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Developing A Product By Stages - Tanner Flake

Tanner Flake was born in Mesa, Arizona, and raised there. After graduating from Mountain View High School, he served a two-year mission for his church in Botswana, Namibia, and South Africa.<br><br>More Information:

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Developing A Product By Stages - Tanner Flake

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  1. TANNER FLAKE Stages of the Product Development Process

  2. According to Tanner Flake, Product development is commonly used to refer to all stages of bringing a product from concept or idea to market release and beyond. In other words, product development encompasses the entire life cycle. What is Product Development? TANNER FLAKE

  3. Standard Stages of Progress in Product Development TANNER FLAKE This process has many steps, and no two organizations follow the same path, but these are the most common stages through which products typically progress:

  4. Identifying a market need Words Products provide solutions to issues. So, where should this journey begin? By identifying a problem that needs to be solved (or a better way). This step can be influenced by conversations with potential customers, surveys, and other user research activities. TANNER FLAKE

  5. Quantifying the opportunity TANNER FLAKE Not every problem is severe enough to necessitate the use of a product-based solution. However, the amount of pain caused and the number of people or organizations affected can determine whether it's a practical problem to solve and whether people are willing to pay for a solution (be it with money or their data).

  6. Conceptualizing the product Building the product roadmap TANNER FLAKE Some solutions are obvious, while others are not. The team puts in the effort and uses its creativity to figure out how a product can best meet its needs. Tanner Flake, With a valid product concept in hand, product management can lay out the product roadmap, determining which themes and goals are critical to developing to solve the most significant pain points and spark adoption.

  7. Ongoing iteration based on user feedback and strategic goals TANNER FLAKE With a product on the market, user feedback via various channels will drive enhancements, expansions, and changes. The product roadmap will evolve based on this learning and the company's objectives for this product. This work never stops until it comes time to retire a product at the end of its lifecycle.

  8. THANK YOU FOR WATCHING THIS TANNER FLAKE

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