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Guide

What is product discovery and why does it matter?

[Visual] Product discovery

When you launch a new product or initiative, you rarely work with perfect clarity. You have hunches, hypotheses, and best guesses about what your customers need. 

But in the real world? Customer needs evolve fast, and your product strategy has to keep up.

Enter continuous product discovery, which helps you understand

  • How your product solves a specific problem for your customers

  • How your product helps your customers accomplish their jobs to be done (JTBD)

  • How your product can evolve and continue to serve your customers

Need a better way to validate your product ideas?

Contentsquare helps you back every decision with real user data.

What is product discovery?

Product discovery is the continuous process of learning how your product can better serve your customers. It helps you understand what product your team could build, whether you should build it, and what you need to know about your customers to build it right

To better understand product discovery, start by answering the question, what does a product manager do? The answer, in short, is that product managers drive user understanding, decide which product initiatives to prioritize, build stellar product teams, and push for a better product-market fit.

And to do this, product managers work with product teams in both product discovery and product delivery activities, which include conducting:

Your approach to product discovery depends on whether you’re starting work on a new product or you’re improving an existing one:

  • When you start work on a new product, focus your product discovery on understanding your potential customers and their problems, and identify what solution your product could offer

  • When you’re improving an existing product, focus your product discovery efforts on identifying the changes you can make to increase customer delight. Digital experience insights are invaluable to building this understanding.

5 ways product discovery helps product teams

Product discovery uncovers the information that product teams need to ensure they’re working on products that matter—and which will provide the most value to customers. 

Here’s a look at 5 ways product discovery will help your team:

1. Find product-market fit

If you’re introducing a new product, one of your first goals is to achieve product-market fit, which happens when you know your ideal customer and serve them with the right product.

And the right product solves a problem for your ideal customer in a way that benefits your business.

To achieve product-market fit, you need to know:

  • What problem is your ideal customer trying to solve?

  • Is it worth it to a customer to have that problem solved?

  • What solution will solve that problem?

Product discovery helps your team uncover information to establish answers to those questions. And with that information, you can build an initial version of your product, or an MVP, and collect customer feedback to confirm whether you've uncovered a meaningful problem and built a solution that will work.

2. Validate assumptions

Assumptions play a factor in all of your product decisions. 

Whether you’re trying to achieve product-market fit for a new product or determining what changes to make to an existing product, you're going to assume something.

For a new product, you might assume

  • Your potential customers experience the problem you’re solving

  • People will spend money to solve that problem

  • They'll use your product to solve that problem

  • Customers will use your product as you intended

For an existing product, your assumptions might include

  • People use your product in the way you intended

  • People use your product to solve the problems you thought they were solving

  • People will use your product more if you make certain changes to it

Product discovery helps you address assumptions in a couple of ways 

  • It helps you validate or disprove your assumptions.

  • It helps you avoid acting on assumptions by providing a clear picture of your customers and their needs. 

For example, Conan Heiselt, a UX Designer at Techsmith, collects information about how people use their products as part of his product discovery efforts:

The further you go without concrete data, the more leaps you’re making. That’s why we come back to the data very regularly—to validate it and make sure we’re on track. That means we're making fewer assumptions, which also means we’re making fewer mistakes in the end.

3. Identify the features that customers need and love

Product discovery helps you build empathy with your customers so you have a deep understanding of their needs—and how they would most like to satisfy those needs.

Your team can then apply that knowledge to identify the features that customers need from your product, and design those features in a way that customers will love.

For example, the team at Center Parcs used Contentsquare’s Journeys and Session Replay tools to put themselves in their customers’ shoes and deliver a site redesign that better catered to their needs. This helps the team empathize with their customers and determine if a feature idea they’re considering will be a hit.

[Visual] Journey analysis on reference mapping

4. Identify the features that need improvement

Sometimes you don’t need to add features; you just need to fix the ones you already have. Product discovery gives you insights into how people use your product so you can identify small changes that'll have a big impact. 

For example, Dirk Biesmans, Head of Digital at TotalEnergies, explains how he used Contentsquare’s Session Replay for product discovery to see where they were encountering problems in the funnel:

We use Session Replay to deep dive into the friction points to understand why users are struggling and how to fix any issues quickly. We can easily conduct analyses that not only identify where customer pain points are but also why they arise. These insights are invaluable to optimize our website according to our customers’ needs, improve customer satisfaction and ultimately boost acquisition.

Dirk Biesmans
Head of Digital at TotalEnergies
[visual] Session replays of a user browsing different homepages, captured using Contentsquare

5. Avoid building features your customers don’t need

Product discovery helps you understand what your customers truly need, and as a result, it helps you avoid building things they don't need. 

This may be one of the greatest advantages that product discovery gives you. 

If you can gather information during product discovery to indicate or confirm that you don't need to build a new feature, you can turn your attention to building products that you know will delight your customers.

For example, when you use Contentsquare’s feedback widget—which acts as a real-time suggestion box—for product discovery, you can identify features that don’t meet customers’ needs and make customer-led decisions on whether to keep, remove, or change them.

2024 10 VOC-Exit-Intent-1.png

3 keys to successful product discovery

So if product discovery is so great, everyone should want to do it, and it should be easy, right?

Well, no. 

Some conditions need to be in place for your product discovery to be truly effective. Without these conditions, you end up with 'discovery theater'—doing the activities that look like discovery, without learning anything as a result.

Here’s a look at 3 key conditions.

1. Make product discovery a continuous activity

Product teams do a lot of analysis, research, and design at the beginning of an initiative, which is always helpful, but they don't circle back and consider what they learned while actually building some of the product.

Keep in mind that 'discovery' isn't just a new name for the analysis, research, and design phases. In any product development endeavor, you can't fully understand your solution until you’ve built part of it, put it in the hands of your users, and received feedback.

  • That's discovery.

And it doesn't happen only at the beginning. Instead, incorporate discovery throughout your entire product development process.

  • That’s continuous discovery.

Adopt an approach such as dual-track agile, where a product trio (a product manager, product designer, and tech lead) does some discovery work on a small subset of the overall solution. 

With dual-track agile, the product trio captures the results of their discovery work into backlog items. The team then discusses those items during backlog refinement to ensure everyone has a shared understanding. Then, if it's decided that the backlog items will drive progress toward an outcome, they're included in sprint planning. 

Then you build, deliver, and get user feedback. The product trio then uses that feedback to guide their next product discovery efforts.

In this way, you create a virtuous cycle where product discovery feeds product delivery, and product delivery feeds product discovery, and on and on it goes: what you learn by delivering iterations of your product feeds back into product discovery, which influences the next thing you build.

2. Build customer needs into a sellable narrative

Product discovery helps you describe your product in words your customers use, which means you can provide more meaningful messages to them about your product.

When you interview your customers (you can do this with Contentsquare), take note of the words they use to describe their problem in context. Their words may not help you identify new features or initiatives to prioritize, but they will give you the language you can use to bring attention to your new feature and increase the effectiveness of your marketing efforts.

The product narratives you create using your customers' language will help everyone in your company understand why your product is so important to your customers.


💡 Pro tip: when you've identified the right product for your target customer, customer interviews and observations (the kind that come from session replays) reveal the language that will resonate most with them and increase their likelihood of buying from you.

Matt Lerner, co-founder and CEO at Startup Core Strengths, suggests the following 4 steps to finding language-market fit so you can build a product that your customers will love—and will talk about in a way that resonates:

1. Interview recent signups to uncover their struggles, hidden assumptions, and goals

Ask a new customer to walk you through their purchase process from beginning to end. Find out when they first realized they needed a solution—ask them what they were trying to accomplish and what alternatives they tried. In effect, you’re trying to find out what job they were trying to get done.

2. Draft some test messages based on the interview transcripts

Consider the goals and struggles you’ve identified through those new customer interviews. Their goals may begin with phrases like, “I want to…” or “I wish it were easier to….” And their struggles will begin with phrases like, “I hate it when…", "I’m tired of…", or "Why can’t I just….”

3. Qualitatively validate messaging comprehension and relevance

Test your product messaging by sharing it with customers and asking them to describe what it means to them.

4. Quantitatively test new product messaging

Test different phrases and messaging on paid ads to see which one resonates best with your ideal customer profile.


3. Get buy-in to spend time on product discovery

Without buy-in and internal support from cross-functional teams, your product team might feel pressured to stop discovery—or skip it entirely—and jump straight into building your product. 

But if you skip discovery, you increase

  • Value risk: the customer won’t get value from the product

  • Viability risk: the product won’t be profitable for the company

  • Feasibility risk: the team can’t build the product

  • Usability risk: the product won’t be intuitive or easy to use

To address those risks, proper product discovery requires cross-functional collaboration between product managers, product designers, and engineers:

  • Product managers approach discovery efforts to address the value and viability risks. They ensure that customers will find the product useful and that selling the product benefits the company.

  • Product designers approach discovery efforts to address usability risks. They ensure that users find the product easy to use and, as a result, can get value from it.

  • Engineers approach discovery efforts to address feasibility risks. They ensure that the product team can build their chosen solution.

Of these three roles, engineers are often the least likely to want to be involved in discovery. In many cases, engineers spend most of their time with their heads down, coding and building the actual product—but when they're involved in product discovery, they’ll empathize with their users and learn more about the context around the problem they’re trying to solve. This empathy and context help engineers build effective solutions and avoid solutions that don’t address the customer’s core problems.

Get started with product discovery

Now that you understand what product discovery is, why you should do it, and how to get the most from it, it’s time to make it happen.

Get your product team together to decide how you’d like to incorporate product discovery into your product development process. The sooner you start your discovery efforts, the more you’ll learn about your customers and the more likely you are to build the product they need.

Need a better way to validate your product ideas?

Contentsquare helps you back every decision with real user data.

FAQs about product discovery

  • Product discovery is the continuous process of learning how your product can better serve your customers. It helps you understand what product your team could build, whether you should build it, and what you need to know about your customers to build it right.

Contentsquare

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