Search icon CANCEL
Subscription
0
Cart icon
Your Cart (0 item)
Close icon
You have no products in your basket yet
Arrow left icon
Explore Products
Best Sellers
New Releases
Books
Videos
Audiobooks
Learning Hub
Free Learning
Arrow right icon
Arrow up icon
GO TO TOP
Growth Product Manager's Handbook

You're reading from   Growth Product Manager's Handbook Winning strategies and frameworks for driving user acquisition, retention, and optimizing metrics

Arrow left icon
Product type Paperback
Published in Jan 2024
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781837635955
Length 292 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Arrow right icon
Author (1):
Arrow left icon
Eve Chen Eve Chen
Author Profile Icon Eve Chen
Eve Chen
Arrow right icon
View More author details
Toc

Table of Contents (19) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Part 1: A User-Centric Management Strategy
2. Chapter 1: Introduction to Growth Product Management FREE CHAPTER 3. Chapter 2: Understanding Product-Led Growth Management Models 4. Chapter 3: Understanding Your Customers 5. Part 2: Demonstrating Your Product’s Value
6. Chapter 4: Unlocking Success in Product Strategy and Planning 7. Chapter 5: Setting the Stage for a Powerful Product-Led Enterprise 8. Chapter 6: Defining and Communicating Your Product Value Proposition 9. Part 3: A Successful Product-Focused Strategy
10. Chapter 7: The Science of Growth Experimentation and Testing for Product-Led Success 11. Chapter 8: Define, Monitor, and Act on Your Performance Metrics 12. Chapter 9: Guiding Your Clients to the Pot of Gold 13. Part 4: Winning the Battle and the War
14. Chapter 10: Maintaining High Customer Retention Rates 15. Chapter 11: Unlocking Wallet Share through Expansion Revenue 16. Chapter 12: The Future of a Growth Product Manager 17. Index 18. Other Books You May Enjoy

Key processes of growth product management

The core processes of growth product management encompass a range of activities that contribute to driving sustainable growth. To fulfill the key responsibilities of a GPM, there are several common processes that help to facilitate their day-to-day activities. Let’s dive into the details of the steps involved in each of these processes.

Strategy development

GPMs use this process to do strategic planning in order to determine the broad goals and direction of the product. They analyze market trends, the competitive landscape, and customer preferences to find growth prospects. They establish a distinct product vision and strategy that are in line with the goals of the business and its target audience.

There are various phases that are commonly involved while creating a growth product management plan:

  1. Set clear objectives: Setting explicit objectives for your product, such as increasing user engagement, making money, or expanding the user base, is the first step in the growth product management process. These goals provide the ensuing actions with a defined direction.
  2. User research: To get a thorough grasp of the target market, substantial user research is carried out at this phase. This entails tasks including conducting user interviews, surveys, and careful observation of user behavior. Finding insights and figuring out user wants and preferences as well as where market opportunities are located are the objectives.
  3. Competitive analysis: After doing user research, it is critical to analyze the competitive environment and define KPIs. This research enables the discovery of existing applications’ strengths and weaknesses as well as potential for innovation and distinction. To assess success, KPIs are created. These KPIs include average revenue per user (ARPU) and retention rates.
  4. Feature prioritization: Prioritizing features involves making a list of prospective features or upgrades while considering the objectives, user research, competitive analysis, and KPIs. The viability and potential effects of these concepts are then categorized. Setting feature priorities guarantees efficient resource allocation.
  5. Concept confirmation and experimentation: This stage entails idea validation and information collecting about user behavior and preferences through methodical experimentation. In order to determine the most efficient strategies, different features, designs, or user flows are tested using a rigorous methodology such as A/B testing.
  6. Data analysis and insights: In this stage, it is essential to carefully study and analyze the data gathered through tests and user interactions. Important insights are gathered through analyzing patterns, trends, and user preferences, which guide subsequent iterations and advancements.
  7. Refinement and enhancement: It is crucial to continuously improve the application based on findings from user research, testing, and data analysis. To enhance user experience and foster development, upgrades and additions are made. The product will continue to be competitive and relevant thanks to this iterative approach.

By following these phases, GPMs can effectively manage the product’s growth trajectory, align it with user needs, and drive continuous improvement.

Real-world example

As an emergent player in the online dating industry, Tinder leveraged rigorous growth product management processes to rapidly capture market share and engagement. Setting clear objectives, Tinder aimed to expand its user base exponentially while making the dating experience mobile-first, easy, and enjoyable to drive retention. Extensive user interviews and surveys yielded pivotal insights into preferences and frustrations surrounding existing dating platforms. Competitive analysis of early apps informed key areas of differentiation for Tinder—namely the gamified, card-swipe matching mechanic.

Armed with these strategic insights, Tinder astutely prioritized feature development around streamlined signup, smart mutual matching algorithms, and delightfully fluid user interfaces. Ongoing experimentation with elements such as UI design, chat functionality, and tiered pricing plans enabled Tinder to continuously refine and tailor experiences using meticulous A/B testing protocols. By relentlessly analyzing user behavior and response data, Tinder sharpened its onboarding, monetization, personalization, and retention capabilities over time. This laser focus on understanding target users, combined with agile product testing, data-informed iterations, and enhancements catalyzed Tinder’s meteoric rise. Leveraging growth product management methodologies proved instrumental for Tinder to disrupt an industry and cement phenomenal market leadership.

User research and insights

Once the strategy is developed, it is critical for GPMs to conduct in-depth user research. This is important as it enables GPMs to gain a comprehensive understanding of customer demands and preferences. Key phases of this process include the following:

  1. Goal definition: The user research processes’ aims and objectives should be made very clear. Choose the specific knowledge you wish to gain and consider how it fits into your larger growth strategy. This action determines how the study will be conducted.
  2. Research question formulation: Once the objectives are identified, develop research questions that will yield the needed insights. Pay close attention to the needs, problems, preferences, and actions of the user. Choose the best research approach, such as questionnaires, interviews, usability testing, user observation, or data analysis.
  3. Target audience identification: Choose participants who represent the user base or certain user subgroups to reflect the research’s target audience. To achieve a representative sample, consider elements such as user behavior, demographics, and product usage.
  4. Data collection: Utilize the research approaches selected to get information and insights. This might entail gathering information through surveys or interviews, watching people at work or play, or looking at how they use the product. To obtain a thorough understanding, collect abundant and varied facts.
  5. Data analysis and insights: Analyze the study data to find trends, patterns, and important conclusions. Combine statistical analysis with qualitative and quantitative research techniques, such as affinity mapping and thematic analysis. Create user personas that illustrate various user types and their traits. To see the user experience, pain points, and places for improvement, create user journey maps.
  6. Communication of findings: Put the research’s conclusions and key takeaways together to form sensible suggestions. Inform the appropriate parties, such as the marketing teams, product managers, designers, and engineers, of these observations. Utilizing visual aids and narrative strategies, deliver the findings in a clear and interesting manner.
  7. Integration into product development: It is imperative that you include the research outcomes in product development reviews. Also, it is important to include the suggestions in the product plan, iterations of the design, and feature prioritization. Verify the answers put forth by doing more testing and utilizing feedback loops. Create continuing user feedback channels to gather information and validate product improvements.
  8. Stakeholder collaboration: Encourage stakeholder involvement in decision-making to promote collaboration and cross-functional alignment. Encourage honest and open dialogue while using the study findings to inform data-driven decision-making.

Real-world example

Spotify conducted in-depth user research to understand how its music streaming app was utilized in various mobile contexts. The key goal was to uncover specific usage insights that could inform enhanced mobile experiences to drive increased engagement and retention. Formulating exploratory research questions was critical, focused specifically on contextual mobile use cases, user needs, and pain points, and how behaviors may differ from desktop environments. Spotify interviewed and directly observed a diverse sample of users including students, professionals, commuters, and so on, from both free and paid subscriber tiers. Researchers employed ethnographic techniques, such as user diaries of daily mobile behaviors, as well as shadowing users executing real-world routines.

Analyzing the qualitative data uncovered a key insight – the very tight coupling of music integration into mobility contexts such as driving, exercising, and getting energized before a night out. Journey maps, personas representing user types, and highlight reels conveyed the textured findings. Spotify’s engineers and designers actually took part in the field research, collaboratively aligning priorities. Leveraging these human-centered insights, Spotify built into their apps context-aware, adaptive playlists that react intelligently to situations the user is in, such as unwinding after work or powering through an intense workout. This research-fueled, user-driven mobile product innovation was crucial for Spotify’s growth and cementing market leadership. The processes and methodologies of user research proved integral to transforming user insights into design, experience, and business impact.

By following these phases, GPMs can gain a deep understanding of customer demands and preferences. This empowers them to make informed decisions and drive product growth effectively.

Experimentation and iteration

GPMs support an experimental and iterative improvement culture. They plan and carry out experiments, including A/B tests, to determine how changes affect important metrics. They optimize the product for better results and sustainable growth by methodically iterating on product features, user experiences, and growth plans based on data-driven insights. Phases of experimentation and iteration in growth product management include the following:

  1. Hypothesis development: Making assumptions based on user expectations, pain spots, and growth potential is the first step. Create hypotheses that explicitly identify the issue to be solved, the suggested fix, and the predicted effect on important metrics.
  2. Metric definition: Select the key metrics that will be used to assess the success of the trial. These measures have to be in line with the growth goals and offer important information about how well the suggested remedy works.
  3. Experiment design: Describe the precise changes or adjustments that the experiment will test. Changes to user interfaces, feature implementations, price policies, or marketing tactics may be involved. Create the experiment with accuracy, measurability, and the capacity to quickly compare many versions.
  4. Experiment execution: Implement the required adjustments to the product or marketing strategies to put the trial into effect. Make sure that the right tracking and measuring techniques are being used. Gather information on user interactions, behavior, and experiment results. To acquire pertinent insights, make use of analytics tools, user feedback, and other data sources.
  5. Data analysis and insights: Analyze the collected information to evaluate how each variant performed in relation to the given metrics. Analyze whether the experiment confirms or disproves the basic hypothesis. Make inferences and learn from the results of the experiment. Understand user behavior and preferences in response to the factors that affected the success or failure of each version.
  6. Data-driven decision-making: Based on the results and insights from the trial, decide, using data, whether to iterate, refine, or pivot the product plan. To optimize the potential for progress, decide the next course of action. Improve user experiences, alter pricing, or change marketing tactics as appropriate, basing your decisions on the knowledge you gained from the experiment.
  7. Monitoring and scaling: As time passes, track and assess how the applied modifications affect the given KPIs. Keep tabs on user activity, engagement levels, and conversion rates to determine how well the changes are working. To spur growth, iterate, test, and enhance the product continuously. Increase the scope of effective tests to reach more users.
  8. Collaboration and learning: Promote cooperation among cross-functional teams, including product managers, designers, engineers, and marketers, to preserve alignment and shared learning from experimentation. To aid in informed decision-making, notify stakeholders of the findings and insights from trials.

By following these phases, GPMs can leverage experimentation and iteration to validate hypotheses, enhance product offerings, and improve user experiences, leading to long-term, sustainable growth for the product and the business.

Real-world example

Experimentation and rapid iteration were critical to Tinder’s ability to accelerate growth while enhancing user experiences over time. When hypothesizing ways to facilitate more connections on Tinder, product managers put forth the assumption that displaying potential matches’ shared Facebook friends and common interests on profiles could lead to higher match conversion rates. To test this, Tinder designed an experiment showing this extended contextual profile data to a sample user group, while retaining minimal profiles for the control group. The key metric of match rate would indicate whether the hypothesis proved true.

Tinder tracked and measured match rates rigorously over a 2-week period as the experiment ran in the wild. When analyzing the resulting data, however, the product team found negligible differences in critical conversion metrics between the control and test groups. Given these unexpected results from the data, Tinder decided not to launch the feature at scale, and instead went back to the drawing board to explore other innovation opportunities. This exemplifies Tinder’s commitment to hypothesis-driven testing guided by user behavior insights.

While this experiment did not yield fruitful results, Tinder persisted in running rigorous tests on enhancements such as the UI design of the card stack and smart photo sequencing algorithms. The processes of rapid experimentation, user analysis, and data-informed iteration were integral to Tinder’s ability to continuously evolve the app experience to changing user needs. By collaborating closely across product engineering and design, Tinder was able to scale successful experiments, learn from results, and fuel ongoing cycles of innovation.

Data analysis and insights

Data analytics are used by GPMs to derive important insights and make defensible choices. To find patterns and trends, they examine user behavior, conversion funnels, cohort analysis, and other pertinent information. They get a greater understanding of user engagement, retention, and conversion through data synthesis and interpretation, which enables them to spot growth possibilities and promote evidence-based decision-making.

Typically, there are multiple phases in the data analysis and insights process for growth product management:

  1. Goal definition: Setting clear objectives for the data analysis process is the first stage. Identify the most crucial issues and metrics that must be dealt with in order to gather information and make wise decisions.
  2. Data collection: Assemble pertinent information from a variety of sources, such as user interactions, website analytics, client feedback, polls, and market research. Make sure the data is accurate, thorough, and reflective of the intended user base.
  3. Data cleansing and preprocessing: Preprocess and clean up the gathered data to get rid of any conflicts, mistakes, or missing numbers. Maintain data integrity while transforming the data into a format that is appropriate for analysis.
  4. Exploratory data analysis: Utilize tools such as data visualization and summary statistics to explore the data and better comprehend its characteristics. Utilize statistical methods to generate hypotheses and test them in light of early findings and organizational objectives.
  5. In-depth data analysis: Use cutting-edge statistical techniques and models to analyze the data to uncover important insights. Interpret the analysis’s results and come up with useful conclusions. To successfully explain the findings, make use of charts, graphs, and visual aids, and use dashboards to automate live intelligence for the right person at the right time.
  6. Decision-making and implementation: Work together with cross-functional teams to set priorities, create action plans, make data-driven choices, and put changes or enhancements into the product strategy in response to the findings and suggestions. Monitor and evaluate the effects of the adjustments you’ve made on a regular basis to spot long-term trends and patterns.
  7. Continuous learning and development: By incorporating the knowledge gained from data analysis into subsequent product revisions and experiments, you may foster a culture of continual learning and improvement. Maintain suitable data governance procedures to guarantee data security, privacy, and legal compliance.

By following these phases, GPMs can effectively utilize data analysis and insights to make informed decisions, improve product strategies, and foster long-term product growth.

Real-world example

When Nike launched its activity tracking app, Nike+ Run Club, the athletic giant aimed to provide personalized fitness recommendations fueled by user data and progress insights. Extensive data from sensors and community usage allowed Nike to deeply analyze behavior patterns—from running terrains to workout frequency—at scale. Initial data cleansing uncovered gaps between Nike’s assumptions and the reality of key categories such as beginners. Exploratory studies revealed surprising engagement friction points post-signup that churned new runners.

These insights led Nike to introduce adaptive training plans dynamically calibrated to each runner’s demonstrated commitment and capability levels. In-depth statistical models ensured plan adjustability to evolving user stamina over time. While initially risky, continual measurement showed these customized plans boosted retention dramatically across beginner cohorts. Additional app refinements were spurred by further analysis into social motivation and competition triggers.

Ultimately, the processes of hypothesis-based experimentation guided by data-driven insights enabled Nike to transform Nike+ Run Club’s capabilities to include not just activity logging but also intelligent planning. Feeding real-world usage patterns back into app improvements fueled sustainable consumer engagement growth. For Nike, leveraging analytics translated user research into increased brand loyalty and market leadership in the fitness tech revolution. Data analysis continuously informs their vision to motivate athletes of all skill levels.

Cross-functional collaboration

To match product development efforts with corporate goals, GPMs collaborate with cross-functional teams. They work together with marketers, data scientists, designers, engineers, and other stakeholders to make sure that product features and improvements are carried out successfully. Collaboration is encouraged, which makes it easier to incorporate technical know-how, market feedback, and user insights into the product development process. The key phases to achieve best practice cross-functional collaboration include the following:

  1. Identifying key stakeholders: Finding the key stakeholders who are crucial to the product’s success is the first step. These stakeholders include members of a variety of teams, such as data analytics, engineering, design, marketing, customer support, customer success, sales, and external partners such as resellers and alliance partners.
  2. Establishing clear communication routes: Establishing clear communication channels can help cross-functional teams collaborate more effectively. Effective information sharing may be facilitated through regular meetings, project management software, shared papers, and other communication channels.
  3. Aligning goals and objectives: The aims and objectives of the product should be understood by all teams. This guarantees that everyone is in agreement on the targeted results and creates a common understanding of what success is.
  4. Fostering a collaborative culture: Transparency, open communication, and an atmosphere that enables team members to openly express opinions, critiques, and insights are necessary for developing a collaborative culture. This makes it possible for everyone to participate in a welcoming environment.
  5. Encouraging active participation: The process of developing a product should involve team members of many different roles. They may provide their unique viewpoints to brainstorming meetings, user research initiatives, and decision-making processes.
  6. Planning and coordination: Product development activities need to be planned and coordinated by cross-functional teams. This makes sure that everyone is informed of their own responsibilities, positions, and due dates. All stakeholders are kept informed through frequent updates and progress reporting.
  7. Regular progress meetings: Set up frequent meetings to evaluate progress, go through problems, and decide what to do next. These meetings offer a chance to talk about new advances, get feedback, and resolve any problems or worries that may come up.
  8. Collaborative problem-solving and decision-making: Participating in the design and development process with individuals from various teams promotes group problem-solving and decision-making. This guarantees that many viewpoints are considered and incorporated into the finished product.
  9. Incorporating input from cross-functional teams: At each stage of the product development process, suggestions from members of the cross-functional team should be solicited. Their recommendations must be considered, and the finished item ought to be enhanced in light of their experience and understanding.
  10. Joint testing and validation: With feedback from many teams, the product should be collaboratively tested and verified. This guarantees that the product satisfies the necessary quality standards and meets the expectations of many stakeholders.
  11. Continuous contact and alignment: Throughout the entire lifespan of a product’s development, cross-functional teams should be in regular communication and alignment. Success depends on regular collaboration, getting feedback, and handling any changes or difficulties that may occur.
  12. Acknowledging and celebrating accomplishments: Cross-functional efforts and triumphs should be honored and celebrated. Continuous development and progress are enabled through fostering a culture of learning from errors and converting them into chances for improvement.

GPMs may encourage productive cross-functional cooperation, tap into the combined knowledge of many teams, and guarantee a smooth and effective product development process by adhering to these guidelines.

Real-world example

When Uber sought to transform urban mobility, close cross-functional coordination was critical in scaling operations globally. Early on, Uber’s product leaders identified domain experts spanning marketing, data science, engineering, and driver operations. Weekly workshops and quarterly hackathons established tight collaboration rhythms even as hypergrowth continued. Yet tensions inevitably emerged amid complexity—data teams grappling with marketplace dynamics felt overwhelmed by endless feature requests, while engineers fixated on technical debt felt misunderstood.

To nurture empathy, Uber fostered job shadowing so teams could walk in others’ shoes. Gradually, psychological safety enabled healthy debate without politics. People managers encouraged knowledge sharing across domains so insights could inform decisions company-wide. For example, analytics models forecasting rider demand were integrated with driver app features to enhance supply positioning. Through joint priority setting sprints, Uber aligned around pragmatic solutions balancing contrasting constraints.

Creative friction was catalyzed by encouraging interdisciplinary teams to rapid-prototype consumer promotions or operations tools. By perpetually synthesizing diverse inputs, Uber tapped collective intelligence to pioneer a new economy. Engineers created vastly scalable cloud infrastructure while data scientists delivered the pricing algorithms that defined the category. Ongoing communal testing and controlled experimentation ensured reliability and positive user experiences.

The integrated orchestration of technology, analytics, and user-centric design was made possible through persistent coordination pursued with discipline. At Uber, cross-functional harmony, connecting strategy to architecture to delivery, has been foundational in revolutionizing consumer transportation amid complexity at scale.

Performance measurement and optimization

KPIs and metrics are set up by GPMs to gauge product performance and monitor growth objectives. To determine how product changes and efforts will affect consumers, they regularly monitor and analyze data. They discover opportunities for improvement through continual optimization work and put plans into place to promote ongoing growth and improvement. The following describes the key phases to achieve best practices for performance measurement and optimization:

  1. Identifying essential metrics: The first step is to choose important metrics and indicators that align with the product’s aims and objectives. These KPIs must be SMART-specific—in other words, measurable, relevant, time-based, and directly correlated with the product’s efficacy.
  2. Assessing current performance: Collect and analyze relevant data to assess the product’s current performance levels. This can serve as a baseline against which future enhancements and optimizations are compared.
  3. Data collection methods: Set up procedures for gathering data on the KPIs you’ve chosen. It can be essential to make use of analytics tools, user monitoring systems, surveys, or other data collection techniques. Make sure that data is consistently and accurately collected over time.
  4. Data analysis: Analyze the acquired data to discover more about the product’s functionality. Identify trends, patterns, and potential areas for improvement. You may track your progress toward the set objectives by comparing performance indicators with the given baseline.
  5. Identifying optimization opportunities: Determine whether certain aspects or properties of the product need to be optimized in light of the inquiry. This may mean improving user experience, adding new features, increasing conversion rates, or exploring further optimization options.
  6. Hypothesis development: Create hypotheses or offer solutions to the optimization opportunities that you have found. These assumptions should be supported by data and derived from analysis-related insights. Sort the hypotheses based on their viability and potential outcomes.
  7. Experimentation and A/B testing: To assess the validity of the hypotheses and determine the efficacy of the suggested optimizations, conduct design studies or A/B testing by splitting the user base into a control and an experimental group, and then applying the alterations to the experimental group.
  8. Monitoring and analysis: Monitor the results of the tests and assess the impact they have on the KPIs that have been selected. Analyze the results to assess the effectiveness of the optimizations and look for any unexpected results or effects.
  9. Iterative improvement: Improve the product optimizations through iteration based on the trial results. Keep or change inefficient improvements while adding effective ones to the finished product. Continue iterating while taking into consideration the data-driven learnings gained through testing. It is important to note that sometimes stepping back and taking a new direction can also be an option when iterative development leads you to a dead end. For example, the Mercedes F1 car was developed for 2022 without sidepods for air intake while all nine other teams had them. Mercedes pursued this approach and encountered a dead end. However, three months into 2023, it adopted sidepods and is now making massive improvements in performance.
  10. Stakeholder communication: Regularly update stakeholders on performance metrics and optimization results. Talk about the outcomes of the experiments and the impact of the advancements. Visual and concise arguments are necessary for effectively explaining the findings.
  11. Continuous optimization and monitoring: Maintain a continual procedure for monitoring and optimizing performance. Track performance metrics, get user feedback, and discover new areas that might require improvement. Take corrective actions and improve the product iteratively using input from customers and data-driven insights.

GPMs can successfully gauge the performance of their products, spot chances for optimization, and make ongoing improvements to the product to promote growth and success by following these procedures.

Real-world example

As Amazon rapidly scaled its Amazon Prime business, continuous performance monitoring and optimization were imperative to managing explosive growth. To gauge Prime’s developing traction, product leaders established conversion rates, retention levels, and subscriber engagement as key tracking metrics against internal targets. Rigorous instrumentation was implemented for near real-time data flows—from signup funnel analysis to usage pattern tracking across video, shipping, and other Prime entitlements. Still, early readings showed lackluster renewal rates despite steep subscriber acquisition levels due to post-purchase drop-off issues.

Diagnosing optimization hypotheses involved intense strategy sprints synthesizing insights from executives down. Hypothesized fixes for renewal fall-off included more prominent media content offerings and streamlining cancellation flows. A series of meticulously instrumented A/B experiments were launched to validate assumptions—novel shows were exposed to subsets of users while redesigned account management screens reduced friction for another group. Control groups helped isolate signals from noise. After monthly reviews, certain tests proved inconclusive and were retooled while others showed promise through lift on engagement metrics and were expanded incrementally.

However, continued measurement some months down the line indicated that while sticky, content investments had limited impact on renewals. UX refinements conversely lifted renewal conversions notably across initial regions. As such, redesigns were progressively rolled out globally while content budgets were reassessed. This example shows how Amazon rigorously leveraged data, research, and controlled testing to distill signals from noise to guide executive resource allocation for Prime’s growth and retention gains over time. Measurement enabled disciplined incrementation toward overarching customer lifetime value optimization.

Stakeholder communication

GPMs are skilled communicators with team members, customers, and executives. They provide updates on growth initiatives and outcomes while outlining the product’s vision, strategy, and development. They develop trust, solicit input, and guarantee alignment throughout the organization by encouraging open and transparent communication. Key phases of best practice stakeholder communication include the following:

  1. Identifying important stakeholders: Finding the important parties with a stake in the outcome of the project is the first stage. Internal teams, executives, clients, users, investors, and other pertinent external stakeholders are all included in this. Developing a Responsible, Accountable, Consulted, and Informed (RACI) chart can significantly help with this process.
  2. Understanding stakeholder requirements: To effectively interact with stakeholders, GPMs must have a thorough understanding of their needs, goals, and expectations. Conduct focus groups, surveys, or feedback sessions to learn more about their particular requirements and difficulties.
  3. Establishing communication goals: For each set of stakeholders, establish clear communication objectives. Establish the information that must be communicated, and the goals and main statements that must be provided.
  4. Selecting communication methods: Select the most effective communication channels to include and speak to each stakeholder group. Meetings, presentations, emails, newsletters, project management tools, and collaboration platforms may all fall under this category. When choosing communication mediums, take stakeholders’ preferences and accessibility into account.
  5. Crafting clear and concise messages: Create messages that are precise and targeted at each stakeholder group. In your communications, speak to their particular objectives, issues, and interests. To guarantee effective communication, speak in plain words.
  6. Developing a communication plan: For each stakeholder group, create a thorough communication strategy that outlines the frequency, timing, and substance of messages. Make sure the approach fits with the timetable and significant milestones for product development.
  7. Sharing relevant information and updates: Inform stakeholders on a regular basis with relevant information, product innovations, and development updates. Inform them of the project’s accomplishments, setbacks, and any other developments that may affect them.
  8. Soliciting user input: Direct user feedback on the features, direction, and any other matters that require attention should be sought. When making judgments, consider their suggestions and wherever feasible, include them. Be transparent and swift in your response to criticism.
  9. Responding to stakeholder inquiries: Respond quickly to stakeholder questions, concerns, or requests for further information. Answer any queries or issues customers may have in a fast and accurate manner.
  10. Encouraging two-way communication: Encourage the use of open, transparent channels for two-way communication. Adopt smart collaboration tools to give interested parties the chance to express their ideas and ask questions. Talk in depth with them and carefully examine their recommendations.
  11. Adapting communication strategies: Adapt communication strategies and approaches depending on input from stakeholders and evolving needs. To guarantee engagement and understanding, constantly assess how successful existing communication tactics are and make the necessary adjustments.
  12. Evaluating communication initiatives: Review stakeholder communication activities on a regular basis. Keep an eye on how communication affects cooperation and decision-making, stakeholder satisfaction, and participation levels. Use statistics and customer feedback to inform future communication efforts.

These steps may be taken to produce effective stakeholder communication that encourages comprehension, alignment, and collaboration. Communication that is clear and consistent increases stakeholder participation, fosters trust, and helps the product succeed.

Real-world example

When Instagram introduced advertising into its popular photo-sharing app, frequent communication with diverse stakeholders was imperative amid monetization concerns. Surveys and interviews highlighted serious user worries about disruptive, intrusive ads degrading experiences. Meanwhile, investors pushed aggressively for lucrative revenue streams given massive consumer reach. Upon careful deliberation, Instagram pursued subtle promotions preserving core utility first. Ongoing dialogue with advocacy groups shaped thoughtful guardrails and disclosures for emerging ad formats over time.

Despite some inevitably negative reactions, sincere explanations grounded in user benefits eased tensions. Instagram convened a council between advertisers, activists, and technologists, addressing trade-offs transparently to forge acceptable policies amid complexity. The sustained willingness to listen, learn, and adapt built lasting trust and unlocked sustainable monetization aligned with societal needs. By communicating respectfully despite competing incentives, Instagram continues advancing interests collectively. Its journey shows stakeholder connections enable better decisions, even on thorny monetization. Dialogue yields creative solutions that address value equitably.

GPMs face a range of difficulties, including limited resources, conflicting objectives, organizational resistance, and the complexity of data analysis. Realizing the full potential of growth product management and attaining long-term success in today’s dynamic and competitive business environment depends on comprehending these issues and developing strategies to solve them.

GPMs may use the power of these processes to make wise decisions, deliver outstanding user experiences, and advance their businesses in their pursuit of success by overcoming these challenges. In the section after this, we’ll examine some of the strategies used by effective GPMs to address these issues.

You have been reading a chapter from
Growth Product Manager's Handbook
Published in: Jan 2024
Publisher: Packt
ISBN-13: 9781837635955
Register for a free Packt account to unlock a world of extra content!
A free Packt account unlocks extra newsletters, articles, discounted offers, and much more. Start advancing your knowledge today.
Unlock this book and the full library FREE for 7 days
Get unlimited access to 7000+ expert-authored eBooks and videos courses covering every tech area you can think of
Renews at $19.99/month. Cancel anytime
Banner background image