Course description
Achieving Product-Market Fit
Through our course we will explore an actionable model that defines product-market fit using five key components. From bottom to top, we will examine the layers of product-market fit beginning with your target customer and transitioning through your customer underserved needs, your value proposition, your feature set, and ultimately your user experience (UX).
Our process is an iterative, easy-to-follow guide through each layer to achieve product-market fit. This process helps you to articulate, test, and revise your key hypotheses about your product and the market so you can define and improve your product-market fit.
Using the principles of Lean Product Process, our course is structured in seven steps: determining your target customer, identifying underserved customer needs, defining your value proposition, specifying your minimum viable product (MVP) feature set, creating your MVP prototype, testing your MVP with customers, and iterating to improve product-market fit.
Upcoming start dates
Who should attend?
Prerequisites:
None required.Product Management Fundamentals recommended.
Training content
- Module 1:Determining Your Target Customer
- Module 2:Identifying Underserved Customer Needs
- Module 3:Defining Your Value Proposition
- Module 4:Specifying Your Minimum Viable Product (MVP) Feature Set
- Module 5:Creating Your MVP Prototype
- Module 6:Testing Your MVP with Customers
- Module 7:Iterating to Improve Product-Market Fit
Course delivery details
This course is offered through The University of Maryland, College Park, a partner institute of EdX.
2-3 hours per week
Costs
- Verified Track -$199
- Audit Track - Free
Certification / Credits
What you'll learn
- Determining your target customer.It all begins with target customers who will ultimately decide how well your product meets their needs. You should use market segmentation to get specific about who your target customer is.
- Identifying underserved customer needs.After forming your hypothesis about your target customers, the next step is to understand their needs. As you try to create value for customers, you want to identify the specific needs that correspond to a good market opportunity.
- Defining your value proposition.Your value proposition is your plan for how your product will meet customer needs better than the alternatives. Out of all the potential customer needs your product could address, which ones will you focus on with your product?
- Specifying your MVP feature set.Once you are clear on your value proposition, you need to specify what functionality your minimum viable product will include. The MVP approach is aimed at building only what is needed to create enough value in the eyes of your target customer to validate that you are heading in the right direction.
- Creating your MVP prototype.In order to test your MVP hypotheses with customers, you need to show them a version of your product so they can give you feedback on it. You will need to apply user experience (UX) design to bring your feature set to life for your customers.
- Testing your MVP with customers.Once you have your MVP prototype ready, it time to test it with customers. It important in this step to ensure the people from whom you are soliciting feedback are in your target market..
- Iterating to Improve Product-Market Fit.The Lean Product Process is an iterative process. After analyzing the customer feedback, you want to revise your hypotheses based on what you learned and loop back to an earlier step in the process.
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