All product leaders know that product is a team activity. To build a great product, one must have a great team.
How does one go about it? The following 4 steps are suggested based on our experiences developing 50+ products over the last 5 years at Adaptive US.
The agile mindset is based on core human values of Respect, Courage, Collaboration, Continuous learning, Customer focus, and Value maximization. The agile mindset:
Identify members of the Product team
While the Scrum Master, team Coach, or Agile Process Facilitator work primarily with the Delivery Team, the Product Owner works closely with the entire product team to ensure collaboration towards the shared goal. The Product team consists of:
Product management practices: Practitioners must plan for each group's unique communication and engagement while operating as a unified team.
A shared vision inspires and motivates the Delivery team. It should be active, common, and collective. Being forward-looking, envisioning exciting possibilities, and enlisting others in a shared view of the future are attributes that most distinguish leaders from non-leaders.
A shared product vision is an outcome of great product management practices, with the whole team pitching in. The shared vision helps everyone, amidst their varied perspectives, understand why the product is being built. The product vision is the guiding force for the team to focus on decisions and resolutions. The product vision:
Product team members may have individual responsibilities, commonly described as:
Role |
Description |
Delivery team |
Develop the product |
Product Owner |
Accountable for the product and maximizing its value. |
Development team |
Is responsible for the delivery of the product. They decide on how the priorities, set by the Product Owner, will be executed. |
Scrum Master |
Supporting the Product Owner and the Development team through coaching and identifying effective ways of working. |
Customers or Customer Representative(s) |
Customers and/or Customer Representatives help understand the personal and impersonal needs or desires that fuel the product idea. They validate the value of a product and identify areas for improvement. |
Other Stakeholders
|
There are numerous ways a product may impact a stakeholder, including those: Those impacted by the product - who invest in, use, depend on or are interested in the product. Stakeholders ensure that the product is being built with cross-functional perspectives that, when combined, align with the customer and business needs combined, align with the customer and business needs. |
Those providing support services |
Support stakeholders, including those who provide support in product build/support services (e.g., product marketing or subject matter expertise). |
Effective product management practices promote and support collective responsibility for product success. Considerations include:
A psychologically safe environment fulfills basic human needs that allow people to thrive. It allows people to grow, learn and take risks. Psychological safety is illustrated with trust and honesty. When people feel safe, they think better and do their best work. Product management Practitioners want everyone rallied around their product to contribute their best in a trusting, supportive environment.
When psychological safety is not present, people may fear humiliation, fear to speak up, fear to make a mistake, fear that mistakes or foolish questions may be held against them, not ask for help, fear someone taking credit for the work of another, and lack fun and happiness. Witnessing any of these behaviors in a team is a call to action for the product management practitioners.
Effective product management practices contribute to the Delivery team's success by actively promoting and instilling values and principles within the whole team. These values support self-organizing the Delivery teams and can promote:
This leads to an environment where all team members:
Do share your thoughts on how you have developed an amazing product team at your organization.