The fundamental responsibility of a Product Manager is to be the company’s leading expert on the customer. In fact, Product Managers often act as mediators between their customers and design teams to identify where their product or service is lagging and ensure that the underlying needs for their online customer are aligned with their service or product offering. Online feedback serves as a great way for connecting product performance and customer expectations.
https://mopinion.com/product-managers-collecting-online-feedback/
As a product manager, you need customer feedback at every stage of the product development lifecycle to inform your product decisions and help you establish a foolproof product strategy.
Before you even have customers, feedback can be incredibly valuable to you. Before a single line of code is written, feedback from real people can help you validate your concept, size up the market, and estimate potential demand. Before shipping your product, feedback can validate whether you’re actually solving the problems you set out to solve and help ensure your product positioning and messaging are effective. As soon as your product has been released out into the wild, customer feedback can help you not only find bugs and technical issues, but also navigate those difficult “what should we build now?” decisions and prioritize your product roadmap as effectively as possible.
https://www.productplan.com/customer-feedback-new-product/
A product roadmap is essential for guiding the strategic direction of mobile app development. A roadmap is designed to communicate the “why” behind what you’re building. When you begin your development project, it’s important to remember that a roadmap is not set in stone; instead, it is made to accommodate change.
It’s a complicated process determining what aspects of your mobile app will be the most valuable for your user base. This article will break down how to identify the primary goal of your product and how to create a business strategy and a roadmap to achieve that goal.
http://customerthink.com/how-to-create-a-product-roadmap-for-mobile-app-success/
Today, developing a SaaS product and launching it in the market is easier than ever before. The good news is that there is a market for almost every quality product. With platforms like Siftery, Product Hunt, and Stack Share, product discovery for and access to early adopters has become a cake walk. However, every SaaS founder takes a leap of faith when building a new product. The success of this leap depends largely on how good the product’s roadmap is. The product roadmap doesn’t necessarily mean that the product must have a definitive feature list with a meticulously carved release plan. For me, it is more important that the product roadmap have a clear identification of the customer problems that the product will continue to solve with every new feature. And most importantly, it must answer how the “build-measure-learn” feedback loop will be incorporated into the product.
http://customerthink.com/using-customer-feedback-to-build-the-right-product-roadmap-for-saas/