What is the difference between User Experience and Product Management? Where do you draw the line between the two? How can UXers work better with Product Managers? How can a UXer transition into product management? All these questions and more, answered in this presentation by Jeff Lash for the 2011 St. Louis User Experience conference on Feb 25, 2011.
User Experience and Product Management: Two Peas in the Same Pod?
1. User Experience and Product Management: Two Peas in the Same Pod? Jeff Lash // STL UX 2011 These slides (with notes!) are online at http://j.mp/ux-pm-stlux11
50. Questions? These slides are online at http://j.mp/ux-pm-stlux11 www.goodproductmanager.com [email_address]
Hinweis der Redaktion
Welcome to the notes view! Hope you enjoy this look behind the scenes Background UX for ~5 years Moved into product management ~5 years ago When I started in my role, my UCD colleagues asked me 2 things Tell us how we can work better with product managers Tell us what itâs like on âthe dark sideâ Can we move over to the dark side?
Iâm not going to even to try and define this; you know what it is Includes everything related to the user experience â user research, information architecture, user-centered design, interaction design, usability testing, etc.
Will get into the details in a bit For now â product manager is someone who manages a product What is a product? Anything can be a product â website, intranet, software, hardware
Everyone should have a printout that looks like this Iâm going to show you 10 job postings â just excerpts from the job postings Your job is to put a checkbox in the column representing what type of job you think it is â a user experience / user-centered design job, or a product manager job Someone asked when I did a dry run of this presentation: can I check both? For each job posting, you can check one, both, or neither box My tip â just pick one The column on the right is to grade your scores later â Iâll trust you not to cheat and Iâll let you grade your own scores Any questions?
Information Architect (Publisher's Clearing House) http://hostedjobs.openhire.com/epostings/submit.cfm?fuseaction=app.dspjob&jobid=303718&company_id=15489&jobBoardId=1112
Product Manager, Google TV User Experience (Google) http://www.google.com/intl/eo/jobs/uslocations/mountain-view/product/product-manager-google-tv-user-experience-mountain-view/index.html
Director of User Experience (Groupon) http://www.groupon.com/jobs?nl=1&jvi=oWDCVfwQ,Job
Information Architect (Publisher's Clearing House) http://hostedjobs.openhire.com/epostings/submit.cfm?fuseaction=app.dspjob&jobid=303718&company_id=15489&jobBoardId=1112
Product Manager, Google TV User Experience (Google) http://www.google.com/intl/eo/jobs/uslocations/mountain-view/product/product-manager-google-tv-user-experience-mountain-view/index.html
Director of User Experience (Groupon) http://www.groupon.com/jobs?nl=1&jvi=oWDCVfwQ,Job
Add up your scores No half-points â either itâs right or itâs wrong Slightly biased â took quotes out of context There are clearly differences, but not as much as you might think â this isnât really as biased as it could have been This was a fun exercise, but it had a purpose (I hope) Thereâs a lot of overlap Confusion Lines arenât clear Youâre UX people and youâre confused â how do you think other people you work with feel? If you canât clearly understand and articulate what you do and how itâs different from others, how can you expect them to?
At the beginning I mentioned âthe dark sideâ If product management is ⊠really the dark side
Then weâre all On the dark side How many of you work for a for-profit company? Your job is to make that company money Non-profits? Your job is to help that non-profit lose money as quickly as possible Just kidding Itâs not âus vs. themâ First, because Iâm not on your side any more (thatâs a joke) But hopefully from the examples youâve seen the similarities between the two roles, the common objectives, the shared responsibility If you take only one thing out of this presentation, thatâs what I want you to get out of it
So if product managers and user experience practitioners really are doing similar things, whatâs the difference?
This is from a great article from Cooper, Alan Cooperâs company (formerly known as Cooper Interaction Design) Reinforces the confusion, doesnât it? Incidentally, this is probably the best article Iâve read describing not just what product managers do, but how they work with user experience people
Been trying to think about why thereâs this confusion and conflict Part of it is probably lack of mutual understanding, but I think itâs more Resources How many of you have worked on a project that, prior to your involvement, had no user experience people working on it? What do you think they did without you? Do you really think that youâre that invaluable that they just sat around, praying that youâd come along? No! They probably did some research, design, specifications themselves Pragmatic Marketing likes to say: If product managers donât do their jobs, the other departments will fill the void. Same applies in reverse â if user experience practitioners donât do their job, or if there arenât any, other departments will fill the void. Skills Lots of product managers do have the same skills that are required of user experience practitioners Again, user experience people like to think that their skills are unique, and that unless youâve been blessed by the high priests, you canât do user experience work To that I say: âPhooey!â Of course, lots of product managers donât have these skills, and thatâs a whole different subject Iâll get to in a minute Control This is a fun one How many of you user experience people are assigned to one single project â your job is specific to one product? How many work on multiple products? There should be shared accountability and aligned goals, but even in the best of cases there isnât true alignment⊠and most cases are not the best of cases Product managers are â or should be, at least â held accountable Unfortunately, bad product managers can translate that gap into accountability into micromanaging. Since PMs are on the line, they feel the need to control everything. If one thing wasnât exactly how they want it, they can say that it wasnât their fault. Again, thatâs just bad product management.
So hereâs how it should work Assumes that people are rational and intelligent, if only misinformed I think most are â Iâm an optimist If people are irrational or unintelligent, thereâs not much you can do Feel free to walk out now if Iâve disappointed you Product Managers Are responsible for the overall success of the product That includes the user experience parts of it, but also a whole lot else Good product managers are Presidents of their product Not dictators Not socialism Presidents have a cabinet, advisors, and the people â in this case, the market â decide whether theyâre doing a good job or not User Experience Practitioners Not responsible for overall success, though they should be concerned with it just as the sales, marketing, engineering should be Should be an objective advocate â itâs good that theyâre not tied to the product in a sense, and should be independent of the product manager Important member of the cabinet, but often forgotten â how many of you feel like thereâs a product cabinet and youâre not a part of it?
Ultimately, a product must be sellable, possible, and desirable User experience is responsible for that bottom circle Product managers sit in the middle â make sure those circles stay in balance Examples in About Face 2.0 of companies who have failed to find the balance Novell, strong in engineering Microsoft, strong in Marketing Apple, strong in Design This is how it should work
So why doesnât it always work that way? Not going to get to the root causes â that would take a whole hour⊠or a day⊠or maybe more But on the surface, why canât we get this balance, specifically in how product managers work with UX folks?
Hereâs what product managers should do Every product management and development book or article Iâve found talks about the need to be market-focused, external-focused, not internal-focused. UX people know this â itâs about customers and users, not about whatâs happening within the company This second point was a bit controversial with people â when you see this, do you feel like PMs are invading on your turf? First, PMs were doing research long before there were UX people Secondly, this doesnât imply that PMs should do all research â just that they shouldnât farm it all out. Thereâs need for dedicated researchers â in fact, good PMs will increase the need for customer research practitioners. But they shouldnât sit in their office all day and never talk to customers either A product management haiku, on my computer monitor Nothing important Happens inside the office Talk to customers What is the strategy for this product? Where does it fit in the market space? How does it compare to the competition? Do we want to be low-cost or high-value? Differentiation strategy? Portfolio â most products donât exist on their own. iPod + iTunes. Gmail works with Google Calendar. With my product, we have different versions, different subscription options and variations; plus our product works with other products in the company so I need to work with other product managers on a combined strategy Once youâve got a strategy you have to create a roadmap for where the productâs going and understand the lifecycle of the product â should be familiar to anyone whoâs taken a marketing class Requirements are the translation of the market needs, strategy, and roadmap into specific actionable items. There actually is a difference between market requirements, product requirements, user requirements, and the other ones I mentioned earlier, but I wonât get into that here. But PMs need to understand the requirements of the market and translate that into requirements of the product, things that the product needs to do or support users doing. Once weâve done that, how do we go to market? Marketing strategy, promotion â weâve got a great product, how do we let people know. Usually involves working with marketing, but sometimes PMs are responsible for this, especially in smaller organizations As president of the product, PMs need to define strategy, communicate that, but then should rely on others to help make that strategy happen
Unfortunately, PMs donât often do this This is basically the exact opposite of everything on the last slide. In fact, I was thinking of just skipping the details on this slide and putting âopposite of what I just saidâ here Bad PMs⊠Focus on the company, not the market Donât do any research themselves, they may farm it out, or they may not do any at all They donât look at strategy, because⊠Theyâre focused on the short-term Instead of requirements they work on specifications Requirements say WHAT Specifications say HOW PMs are responsible for what the product should do Other people are responsible for HOW the product accomplishes that â user experience practitioners, software developers Bad product managers donât work with marketing â they tell them about a new product a week before itâs going to be released and ask for brochures. They probably donât work with other stakeholders either until itâs too late â finance, customer service, legal Another good quote I like: time spent on the strategic reduces the time wasted on the tactical. Unfortunately, many PMs focus on the trees and not the forest and spend most of their time fighting fires⊠and yes, I just mixed my metaphors there
Itâs not just PMs who are guilty, though Donât feel like youâre off the hook just yet Good UX people⊠Donât need to know the intricate business details, but should understand the context â the strategy, the competition, the market, the business objectives Earlier, when I talked about UX right at the beginning, I said that I wasnât going to explain it because I assumed you knew what it was How often have you done this when working with someone new? If you donât establish a good understanding up front, it will lead to confusion later. Just like the design process we advocate â spend more time up front to save yourself time and hassle later. Spend time up front clarifying your role and skills and make sure you have understanding of the others you are working with Advocate for a user-centered process, but not at the expense of other factors. Ultimately the PM is the one who is going to have to âbalanceâ those three circles, but by better understanding what goes on in those three circles, you can make yourself more relevant Thereâs a lot of focus on tools and deliverables, but good UX people focus on the end goals, and then worry about how to get there
Of course, none of this applies to you, rightâŠ? ;-) Iâve known people who hear about the business context and ignore it when theyâre designing Or they know they should learn more but donât want to Or they say that itâs someone elseâs responsibility Youâre part of the âcabinetâ â the secretary of defense doesnât have to be an expert in energy, but should know a bit about it Biggest pitfall Iâve seen is assuming others know and understand role Either donât explain it at all Or give a cursory explanation Or talk AT people but donât engage in discussion⊠hereâs what I think my role is, how do you see it fitting in with yours? Do we agree? The idea of âdoing exactly whatâs best for the user at all costsâ has given UX a bad name major complaint about Jakob Nielsen is that heâs too dogmatic about usability â I donât care how hard it is to develop, how it impacts performance or bandwidth consumption, how much it costs, how it hurts marketing objectives, how it doesnât fit in with our brand imageâ: these are harmful stances to take for your own career, influence, and that of UX in general On listservs thereâs constant discussion about tools and deliverables How to best create wireframes, what software programs to use, different protocols for user research, software to record usability testing Thatâs all great⊠but whatâs the goal? Is this helping towards the goal? The deliverables and methods are necessary, but Iâve seen too much focus on HOW and not enough on WHAT user experience people are doing
I was asked by UX people how they could work better with PMs Random assortment of thoughts If youâre already doing these things, great, but Iâm betting thereâs at least one thing here that youâre not doing Lead! Donât wait for someone to request something, take the initiative and do it Better to ask for forgiveness than permission When was the last time you really did something without anyone asking â not just told them you were going to do it, but actually did? These next 2 go together: A lot of things are really PM decisions, but you can help those decisions be made in the way you feel is right by making your case Sometimes PMs donât factor in all of the aspects of a decision â make sure they are, help them evaluate alternatives Donât say âthis is imperative,â say âI strongly recommend this becauseâ and state your case Waffling and being unsure donât help at all â either do more work to be able to make a recommendation, or get out of the way Thereâs more that goes on than just UX â by understanding the big picture you can help the PMs make better decisions, and understand the context for your recommendations Nothing worse than making what you feel is a good case and being put down because of something that would have been completely obvious if you knew more about the competition, marketing, production Iâve seen cases where features are evaluated based on importance to sales, to product management, and to UCD, all separately That should never happen There should be 1 importance â to the product, and the PM is the arbiter of that If thatâs happening, thatâs a sign that you donât have good product management Help PMs get out of the office! Bring them along on formal or informal research. Ask them when they last met with a customer Tell stories about people you met with, how great it was Invite them along, and if they say no, keep asking If theyâre going on their own, ask to go with them Last question is great, for 2 reasons: 1) Makes PMs think about what their goals are. Some donât know. This may highlight the fact they are not sure, and you have an opportunity to be a trusted advisor and help them establish goals. 2) If they do have goals, theyâll tell you, and youâll know exactly what you need to do. If their goals donât make sense, you can get clarification, see where youâre not in alignment and how to correct that. I would love if someone asked me this.
If you want to be a product manager after reading through this, youâre nuts! ;-) Lots of people I know have moved into PM roles or are looking to. If you want to, what do you need to do?
Every business person, every consultant has their own patented 2x2, and this is mine! Rough plot of various positions on two dimensions Strategic vs. tactical â how much focus is on the big picture vs. the details Single vs. multiple disciplines â how much focus is on one area â software design, marketing, finance â vs. multiple areas Lots of people say PM is good path to CEO â not something personally Iâm interested in, but it makes sense Running a business within a business Look at the balance of tactical (day to day) vs. strategic (long-term view), and single discipline (just UI design, just server architecture, just facilities planning, just quality assurance testing) vs. multiple discipline (a bit of all of those) and youâll see where these fit together
This is the fun stuff The main reason UX people want to become product managers is because they want to make products more customer-focused overall Thatâs a great reason, and, while challenging at times, definitely possible This is something people donât often think about, but itâs not just the product itself, but the whole customer experience surrounding the product Itâs not enough to just develop a good product, you have to let people know about this, communicate the benefits We often donât appreciate the importance of this We take the approach of âif we create a good product, it will be a successâ But for every great product thatâs a success, thereâs probably one thatâs a failure because of the ineffectiveness of the marketing strategy Marketing is more than promotion â good marketing is a holistic practice from end-to-end But I could do a whole presentation on what marketing really is vs. how itâs practiced at most companies Well, maybe not me, but someone could Suffice it to say, itâs more than designing logos and ordering can coozies with said logo If youâre a product manager at a medium-to-large company, youâll be in a position to influence other products as well Not to say that you couldnât do this as well in a UX role For better or for worse, in most organizations most people will get more credibility just by being in a product management role Itâs not fair⊠and there are some exceptionsâŠ
So that was the fun stuff This is the other stuff As a product manager, you have little to no actual power While you may be a âpeople manager,â you wonât manage most of the people who work on your product Guy Kawasaki: A product manager can be defined as someone who has all of the responsibility and none of the power. Marketing has one idea; sales has another; engineering says neither can be done in time; designers say the way engineering wants to build it doesnât make sense And thatâs just before you get coffee Monday morning Not constant, but as President youâre going to be caught in the middle Decisions need to be made, based on whatâs best for the product, and not everyone will agree Need to understand all viewpoints but at the end of the day youâre on the hook Allies include everyone from senior management to the entry-level developer to your customers Canât always do whatâs âbestâ for the user, as much as you may want to: other forces are at work If you do your job well, youâll be able to justify those decisions, explain your rationale, be transparent, and people wonât be too upset or take it personally⊠but itâs tough Management is looking to you for information Whether things are going well or falling apart, whether you really have control or not, you are accountable
So thatâs the fun stuff and the other stuff that youâll do as a product manager Thereâs some stuff that you might miss if you make the transition from user experience to product management When I took my position, the one thing I was told by several people is that you wonât get your hands dirty A PM may be down in the details, but theyâre not doing their job well Remember â more strategic than tactical That said, I do pore over the details of a design every so often because I have to⊠but much less frequently before, and usually reviewing it, not doing it myself. I do miss it at times but I work with capable people whose judgment I trust and skills I admire. I donât have the time to double-check their work nor do I need to, but Iâll gladly give feedback and have discussions when itâs appropriate Product managers rarely make recommendations â they make decisions If you like making recommendations, youâre probably not cut out to be a product manager If you canât make decisions, youâre probably not cut out to be a product manager Youâre probably still a good person, just probably wonât be a good product manager You DO make recommendations with respect to other areas â making sure the strategy and vision are being reflected in other areas⊠make sure product vision is carried out in marketing strategy, UI design, copywriting, etc. But to me, thatâs more âleadingâ than making recommendations Us product managers donât call it passing the buck â we call it âdelegatingâ But just like the earlier point, you make decisions The buck stops with you One important role of product managers that I didnât cover is that of product evangelist Champion of the product To sales, marketing, executives, development⊠Externally: customers, users ⊠maybe even industry analysts, the press Internally: very very important role Canât just blend in â need to be visible and engaged Not just drinking the Kool-Aid â itâs making a huge batch of it, getting drunk off of it, and then getting everyone else sauced with you You can have the best strategy in the world, the best understanding of your customers, the best requirements⊠but if you canât get people on board, youâve got nothing Remember, Guy Kawasaki: A product manager can be defined as someone who has all of the responsibility and none of the power. The joke is that user experience people always answer with âIt dependsâ As a product manager, it may depend, but thatâs irrelevant Itâs not about what theoretically should happen, itâs about what we should do right now, in this situation As a sidenote, this is something I think more UX people should adopt Earlier I talked about âstrong recommendationsâ â this is exactly what Iâm referring to Itâs okay to say âIt dependsâ as long as you follow it up with âbut in this situationâ
Thereâs lots of great resources These are probably the best blogs Iâve found Thereâs many more, Iâm finding more every week The Jonathan Korman article from Cooper as I mentioned is fantastic, a must read Delicious has lots of good reading as well Two organizations, the PDMA and AIPMM More focused on Product Management, Development, Marketing in general, not specific to online or technology products, but good fundamentals PDMA is probably the more renowned of the two, a bit deeper There are certifications, college- and masters-level courses and even degrees in product management and product development
When was the last time you read about market research? Have you heard the phrase Voice of the Customer Conjoint Analysis? Choice modeling? Thereâs lots out there UX is great but itâs not new Build on the foundation thatâs existed for years Read about business I donât mean the latest fads or business news Itâs not Wall Street Journal or Business Week or even FastCompany or Business 2.0 Itâs not the âhotâ business trend of the week (e.g. âWho moved my blackberry?â) They are good and interesting and probably worth reading But there are classic books on product development and business that you can benefit a lot from, and these will help you in the long-term Clockwise from top left Robert Cooper, classic book on product development Guarantee it will change the way you look at your role in developing products Tuned In Fantastic book on not overall understanding of your market Uses UX methods but goes well beyond Harvard Business Review is a must read Current issues plus great stuff from the archives So much good information in here itâs what people you work with are reading Itâs what the CEO uses to guide his or her decisions You can tap into that same knowledge Goodthinking is just one of the many good books on qualitative research from the marketing perspective Thereâs lots to be learned from techniques and processes that have been used successfully for years House of quality â a very sophisticated method for determining feature priorities and thresholds Not saying you should start using it tomorrow But should be aware of it, understand what it is and how itâs used See if there are parts of it that may be applicable Most of all â it will make you realize that a lot of what weâre doing is not unprecedented; donât have to always reinvent the wheel Lastly, a huge part of being successful is understanding how organizations work Unless you work for yourself and never have to interact with anyone, this is vitally important I like to say that 10% of my job is the specific things that I am trained and skilled to do â 90% is all the other stuff I need to do to be able to do that 10% Learn about how to succeed with that 90% and it will make the 10% of the time a lot more enjoyable and impactful Leadership Challenge by Kouzes and Posner is a classic book on leadership and can really highlight some things to do to lead better Leadership is not about title or role â whether youâre a PM or a UX you can be a leader Leading Change by John Kotter is another good one Ever wondered why things that in your mind very clearly need to change never seem to? Read this! No matter what your role, these and other similar resources will help you broaden your horizons and make you a more valuable contributor, no matter how you want to contribute
One last thought Going back to the âWeâre all on the dark sideâ comment earlier Hereâs a more positive way of saying it I agree with this 100% and hopefully what Iâve provided to you here will help you understand this and help make that collaboration work for you