7 Steps to Product Enlightenment
In my many years of consulting together with my years as engineer, product manager, entrepreneur, partner, board chair and mother, I’ve learned a thing or two about developing and launching anything new. Many of these have been codified and turned into MIDIOR lore but there’s not a week that goes by that I don’t find myself spouting off at least one of these seven steps to “product enlightenment” – particularly when I’m working with one of our new “MIDIORites” (associates who have recently joined the MIDIOR team). So, while many of you have heard these before, I thought I’d share them again as both a gentle reminder and source of a chuckle in your day. In a nutshell, here are some important things – seven to be exact – to remember when your team engages in any new product or service initiative:
- There are no crystal balls. You cannot predict the future and you should not trust anyone who says they can. Success lies at the intersection of preparation and opportunity. Half of that is serendipity – the other half is up to you. The best you can do is be prepared by understanding enough of the details so you are ready to deal with reality.
- Brakes let you go fast. If you are not able to put an end to projects gone bad, you will have no resources with which to start new paths. The ability to do more of the right things depends on freeing up resources by making hard decisions about what not to do.
- Customers are better than patents. If you don’t have customers, put serious effort into getting to know a few. If you already have customers, get to know them better. The answers to most of your questions are at your customer’s office: to know thy customer is to know thy product requirements.
- Innovative products lose money. Innovation depends on risk capital and is an investment for future growth—not a strategy for increasing current earnings. If you are not inclined to follow the product J curve, do not pursue this path for it will only lead to disappointment and failed expectations.
- If you can’t give it away, you can’t sell it. If you can’t get anyone to try your product by giving it to them, you probably won’t get them to “trade” their money for it. There is much to be learned from walking the path of a customer in order to understand the complete truth of trying, buying and using your product. Until then, you cannot know what it feels like to live in their shoes.
- If your mother doesn’t get it, how do you expect me to? If you are spending most of your time educating customers, then it’s time to rethink the plan with a focus on reducing the sales cycle. This is a common symptom of early stage markets and missionary sales and should be a warning sign for the perils ahead. Beware of the valley of the innovators and the realm of the early adopter – many wonderful products have died the death of the long sales cycle. Do not enter without food, water, and enough capital to last the entire journey.
- Passion trumps process , every time. You cannot separate the people from the “product” – and how much they care directly correlates to their level of accountability for the result, and by extension, the actual outcome. Great people who define themselves by the success or failure of their products build great products.







