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Saeed Khan

Hi Bonnie,

First time reading your blog. Came through a referral posting on Steve Johnson's site.

Don't take this the wrong way, but I honestly don't see how the personas helped reach the conclusion, because, to be honest, that's the only conclusion that could be reached.

i.e. old "stuff" still has to work the same for existing users, but new capabilities (of the new engine) can be exposed for new and power users.

There simply is no other choice really. I've been through this before, and it was simply a given conclusion with the dev team. Rip out the internals, replace with something better, but the old "stuff" has to work as before, or if it is technically not possible, then an automated upgrade path so the old "stuff" is upgraded with minimal user effort and works.

Can you elaborate on why WhizApp needed to use personas to convince them of something that sound like a no brainer? Again, please don't take this the wrong way.

Saeed

Bruce McCarthy

In this case it sounds like the real benefit to having the two personas was in your last paragraph:

"they prevented the dev staff from speding all their time on the cool/sexy work they wanted to do, helping them stay focused on the dull/necessary work of the product."

It gave your discussion a framework for understanding that both things were needed and that the dull stuff was, in fact, necessary.

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