You do the things that fall in the upper right quadrant, right? That works fine when you have 5 or 10 things to prioritize, but most of us are dealing with hundreds. How do you figure out which is closest to the corner here? And don’t most of us have several projects running in parallel?\n
  92. Analysts and some requirements tools like to plot value vs. effort on the classic 2x2 grid. You do the things that fall in the upper right quadrant, right? That works fine when you have 5 or 10 things to prioritize, but most of us are dealing with hundreds. How do you figure out which is closest to the corner here? And don’t most of us have several projects running in parallel?\n
  93. Analysts and some requirements tools like to plot value vs. effort on the classic 2x2 grid. You do the things that fall in the upper right quadrant, right? That works fine when you have 5 or 10 things to prioritize, but most of us are dealing with hundreds. How do you figure out which is closest to the corner here? And don’t most of us have several projects running in parallel?\n
  94. Analysts and some requirements tools like to plot value vs. effort on the classic 2x2 grid. You do the things that fall in the upper right quadrant, right? That works fine when you have 5 or 10 things to prioritize, but most of us are dealing with hundreds. How do you figure out which is closest to the corner here? And don’t most of us have several projects running in parallel?\n
  95. Analysts and some requirements tools like to plot value vs. effort on the classic 2x2 grid. You do the things that fall in the upper right quadrant, right? That works fine when you have 5 or 10 things to prioritize, but most of us are dealing with hundreds. How do you figure out which is closest to the corner here? And don’t most of us have several projects running in parallel?\n
  96. Analysts and some requirements tools like to plot value vs. effort on the classic 2x2 grid. You do the things that fall in the upper right quadrant, right? That works fine when you have 5 or 10 things to prioritize, but most of us are dealing with hundreds. How do you figure out which is closest to the corner here? And don’t most of us have several projects running in parallel?\n
  97. Analysts and some requirements tools like to plot value vs. effort on the classic 2x2 grid. You do the things that fall in the upper right quadrant, right? That works fine when you have 5 or 10 things to prioritize, but most of us are dealing with hundreds. How do you figure out which is closest to the corner here? And don’t most of us have several projects running in parallel?\n
  98. Analysts and some requirements tools like to plot value vs. effort on the classic 2x2 grid. You do the things that fall in the upper right quadrant, right? That works fine when you have 5 or 10 things to prioritize, but most of us are dealing with hundreds. How do you figure out which is closest to the corner here? And don’t most of us have several projects running in parallel?\n
  99. Analysts and some requirements tools like to plot value vs. effort on the classic 2x2 grid. You do the things that fall in the upper right quadrant, right? That works fine when you have 5 or 10 things to prioritize, but most of us are dealing with hundreds. How do you figure out which is closest to the corner here? And don’t most of us have several projects running in parallel?\n
  100. Analysts and some requirements tools like to plot value vs. effort on the classic 2x2 grid. You do the things that fall in the upper right quadrant, right? That works fine when you have 5 or 10 things to prioritize, but most of us are dealing with hundreds. How do you figure out which is closest to the corner here? And don’t most of us have several projects running in parallel?\n
  101. Analysts and some requirements tools like to plot value vs. effort on the classic 2x2 grid. You do the things that fall in the upper right quadrant, right? That works fine when you have 5 or 10 things to prioritize, but most of us are dealing with hundreds. How do you figure out which is closest to the corner here? And don’t most of us have several projects running in parallel?\n
  102. Analysts and some requirements tools like to plot value vs. effort on the classic 2x2 grid. You do the things that fall in the upper right quadrant, right? That works fine when you have 5 or 10 things to prioritize, but most of us are dealing with hundreds. How do you figure out which is closest to the corner here? And don’t most of us have several projects running in parallel?\n
  103. Analysts and some requirements tools like to plot value vs. effort on the classic 2x2 grid. You do the things that fall in the upper right quadrant, right? That works fine when you have 5 or 10 things to prioritize, but most of us are dealing with hundreds. How do you figure out which is closest to the corner here? And don’t most of us have several projects running in parallel?\n
  104. Analysts and some requirements tools like to plot value vs. effort on the classic 2x2 grid. You do the things that fall in the upper right quadrant, right? That works fine when you have 5 or 10 things to prioritize, but most of us are dealing with hundreds. How do you figure out which is closest to the corner here? And don’t most of us have several projects running in parallel?\n
  105. Analysts and some requirements tools like to plot value vs. effort on the classic 2x2 grid. You do the things that fall in the upper right quadrant, right? That works fine when you have 5 or 10 things to prioritize, but most of us are dealing with hundreds. How do you figure out which is closest to the corner here? And don’t most of us have several projects running in parallel?\n
  106. Analysts and some requirements tools like to plot value vs. effort on the classic 2x2 grid. You do the things that fall in the upper right quadrant, right? That works fine when you have 5 or 10 things to prioritize, but most of us are dealing with hundreds. How do you figure out which is closest to the corner here? And don’t most of us have several projects running in parallel?\n
  107. Analysts and some requirements tools like to plot value vs. effort on the classic 2x2 grid. You do the things that fall in the upper right quadrant, right? That works fine when you have 5 or 10 things to prioritize, but most of us are dealing with hundreds. How do you figure out which is closest to the corner here? And don’t most of us have several projects running in parallel?\n
  108. Analysts and some requirements tools like to plot value vs. effort on the classic 2x2 grid. You do the things that fall in the upper right quadrant, right? That works fine when you have 5 or 10 things to prioritize, but most of us are dealing with hundreds. How do you figure out which is closest to the corner here? And don’t most of us have several projects running in parallel?\n
  109. Analysts and some requirements tools like to plot value vs. effort on the classic 2x2 grid. You do the things that fall in the upper right quadrant, right? That works fine when you have 5 or 10 things to prioritize, but most of us are dealing with hundreds. How do you figure out which is closest to the corner here? And don’t most of us have several projects running in parallel?\n
  110. Analysts and some requirements tools like to plot value vs. effort on the classic 2x2 grid. You do the things that fall in the upper right quadrant, right? That works fine when you have 5 or 10 things to prioritize, but most of us are dealing with hundreds. How do you figure out which is closest to the corner here? And don’t most of us have several projects running in parallel?\n
  111. Analysts and some requirements tools like to plot value vs. effort on the classic 2x2 grid. You do the things that fall in the upper right quadrant, right? That works fine when you have 5 or 10 things to prioritize, but most of us are dealing with hundreds. How do you figure out which is closest to the corner here? And don’t most of us have several projects running in parallel?\n
  112. Analysts and some requirements tools like to plot value vs. effort on the classic 2x2 grid. You do the things that fall in the upper right quadrant, right? That works fine when you have 5 or 10 things to prioritize, but most of us are dealing with hundreds. How do you figure out which is closest to the corner here? And don’t most of us have several projects running in parallel?\n
  113. Analysts and some requirements tools like to plot value vs. effort on the classic 2x2 grid. You do the things that fall in the upper right quadrant, right? That works fine when you have 5 or 10 things to prioritize, but most of us are dealing with hundreds. How do you figure out which is closest to the corner here? And don’t most of us have several projects running in parallel?\n
  114. Analysts and some requirements tools like to plot value vs. effort on the classic 2x2 grid. You do the things that fall in the upper right quadrant, right? That works fine when you have 5 or 10 things to prioritize, but most of us are dealing with hundreds. How do you figure out which is closest to the corner here? And don’t most of us have several projects running in parallel?\n
  115. Analysts and some requirements tools like to plot value vs. effort on the classic 2x2 grid. You do the things that fall in the upper right quadrant, right? That works fine when you have 5 or 10 things to prioritize, but most of us are dealing with hundreds. How do you figure out which is closest to the corner here? And don’t most of us have several projects running in parallel?\n
  116. Analysts and some requirements tools like to plot value vs. effort on the classic 2x2 grid. You do the things that fall in the upper right quadrant, right? That works fine when you have 5 or 10 things to prioritize, but most of us are dealing with hundreds. How do you figure out which is closest to the corner here? And don’t most of us have several projects running in parallel?\n
  117. Analysts and some requirements tools like to plot value vs. effort on the classic 2x2 grid. You do the things that fall in the upper right quadrant, right? That works fine when you have 5 or 10 things to prioritize, but most of us are dealing with hundreds. How do you figure out which is closest to the corner here? And don’t most of us have several projects running in parallel?\n
  118. Analysts and some requirements tools like to plot value vs. effort on the classic 2x2 grid. You do the things that fall in the upper right quadrant, right? That works fine when you have 5 or 10 things to prioritize, but most of us are dealing with hundreds. How do you figure out which is closest to the corner here? And don’t most of us have several projects running in parallel?\n
  119. Analysts and some requirements tools like to plot value vs. effort on the classic 2x2 grid. You do the things that fall in the upper right quadrant, right? That works fine when you have 5 or 10 things to prioritize, but most of us are dealing with hundreds. How do you figure out which is closest to the corner here? And don’t most of us have several projects running in parallel?\n
  120. Analysts and some requirements tools like to plot value vs. effort on the classic 2x2 grid. You do the things that fall in the upper right quadrant, right? That works fine when you have 5 or 10 things to prioritize, but most of us are dealing with hundreds. How do you figure out which is closest to the corner here? And don’t most of us have several projects running in parallel?\n
  121. Analysts and some requirements tools like to plot value vs. effort on the classic 2x2 grid. You do the things that fall in the upper right quadrant, right? That works fine when you have 5 or 10 things to prioritize, but most of us are dealing with hundreds. How do you figure out which is closest to the corner here? And don’t most of us have several projects running in parallel?\n
  122. \n
  123. Your goals usually come down from your CEO or your executive team. Strategic goals help you prioritize projects. More tactical goals are what gets your project approved. Revenue is nearly always on the list. \n\nA tip for when your CEO asks what you are doing that’s “transformative” or “paradigm-shifting” is to think of it as things that won’t generate significant revenue this year but have a chance to grow it a lot in future years by entering new markets or serving new needs.\n\nI’ve never been able to get away without including some kind of “coolness” or “buzz factor” goal for anything but internal projects. If you skip that, someone always complains that we’re not taking into account that we need to generate excitement in the market to be successful.\n
  124. Your goals usually come down from your CEO or your executive team. Strategic goals help you prioritize projects. More tactical goals are what gets your project approved. Revenue is nearly always on the list. \n\nA tip for when your CEO asks what you are doing that’s “transformative” or “paradigm-shifting” is to think of it as things that won’t generate significant revenue this year but have a chance to grow it a lot in future years by entering new markets or serving new needs.\n\nI’ve never been able to get away without including some kind of “coolness” or “buzz factor” goal for anything but internal projects. If you skip that, someone always complains that we’re not taking into account that we need to generate excitement in the market to be successful.\n
  125. Your goals usually come down from your CEO or your executive team. Strategic goals help you prioritize projects. More tactical goals are what gets your project approved. Revenue is nearly always on the list. \n\nA tip for when your CEO asks what you are doing that’s “transformative” or “paradigm-shifting” is to think of it as things that won’t generate significant revenue this year but have a chance to grow it a lot in future years by entering new markets or serving new needs.\n\nI’ve never been able to get away without including some kind of “coolness” or “buzz factor” goal for anything but internal projects. If you skip that, someone always complains that we’re not taking into account that we need to generate excitement in the market to be successful.\n
  126. Your goals usually come down from your CEO or your executive team. Strategic goals help you prioritize projects. More tactical goals are what gets your project approved. Revenue is nearly always on the list. \n\nA tip for when your CEO asks what you are doing that’s “transformative” or “paradigm-shifting” is to think of it as things that won’t generate significant revenue this year but have a chance to grow it a lot in future years by entering new markets or serving new needs.\n\nI’ve never been able to get away without including some kind of “coolness” or “buzz factor” goal for anything but internal projects. If you skip that, someone always complains that we’re not taking into account that we need to generate excitement in the market to be successful.\n
  127. Your goals usually come down from your CEO or your executive team. Strategic goals help you prioritize projects. More tactical goals are what gets your project approved. Revenue is nearly always on the list. \n\nA tip for when your CEO asks what you are doing that’s “transformative” or “paradigm-shifting” is to think of it as things that won’t generate significant revenue this year but have a chance to grow it a lot in future years by entering new markets or serving new needs.\n\nI’ve never been able to get away without including some kind of “coolness” or “buzz factor” goal for anything but internal projects. If you skip that, someone always complains that we’re not taking into account that we need to generate excitement in the market to be successful.\n
  128. Your goals usually come down from your CEO or your executive team. Strategic goals help you prioritize projects. More tactical goals are what gets your project approved. Revenue is nearly always on the list. \n\nA tip for when your CEO asks what you are doing that’s “transformative” or “paradigm-shifting” is to think of it as things that won’t generate significant revenue this year but have a chance to grow it a lot in future years by entering new markets or serving new needs.\n\nI’ve never been able to get away without including some kind of “coolness” or “buzz factor” goal for anything but internal projects. If you skip that, someone always complains that we’re not taking into account that we need to generate excitement in the market to be successful.\n
  129. Your goals usually come down from your CEO or your executive team. Strategic goals help you prioritize projects. More tactical goals are what gets your project approved. Revenue is nearly always on the list. \n\nA tip for when your CEO asks what you are doing that’s “transformative” or “paradigm-shifting” is to think of it as things that won’t generate significant revenue this year but have a chance to grow it a lot in future years by entering new markets or serving new needs.\n\nI’ve never been able to get away without including some kind of “coolness” or “buzz factor” goal for anything but internal projects. If you skip that, someone always complains that we’re not taking into account that we need to generate excitement in the market to be successful.\n
  130. Your goals usually come down from your CEO or your executive team. Strategic goals help you prioritize projects. More tactical goals are what gets your project approved. Revenue is nearly always on the list. \n\nA tip for when your CEO asks what you are doing that’s “transformative” or “paradigm-shifting” is to think of it as things that won’t generate significant revenue this year but have a chance to grow it a lot in future years by entering new markets or serving new needs.\n\nI’ve never been able to get away without including some kind of “coolness” or “buzz factor” goal for anything but internal projects. If you skip that, someone always complains that we’re not taking into account that we need to generate excitement in the market to be successful.\n
  131. \n
  132. \n
  133. \n
  134. \n
  135. \n
  136. \n
  137. \n
  138. \n
  139. \n
  140. \n
  141. Removing the QA step to ship early means negative numbers for quality (V2)\n
  142. Removing the QA step to ship early means negative numbers for quality (V2)\n
  143. Removing the QA step to ship early means negative numbers for quality (V2)\n
  144. Removing the QA step to ship early means negative numbers for quality (V2)\n
  145. No. Maybe halfway.\n
  146. \n
  147. \n
  148. \n
  149. Henry Kissinger was Nixon’s Secretary of State and famously settled things down in the Middle East after the 1967 war using shuttle diplomacy.\n
  150. \n
  151. \n
  152. \n
  153. A long-time PM of a company I had just joined saw the way this methodology drove consensus among his executive team as “magical.”\n
  154. A PM I met recently told me he had a friend who developed a spreadsheet like this but could not get buy-in on it. Turns out he made two critical mistakes. First, he had about 20 different goals he scored everything against and so couldn’t get anyone to review it with him. Second, he insisted the team adopt the spreadsheet’s recommendations exactly without further discussion.\n
  155. \n
  156. \n