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November 12, 2010

Creating a Product Road Map

“Follow the yellow brick road” - this is the instruction that Dorothy got in order to get to Emerald City.

Product managers are responsible for building the product’s yellow brick road – the Product Road Map.

The road map generally should normally be planned for a 3 year period at a high level and for 18 months in a more detailed manner.

Probably the most important starting point for the road map process is the outcome of the strategic business process of the company. This is a critically important process performed periodically (often annually) by the senior management of the company together with the marketing team and actually drives the entire company. When we start to create or update the road map the last version of the strategic process is a major input.

Often this will be replaced or supplemented by a product strategic process where we systematically look at all aspects of the product and the market and set key business objectives within the overall corporate strategic framework.

The road map process starts with information collection which should include the following:

  • Market trends
  • Regulatory trends
  • Technology directions
  • Competitive analysis
  • Customer requirements and suggestions

In the next step we need to analyze what is the likely impact of each item on the product and what we can or should be do in order to give the best response to the probable impact. The best way is to create a product requirements matrix with all the needed activities, new features, platform changes, etc. and then to prioritize this list.

Having done that, we need to figure out what is required in the development of each element in the matrix. We must get the rough effort estimation and / or the budget needed. Now we have the information needed in order to make decisions and to create a road map release plan, if possible for a 3 year period, but not less than 18 months.

Needless to mention that during all the process described here we need to drive internal collaboration and buy in by involving and getting the opinions of many other groups from within the organization for example marketing, R&D, sales, operations and so on.

This is a cyclic process, since we need to do it again at least once or twice a year and adjust the road map if needed.

The decision whether to let our customers be involved in the road map or more precisely to what extent they should be involved is not an easy one. See this article for some of our thoughts in this area. Generally we need to make the product ready for market, but at the same time, we need to be careful not to let the road map drift in the direction of one or two (big) customers, but, is not in line with the general market direction.

We should be very careful when externalize the road map document since it is has some legal status as a kind of contract and as such we need to enter all the needed legal and financial disclosures.

Hopefully this road map will lead us to Emerald City.

In subsequent blogs we will look at ways to share the roadmap internally and externally, getting internal buy in and some of the methods available to do competitive analysis and technology reviews.

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