4 Key Differences between Minimum Lovable Product and MVP

Meaning and definition of a minimum lovable product

A minimum lovable product sounds great and exemplifies the qualities of product purpose, I still wonder if it makes sense for an innovative startup? A minimum lovable product establishes some great principles such as design first, user thinking frameworks. However, what happens when you don’t know what the final product looks like? And does it work in places where you’re trying to create something completely new and unheard of?

Anchor customer for MVP in Product Development

I’ve been a huge fan of product development and have been very interested in understanding customer needs. As a start-up, I understand it is extremely important to have the first customer. It will not only help your commercial model to raise investment, but it will also help product validation and understanding customer needs.

Going the Extra Mile in an Agile Context

going the extra mile, customer satisfaction, minimum viable product, customer expectations, definition of done, agile development, prduct management

Going the extra mile in an agile context – is a discussion about managing customer expectations while delivering an excellent product. The discussion centres around priorities of product management, agile philosophies and defintion of done. These lines of thought culminate together to provide customer the expected product and a level of satisfaction which encourages brand loyalty

Look and Feel in product design – Product Management

Product management, feature prioritisation, look and feel, product design, design is not just what it looks and feels like

Design is not just what it looks like and feels like. Design is how it works. – Steve Jobs Product Design Design is almost a favourite topic in the standard product management meetings. General UX conversations for me mostly tend to be about improving accessibility and convenience in a product. This in other words take … Read more