Thu.May 19, 2016

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Developer Powered Innovation

svpg

There is a very common fallacy about developers in our industry, and I think it hurts countless companies. Have you ever heard the old accusation that developers only want to solve problems for themselves? They’ll spend countless hours, often on their own time, to create amazing tools for themselves and the developers they work with. But just try to get them excited about building something for “the business” or “the customer" and good luck.

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Comment on MVPM: Minimum Viable Product Manager by Laure

Product Club

Thank you, Brandon! This quote basically sums up why we started Notion: “Being able to independently gather data is vital to making quick decisions. For all but the most involved analyses, relying on someone else to get data for you is not only an inefficient use their time, but it also doesn’t lead to insights, because anyone who’s been an analyst before knows that insights come through iterative exploration of data, not some perfect report you dream up.” It can be a challenge to ow

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Low-Anxiety Launching

dscout People Nerds

A guide to eating your own dog food with product research—and surviving it.

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Road Maps: Involving Business in the Journey

Product Club

The first time I wanted to socialize a product road map within the business (a software start up with under 50 employees) I scratched for information on best practice or recommended approaches. I wanted to communicate the right stuff to the right people. As such, this post is a practical piece on exactly that: how I’ve shared a road map internally, and why.

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From Developer Experience to Product Experience: How a Shared Focus Fuels Product Success

Speaker: Anne Steiner and David Laribee

As a concept, Developer Experience (DX) has gained significant attention in the tech industry. It emphasizes engineers’ efficiency and satisfaction during the product development process. As product managers, we need to understand how a good DX can contribute not only to the well-being of our development teams but also to the broader objectives of product success and customer satisfaction.

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Friends and Family… What the 'FUX'?

dscout People Nerds

How to nail your first-time user experience—from launching to scaling.

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The Selfie Matters

dscout People Nerds

Strategies to recruit mobile research participants.