Keep the Process Simple
The New England Journal of Medicine recently published a study about surgical safety, showing that a simple 19-step checklist helped reduce complications and death associated with surgery. Whoa! What about all the multi-million dollar diagnostic equipment? And $300 "hospital grade" electrical outlets? Apparently those are not so clearly correlated with positive outcomes. It turns out that the lowly checklist is highly effective as a tool for improving teamwork, communications and consistency of delivery.
So what does this have to do with product development? Well, product development is a notoriously unpredictable process, with a less than stellar survival rate - less than 50% of products in development make their way to commercial success. Product development is also rife with complicated methodologies and collaboration tools that are nice for filling binders and boosting the corporate bureaucracy, but not clearly correlated with positive outcomes. Our mantra has always been - it doesn't matter what your process is, just have one. And even more importantly, keep the process simple and consistent enough so that people actually follow it. Most of the development processes we run into are so complex that the really successful product teams are those skilled at avoiding the process (a.k.a. "flying under the radar"). Strict adherence to a complex process will inevitably get in the way and frustrate the enthusiasm of product champions. Most surgeons will tell you, what they do cannot be reduced to a simple formula, and every product manager with an ego will tell you the same thing. However, what surgery and product development have in common is that they are both team sports, highly dependent on multiple individuals pulling toward a common goal. So having the list/playbook at hand surely helps. Remember - the process does not substitute for judgement and intuition about the right thing to do. Process may however, provide the brakes and safety valves that can save you before things go very wrong.
Before you spend the next year defining the ultimate product development process, take a moment and start with a one-page checklist. You may be surprised at the impact on your product mortality rate.







