When it comes to “product,” we encourage our clients not to be too rigid when spinning up teams. “Product” is the one place in the organization where having a single configuration for product teams is a recipe for disaster. What you need to be successful varies depending on the product: its maturity, complexity, scale, objectives and so forth. Effective product teams also evolve in tandem with products as they move through their life cycle. To be fair, there are certainly groups of activities (which I call functions) and particular roles (not to be confused with jobs) that need to be played in almost every case but companies that “lead the pack” in their respective industries know that how functions are covered and how roles map to jobs will vary from product to product and year to year.
Before starting any product initiative and configuring a team, take a moment to think about its characteristics. Is it large or small in scope? Complex or simple? Is the new product or set of capabilities innovative or is the target clearly defined extensions? Is your development approach Agile or Waterfall? Then think about the functions that need to be covered. In any initiative, there are internally facing activities that include facing off with development teams, translating requirements and prioritizing work. Similarly, there are externally facing activities that include facing off with customers and stakeholders to identify and understand problems and serve as the face of the product in the market. Depending on the scope and scale of the initiative, these functions may be able to be mapped to a single role filled by an individual with responsibility for both the internally and externally facing activities– and they may not.
When individuals are assigned to a product initiative, they often bring along titles that are tightly coupled with their jobs within particular business units or departments. And yet, each team should ideally consist of different roles that have nothing to do with specific positions. Typically, someone will need to capture and prioritize requirements. You also need someone to keep the lists and track the milestones. And, of course, you need someone at the helm serving as champion to evangelize and lead the charge. There is always a financial or business sponsor who makes budget available along with someone who can provide air cover for the team, allowing the players to execute without unnecessary interference. This is particularly important when the product is innovative and goes against the grain of organization’s process and culture. In my view, these are roles and roles have names like Product Owner, Product Manager, Scrum Master, Project Manager, Business Analyst and the like. The particular personality required to succeed in a specific role will vary by product, initiative and point in time.
Depending on what the desired outcome is for an initiative, product leaders must understand what functions need to be covered, which roles are required and what type of personality and experience will be effective. One person can play multiple roles but it can be equally effective to split up roles depending on maturity, complexity, scope and timeline. Which is why I encourage my clients to map functions to roles, roles to jobs and jobs to people – in that order. This should be reassessed on a regular basis as products evolve, requirements change and timelines adjust – which is where the need to be flexible comes into play.
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