The User’s Journey by Donna Lichaw – Part 2
I took notes while reading “The User’s Journey” by Donna Lichaw. It’s a great book!
Chapter 3: Concept stories permalink
- Conceptual story model of the product illustrating big picture overview
- Outlines how customers think about the product
- Used to communicate core concept and value proposition
- Foundation to everything that gets built
- Help to answer those questions:
- Who is this product for?
- What is their problem?
- What is their big goal? Secondary goals?
- What is this product?
- What is the competition?
- Why might someone not want to use this product?
- How is this product better than the competition?
- What does this product need to do?
- What is the straightforward solution to the problem?
- What is the awesome solution to the problem?
- Who is this product for?
- Use concept stories to communicate a shared vision and build alignment, and to innovate and prioritise against the vision
How Concept Stories Work permalink
- Concept stories are illustrations of customers’ mental calculations when encountering a product; they can be aspirational if there is no data
- Exposition: current state of things for the target user (character and their needs)
- Inciting Incident/Problem: why can’t the customer meet their goal? What problem do they have? How do they solve it today?
- Rising Action: the product comes to a rescue (should have a name and a brief description or market category); keep it short and straight to the point
“Think of a concept story as a way to visualize and bolster a short, impactful, bulletproof elevator pitch.” - Crisis: the competition – other products or services, resistance to change, etc.
- Climax/Resolution: the customer overcomes the difficulties described as the problem; they way the product solves the problem is its value proposition (why is a better solution than the current one?)
- Falling Action: imaginary, plausible takeaway of the story’s hero; an envisioned path forward (stay in the realm of thought and emotions)
- End: the hero can see herself meet her goal
Avoiding the Anticlimactic permalink
- Flat stories are anticlimactic; crisis and climax add structure and excitement to the story
Supporting the story permalink
- Features, functionality and packaging of the product need to deliver on the story that you promise
Mapping a Concept Story permalink
- Answer questions about the target customer, what works today, their big goal, their problem, the product, the competition, hurdles or barriers, the solution, value proposition and differentiator, the ideal take-away, the ideal end state, the business goal; then map them on a narrative arc