Intuiting Your Audience
I’ve been meeting with VP and Directors of Development and Product Management of – typically – well-funded, mid-stage startups. It’s clear to me that these leaders who set the direction of the product are not getting enough time with their customers and prospects. It’s the typical product management difficulty. They want to spend the time with their users and buyers, but can’t find the time to do so. There are just too many other pressing responsibilities; too many fires to fight. Instead these product and development leaders intuit their users and buyers. If you are doing this, my advice is to be sure to:
- Intuit the users and buyers based on reality, not on guesswork
- Ensure the staff have a common intuition of the product’s users and buyers (so the work is at least consistent)
Here’s a quick example: A, a User Experience expert, inherited responsibility for a relatively technical software product that was OEM to (I’m not making this up) Intuit. Intuit’s users weren’t happy with the user experience of the product. Intuit considered severing the OEM deal, but gave the company a chance to address the issues.
A began calling users. It turned out that none of the users A spoke with were technical. While ideally the user would be technical – even a sys admin, actual use of the product had fallen to an administrative assistant, a marketing person, etc. Based on more research, A created a robust persona for the UI programmers. The programmers, in turn, quickly modified the interface to meet the needs of the true product users rather than the assumed users. The big OEM deal with Intuit was saved.

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