Jobs to Be Done: A Roadmap for Customer-Centered Innovation
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In a challenging economy filled with multiple competitors, no one can afford to stagnate. Yet, innovation is notoriously difficult. How do you pinpoint the winning ideas that customers will love?
Sifting through purchasing data for clues about what might sell or haphazardly brainstorming ideas are typical strategies. However, innovation expert Stephen Wunker offers the effective Jobs method: determining the drivers of customer behavior--those functional and emotional goals that people want to achieve.
This simple shift in perspective opens up new insights about your customers and a wealth of hidden opportunities. For example, social media newcomer Snapchat used the Jobs process to capture the millennial demographic. By reducing functionality, the company satisfied its users' unmet need to document real life in the moment, without filters and "like" buttons.
Packed with similar examples from every industry, this complete innovation guide explains both foundational concepts and a detailed action plan developed by Wunker and his team.
In Jobs to Be Done, the groundbreaking Jobs Roadmap takes you step-by-step through the innovation process and reveals how to:
- Gather valuable customer insights
- Turn those insights into new product ideas
- Test and iterate until you find original profitable solutions
- And much more!
Jobs to Be Done gives you a clear-cut framework for thinking about your business, outlines a roadmap for discovering new markets, new products and services, and helps you generate creative opportunities to innovate your way to success.
Stephen Wunker
STEPHEN WUNKER worked with Christensen for years, led development of one of the first smartphones, and now runs New Markets Advisors. He has written for Forbes, Harvard Business Review, and The Financial Times.
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Jobs to Be Done - Stephen Wunker
■ INTRODUCTION ■
CHARTING A ROADMAP
TO GREAT IDEAS
A NEW APPROACH TO GROWTH
WHAT DO A REVOLUTIONARY scooter, cat food, and an eGovernance platform in Africa all have in common? More than you would think. They are all products of an innovation approach called the Jobs Roadmap. The Jobs Roadmap is a straightforward process that enables companies to consistently uncover new opportunities and generate great ideas. It’s based on the groundbreaking work of Harvard Business School Professor Clayton Christensen, who popularized the concept of Jobs to be Done as a surefire way to spur innovation through looking not at what people happen to buy today, but rather at what are the underlying jobs they are trying to get done. By combining a deep understanding of customer needs, attitudes, and behaviors with hard data on the market landscape, the Jobs Roadmap enables companies to arrive at insights and solutions that are original and profitable. It makes the concept of Jobs to be Done highly actionable.
So much of today’s current thinking sees innovation as a creative free-for-all where the best ideas inevitably rise to the surface. Teams sit in front of whiteboards and brainstorm lots and lots of ideas for new products that their company can offer, or they imagine numerous creative ways for their organization to grow. The winning ideas are usually chosen not through any consistent process but through a one-off assessment of what seems most promising given the information on hand, the company’s internal climate, and the preferences of key stakeholders. Rarely are customer insights fed into the process in any meaningful and systematic way, and hardly ever do the results turn out to be breakthrough innovations. Even when organizations hit the jackpot with a new product or service, they soon realize that they don’t know how to replicate their success.
This book was written to help organizations tackle the challenge of innovating in a way that is consistent and repeatable, using Jobs to be Done as the cornerstone of a rigorous framework. Our view is that to create innovation, it’s necessary to focus as much on the approach taken as on the ideas themselves. In fact, we argue that getting the how
of innovation right will in large part determine the quality of the what
—the solutions that organizations ultimately produce. Through a detailed but straightforward approach, which we call the Jobs Roadmap, companies can navigate the various requirements of innovation and consistently come up with winning solutions.
Customer insight is at the center of the Jobs Roadmap. Understanding what jobs customers are trying to get done and the obstacles they face in doing so points to fertile terrain for new solutions. As a framework, the Jobs Roadmap offers a logical approach to any innovation project—enabling organizations to gain a deep understanding of their customers and key stakeholders, focusing idea generation on big opportunities and creating parameters that enable the quick and inexpensive testing of new solutions.
WHY WE NEED A NEW APPROACH
The customer is always right. Especially when it comes to innovation. Whether they know it or not, customers have the answers for where the next big breakthrough will be. The problem is that customers are notoriously bad at imagining the product that solves their problems and conceptualizing how they would interact with true breakthrough solutions. As Henry Ford reputedly put it, If I’d asked people what they wanted, they would have said faster horses.
¹ The trick is figuring out how to unlock the right information that can get you to the winning solution without relying solely on asking people what they want. This critical step is where many innovation efforts fail.
When the failures occur, it’s not for a lack of effort. Companies often invest heavily to understand the so-called voice of the customer. They may gather overwhelming amounts of data around current and potential customer behavior, opinions, and attitudes. Problems arise when these organizations try to figure out what to do with all the information; they lack a structured way of determining what’s important and what’s not. This makes it difficult to figure out the right direction to take.
And that sad picture describes some of the more customer-centric organizations out there. More commonly, we find companies relying heavily on very short customer satisfaction surveys and highly circumscribed concept tests. These instruments have their place, but they offer little or no insight into the fundamental drivers of demand, what might cause customer preferences to shift, or where an industry should head. By looking with myopic intensity at data that is very easy to collect, companies can miss critical elements of the whole picture and cast their efforts in fundamentally wrong directions.
Even when it comes to new products, which seem straightforward to research, companies’ track records are dire:
■ More than 50 percent of newly launched products fall short of the company’s projected expectations.
■ Only 1 in 100 new products covers its development costs.
■ Only 1 in 300 new products has a significant impact on customer purchase behavior, the product category, or the company’s growth trajectory.²
Fortunately, the Jobs Roadmap provides a systematic way to beat the odds. Many new product failures can be avoided simply by understanding what jobs customers want to get done. Rather than leaping to foist a solution on the market, companies need to step back, listen to and observe real and potential customers (including how they react to early prototypes), and then hone in on strategic opportunity areas that show promise for growth.
DOING IT RIGHT
Making the innovation process work doesn’t require flashes of genius, nor does it depend on glamorous ideas. By looking intently at customers in the strategic context of the company, great ideas can emerge from simple insights that are easy to act upon.
Consider the story of Uber, an on-demand car service that gets you an affordable ride within minutes. The idea isn’t revolutionary. Taxis and car services have been around for a long time. In shaking up the taxi industry, part of what Uber brought to the table was a more cost-effective business model. By being a coordinator for drivers who had their own cars, Uber could substantially reduce its upfront costs by avoiding the need to pay for cars and medallions. But simply starting a price war by introducing a lower-cost model wouldn’t have been enough to steer people away from traditional taxis. Large incumbents—even in relatively low-margin industries—usually have the resources to weather the storm, even if things are a bit uncomfortable for a while.
The key to Uber’s success is that its efforts rely on Jobs-based principles. It’s almost impossible to list all of the pain points associated with traditional taxis: Long waits while trying to find an empty cab, unfriendly drivers using every trick they know to drive up the fare, and broken
credit card readers that force you to pay with cash are just a few of the difficulties. Uber’s founders saw the problems that customers were facing and set out to offer a better alternative. Starting from the ground up, they produced a solution that would solve the most important jobs and alleviate as many frustrations as possible. The app’s interface allows you to summon a car on demand and know exactly when it will arrive. The interface provides fare quotes in advance, and back-end staffers will refund fare overages when drivers take overly long routes. Every ride is charged to a credit card on file, eliminating the need to deal with cash. Beyond eliminating a number of important pain points, Uber focused on emotional jobs that the taxi industry had ignored, offering a sense of certainty and control that you simply don’t have as you stand out in the cold waving at passing flashes of yellow or sit in the back of a cab endlessly watching the fare tick up on the meter. By focusing on fundamental jobs and taking a customer-centric perspective, Uber has grown to a $50 billion valuation in a little over five years.
WHAT LEADS COMPANIES ASTRAY
If the route to success is straightforward, why is it so uncommon? We offer five reasons why smart companies go astray.
First, doing things right requires a modest up-front investment of time. In typical corporate life, none of that is available. For example, Stephen, back in 1999, had the privilege of leading a team responsible for creating one of the first smartphones ever. Until he pushed back hard, he was given a whole two weeks from the project’s inception to develop the specification for what would be in that device. Really.
Second, following the Jobs Roadmap entails asking difficult questions, many of which you’ll struggle to answer. This is not the sort of behavior that’s rewarded in most organizations. We are trained to be solution finders, from early schooling through to our annual employment reviews. Asking awkward questions can elicit equally awkward pauses, when people fumble for smart-sounding answers. You will need to get comfortable with the unknown. In tough questions lies great opportunity. Albert Einstein once said, If I had an hour to solve a problem I’d spend 55 minutes thinking about the problem and five minutes thinking about solutions.
Once you frame a problem very well, the answers can be rather obvious.
Third, market researchers and product developers can focus too heavily on the superficial questions—probing into whether customers like this or that better. They worry that if they delve too deeply into behavioral drivers, customers will come up with rationalizations that don’t ultimately reflect their decision-making process when it comes time to make a purchase. A benefit of the Jobs Roadmap is that it allows you to target and understand discrete pieces of why customers act as they do, getting at the real root causes of behavior first and then becoming progressively more specific about the ramifications for the innovation.
Fourth, managers seek data to justify their conclusions, and data is rarely readily available about Jobs to be Done. Data can be produced reasonably quickly and inexpensively through primary research and test-and-learn experiments, but most companies still lack this information. This state of events is actually a good thing: It means that securing the data creates a true advantage for the company willing to do the work.
Last, and quite critically, we must discuss Clayton Christensen. As noted at the start of this introduction, Clay was the first person to popularize the notion of Jobs to be Done, although he is most famous for his concept of disruptive innovation.
Aside from Clay’s remarkable brilliance, there is good reason why this one man, who mentored Stephen for many years, has produced these two concepts. The disruptive innovation theory holds, in part, that products starting out in small market niches can grow to upend industry giants. Companies already incumbent in an industry tend to ignore these niches, focusing on their business as they’ve traditionally defined it. For interlopers, though, looking at underlying jobs helps determine whether that niche is a dead end or a route to eventual greatness. By targeting an underaddressed job to be done, a disruptive entrant can attack incumbents in asymmetric fashion, building strength in corners of the market that seem uninteresting to the traditional giants. When the giants awaken, it is often too late to fight off the clever entrant. Disruption succeeds when it targets the right jobs to be done.
MAP OF THE BOOK
This book follows our Jobs Roadmap, which brings readers on a two-part journey to uncover and implement great ideas.
In Part I, Understanding Jobs to be Done,
we introduce readers to the concept of Jobs to be Done and help them construct their Jobs Atlas—a tool that systematically lays out customer insights relevant to the challenge being addressed. The Jobs Atlas has three subsections. The first, Know Where You’re Starting From,
provides a process for discovering and prioritizing the jobs that customers are looking to get done, as well as identifying current customer approaches and pain points. The second subsection, Chart the Destination and Roadblocks,
helps the reader to define success from the customer’s perspective while simultaneously determining what obstacles might stand in the way of buying or using a new solution. This information will be critical for translating Jobs-based insights into specific product features. The third subsection, Make the Trip Worthwhile,
integrates business model considerations into the process of exploring customer insights. This portion of the Jobs Atlas lets the reader determine what’s at stake and figure out how to excel over competitors that the company may not have even recognized.
JOBS ROADMAP
JOBS ROADMAPPart II, Using Jobs to be Done to Build Great Ideas, explains how to turn customer insights into winning solutions. The section lays out a comprehensive innovation process that spans from project planning to ideation to iteration. The Jobs Atlas lies at the center of that process, but it does not stand alone. We start this section by looking at how to establish a project approach that will zero in on the answers management wants. This includes setting a strategic compass heading for the project, building clear guidelines about which opportunities will be in scope, understanding what is uncertain or controversial, and employing research methods that will resolve key issues. These chapters lay the groundwork for the Jobs Atlas to be used effectively. We next turn to what follows the use of the Jobs Atlas: brainstorming new ideas effectively and encouraging people to adopt perspectives beyond the traditional company or industry lens. Finally, we talk about testing prototypes and solutions in an iterative environment to learn quickly and cheaply what works and what doesn’t.
The section concludes with an afterword that explains how companies can build Jobs-based innovation capabilities within their organizations. Included is an up-close look at how we have helped institutionalize and scale Jobs to be