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Carnegie Mellon Qatar ©2006 - 2011 Robert T. Monroe Course 70-446
Jobs To Be Done Analysisand
Outcome Expectations
Robert Monroe
Innovative Product Development
February 1, 2011
Carnegie Mellon Qatar ©2006 - 2011 Robert T. Monroe Course 70-446
By The End Of Class Today, You Should:
• Understand the concept of 'hiring' a product to do a job, and use the technique of identifying and understanding the Job To Be Done as a way to uncover new Product Opportunity Gaps
• Be able to use Outcome Expectations analysis to identify important Jobs To Be Done that are not being done in a way that meets customers’ needs and expectations
• Be able to use Value Quotient Analyis to identify product opportunity gaps
Carnegie Mellon Qatar ©2006 - 2011 Robert T. Monroe Course 70-446
Phase 1: Identify The Opportunity
Source: Cagan and Vogel, Creating Breakthrough Products, [CV02] Chapter 5.
Launch* Realize Conceptualize UnderstandIdentify
Carnegie Mellon Qatar ©2006 - 2011 Robert T. Monroe Course 70-446
Jobs To Be Done Analysis
“People don’t buy quarter-inch drills, they buy quarter-inch holes. The drill just happens to be the best means available to get that job done.”
• Ted Leavitt of Harvard Business School [SSD09] p 10.
Carnegie Mellon Qatar ©2006 - 2011 Robert T. Monroe Course 70-446
Jobs To Be Done (JTBD) Analysis
• Goal: identify the human need you are trying to meet
• Focus on the outcome that your customers want to achieve, not on the product that you want to sell to them
• JTBD analysis steps1. Identify a focus market
2. Identify jobs customers are trying to get done
3. Categorize the jobs to be done
4. Create job statements
5. Prioritize JTBD opportunities
6. Identify Outcome Expectations regarding the job
Source: [SSD09] pages 1-8.
Carnegie Mellon Qatar ©2006 - 2011 Robert T. Monroe Course 70-446
Different Types of Jobs To Be Done:
Source: [SSD09] pages 1-8.
Carnegie Mellon Qatar ©2006 - 2011 Robert T. Monroe Course 70-446
Job Statements
• Express the JTBD with a Job Statement, which usually takes the form:– <Action verb> <Object of Action> <Contextual Clarifier>
• Examples– Listen to music in the car with friends– Allow the kids to listen to different music in the car than their
parents– Travel from home to work comfortably and quickly without
the stress of driving in traffic– View pictures at home that were taken with a digital camera – Satisfy appetite for ice cream without becoming overweight
Source: [SSD09] pages 1=8.
Carnegie Mellon Qatar ©2006 - 2011 Robert T. Monroe Course 70-446
Exercise: Describe The Job(s) To Be Done By…
Carnegie Mellon Qatar ©2006 - 2011 Robert T. Monroe Course 70-446
Exercise: Describe The Job(s) To Be Done For…
Carnegie Mellon Qatar ©2006 - 2011 Robert T. Monroe Course 70-446
Outcome Expectations Analysis
Carnegie Mellon Qatar ©2006 - 2011 Robert T. Monroe Course 70-446
Outcome Expectation Analysis
• Goal: list desired and undesired outcomes of a product that addresses a Job To Be Done to identify places where current solutions fall short
• Focus on broad benefits and drawbacks, not features or performance characteristics for specific products
• Outcome expectation analysis steps1. Identify the Job To Be Done2. List the JTBD’s related Outcome Expectations3. Create Outcome Statements4. Determine high-priority Outcome Expectations
Source: [SSD09] pages 10-13.
Carnegie Mellon Qatar ©2006 - 2011 Robert T. Monroe Course 70-446
Outcome Expectations Grid
Customer Provider
Undesired
Desired
Source: [SSD09] page 10.
Carnegie Mellon Qatar ©2006 - 2011 Robert T. Monroe Course 70-446
Outcome Expectations Grid
Customer Provider
Desired
• Strongly secures private data• Easy to install• Easy to use• Inexpensive to buy / own• “Just works” on my phone• …
• Cheap to produce and maintain• Easy and inexpensive to distribute• Requires little advertising / marketing support• …
Undesired
• Difficult to use• Expensive • Sometimes makes me lose access to my own data• Does not work on my existing smartphone•…
• Expensive to create• Expensive to support / maintain• Complicated to support/maintain• Customer data loss causes lawsuits or bad customer relations• Attackers can easily go around security provided•…
Job statement: Prevent other people from seeingthe private information stored on my smartphone
Carnegie Mellon Qatar ©2006 - 2011 Robert T. Monroe Course 70-446
Outcome Statements
• Clearly and precisely state desired/undesired outcomes
• Structure:– Direction of action (decrease, increase, maximize, etc.)
– Unit of measurement (time, length, weight, cost, etc.)
– Object of control (what it is you are influencing)
– Context (where or under what circumstances)
Source: [SSD09] pages 11-13.
Carnegie Mellon Qatar ©2006 - 2011 Robert T. Monroe Course 70-446
Outcome Statement Examples
• Minimize the difficulty of installing on phone• Minimize the technical knowledge required of phone
user• Minimize the likelihood that the customer will lose data• Increase the “invisibility” of protecting the data• Reduce development and maintenance costs for
supplier• < other examples? >
Source: [SSD09] pages 11-13.
Carnegie Mellon Qatar ©2006 - 2011 Robert T. Monroe Course 70-446
Exercise: Outcome Expectations
• Create an Outcome Expectations grid for the following JTBD Job Statement:
– Record images from vacations to share with friends
• Create outcome statements for this job statement and prioritize them based on importance and the level of consumer satisfaction with current solutions
Carnegie Mellon Qatar ©2006 - 2011 Robert T. Monroe Course 70-446
Exercise: Outcome Expectations Grid
Customer Provider
Undesired
Desired
Carnegie Mellon Qatar ©2006 - 2011 Robert T. Monroe Course 70-446
Value Quotient Analysis
Carnegie Mellon Qatar ©2006 - 2011 Robert T. Monroe Course 70-446
Value Quotient
• Key Idea: start from ‘perfect’ and work backwards
• To improve Value Quotient look for places to improve desired outcomes or reduce undesired outcomes€
Value _Quotient =Desired _ Outcomes
Undesired _ Outcomes
Carnegie Mellon Qatar ©2006 - 2011 Robert T. Monroe Course 70-446
Value Quotient Analysis Steps
1. Identify the Job To Be Done
2. Identify the desired and undesired outcomes
3. Plot the ideal innovation
4. Plot existing solutions
5. Identify opportunity value gaps
6. Close the value gaps
Carnegie Mellon Qatar ©2006 - 2011 Robert T. Monroe Course 70-446
Value Analysis Plots: Perfect World
Job To Be Done: Record images from vacations to share with friends
Carnegie Mellon Qatar ©2006 - 2011 Robert T. Monroe Course 70-446
Step 5: Identify Opportunity Value Gaps
• Where to look for value gaps:– Dimensions with high customer importance and low customer
satisfaction
– Dimensions that customers report as not very important and they are satisfied
• This may present an opportunity to ‘lower the bar’ to produce a cheaper, simpler, alternative for the low end of the market
– Dimensions for which there is currently no good solution
Carnegie Mellon Qatar ©2006 - 2011 Robert T. Monroe Course 70-446
Value Quotient Exercise
• For the identified Job To Be Done:– Record images from vacations to share with friends
• Select three different solutions currently on the market for this JTBD.
• Plot the existing solutions on your value analysis graph• Identify opportunity value gaps that this analysis
exposes• Propose different ways that you might close these gaps
Carnegie Mellon Qatar ©2006 - 2011 Robert T. Monroe Course 70-446
Wrap Up
Carnegie Mellon Qatar ©2006 - 2011 Robert T. Monroe Course 70-446
Challenge Problem #1
• Challenge Problem #1 posted to the wiki
• Thursday will be a ‘workshop’ class– First half of class will be time for group work and discussion on the
challenge problem– Second half of class you will present your preliminary findings and
get feedback from the class and instructor– Written proposal/solution due on week from today
• You will get a lot more out of Thursday’s class if you have done a nontrivial amount of preparation prior to class, as outlined on the wiki.
Carnegie Mellon Qatar ©2006 - 2011 Robert T. Monroe Course 70-446
References
[CV02] Jonathan Cagan and Craig M. Vogel, Creating Breakthrough Products, Prentice Hall, 2002, ISBN: 0-13-969694-6.
[SSD09] David Silverstein, Philip Samuel, Neil DeCarlo, The Innovator’s Toolkit, John Wiley and Sons, 2009, ISBN: 978-0-470-34535-1.