Product = Experience

Experience

This is a follow up to my Sales = Support post about how the delivery and consumption of web-based products is changing the way we need to think about aligning around the end-user.

Like many of my blog posts, this was inspired by a conversation (an email exchange in this case) about whether to focus on adding features or focus on the user experience given limited resources.

I had been meaning to write this for some time so decided to post here what I shared with a friend:

Do one thing and make it really simple (to start).  There are always features to add and complexity to consider but people use products and unless they have to use it (do x to get paid/keep your job, etc.) they choose to use products based on value delivered.  

I definitely believe that product = experience in an on-demand world.  You want people to find, try, use and love your thing with limited to no involvement on your part.  This makes it all about experience. You get involved when they have a question or observation:  sales = support.  The product = experience blog post is coming soon:)

That said, if you are not quite to the point where the one thing you are doing really well doesn't solve someone's problem yet, then focus on that.

Consider a product like Dropbox.  They get a lot of buzz but one of the things that stands out to me is not their fame but how dead simple the product is to use and works itself into my existing knowledge. I didn't have to learn how to use it, it works like a file finder/manager – looks the same, even integrated into that view.  

They are not the first (or last) company to do cloud-based file backup but they made it work for me with limited brain cycles to learn it.  Most people are not curious enough to figure it out so the focus has to be on quick time to value.

 

Forget about B2B and B2C, it’s all about B2P

Businessprofessionals_B2P

B2P = Business to Professional

The broad definitions of defining a target market for a technology product or service have a new addition and it is you.

Traditionally, consumer products were Business to Consumer (B2C) and business products were Business to Business (B2B) primarily based on who and how the decision to purchase is made.  Consumer traditionally via an individual and Business via procurement or the like.

Now that products can be delivered via the web, apps, app marketplaces, mobile, etc. a new way to look at how and who you market to has emerged.  

Businesses have employees and those employees are people.  People who now are able to find, try, and even purchase products on their own and bring them to the workplace.  They can then share them with others without central coordination or control.  While not always perceived as a good thing from a IT risk management perspective, this is driving a whole new level of innovation inside businesses.

B2P requires consumer marketing savvy combined with enterprise marketing reality.  Solve a problem but do so in an interesting and even entertaining way that matters to the individual first.

What do you think?  Leave a comment below or send me an email.

 

Some predictions on the future of media from Jeffrey Cole

I had the opportunity to hear Jeffrey Cole of USC's Annenberg Center for the Digital Future present earlier this week at the FT Global Investment Series forum in Seattle.

He did a really nice job covering the current state and future of media.  Here are some highlights:

  • Newspaper circulation begins to decline when Internet penetration gets to 30%.  For comparison, India is currently at 14% Internet penetration.
  • The iPad is the "4th screen" in an evolution of TV (1st screen) ->PC (2nd screen)->mobile (3rd screen)->iPad/tablet (4th screen)
  • Television and its captive audience have escaped the home with mobile consumption and no longer a predictable audience.
  • The amount of time we spend "in front of a screen" has increased from 15 hrs per week in 1975 to 36 hrs per week today and will go to 50 hrs per week two years from now.
  • 80% of mobile phone users sleep within arm's reach of their device (I use mine as an alarm clock – do you?)
  • On-line news needs to be between 30-60 seconds old requiring constant production.  No more printing the paper and distributing it hours after news breaks.
  • We don't lose our mobile phones because we rarely get far enough away from them to forget them.

I also met some really nice folks and definitely appreciated the invitation to attend.