Friday, March 11, 2011

My three principles of new product development

Spigit recently released a Facebook application that exposes Spigit's social innovation management functionality on the platform. It is always thrilling when something you help create sees the light of the day. In this case it was particularly satisfying because we followed my three principles of new product development with a great degree of success (thanks to FacebookEngage product manager Nina Chai and Pratim Mukharjee, the lead developer on the project).

Simple but not Simpler
I have lead the evolution of the Spigit platform from an abstract concept to the leading social innovation platform used by over 100 organizations all over the world. Initially we had to take a leap of faith in creating the first version of the product. Combining idea management with social networking was a new concept for a lot of our prospective users. We certainly made a lot of untested assumptions to create that first version. We did strive, however, to minimize the number of assumptions and create something that was simple (with a minimal feature set) but not simpler, i.e. it provided unprecedented benefit to the end users. We have started Spigit's Facebook application development much the same way. The initial version exposes minimal functionality. It's a proposal to our customer base which they use, review, and evaluate.The rest of the course will be charted by combining customer feedback with our own intuition and understanding of the marketplace.

Native Experience
There are some products that are so revolutionary that they change existing interaction paradigms, processes, or even the way of thinking. Most others need to seamlessly fit into existing  lifestyles and usage conventions. They must blend with established usage patterns and feel completely native to the user. We had to be very careful about this blend for the facebook application. A large portion of Spigit's user base is in the enterprise space. Facebook users are significantly different in their expectations, attention spans, and motivation to participate. Spigit's Facebook application deliberately sports a non-enterprise, lightweight look. The primary motivation of Facebook users is keep in touch with their social circle. The Spigit apps plays into that by making the user aware of ideas posted by your friends and how many of them made into the top ranking list.The ideas are displayed very much in a wall-style format. When a user posts an idea, posting that on the wall or sending message can be done with minimal effort. In general, we have made every effort to introduce Spigit functionality in a way that is consistent with ethos of Facebook community.

The Wow Factor
A new product should have at least one or two features that make a user go "Wow that's useful!" when s/he uses the product. When I started using iPhone, I had that reaction when I realized that unlike my previous mobile windows-based phone, the screen goes dark when I put it to my ear but it comes alive when I hold it in front of me. With Spigit's facebook launch we did not have a problem introducing the Wow factor. We pulled in some of Spigit's key features deemed relevant to Facebook. We included idea theme clusters that allows administrators to get a sense of emerging trends and topics. Reputation scores identify key contributors in the community. Spigit's social analytics is available to the administrators via Spigit's regular user interface. Subsequent versions of the app will track user feedback and will build upon the initial feature set to make it even better.

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