Oct 8, 2018
What is surprisingly inconvenient about my product?
The designers and engineers who work at HP face many challenges
in getting their ideas signed off on.
It’s a long process from an idea to a finished prototype.
Before any product can hit the market, it faces one final
test.
I take the prototype home, give it to my wife, and say, “Tell me
what you think.”
Now, my wife is an extremely smart and focused individual, but
she is emphatically not a techie.
She doesn’t care how a gadget works; she just wants it to
work.
Her lack of specialized knowledge has been hugely valuable to me
over the years.
If I test a new product, I can troubleshoot it almost without
thinking.
I might not even notice a glitch that could cause major hassles for
an end consumer because the fix is second-nature to me.
On the other hand, if my wife can’t get a product to work, the
first thing she does is call me up and yell at me, which is a great
incentive to get our products as flawless as
possible.
Back in 2007, she was relocating her stained-glass studio
to California from our former home on the East Coast.
She was a little nervous about the drive.
Luckily, I had just been given the first working model for the
latest GPS device that HP was about to go into production
on .
I gave her a quick lesson, and off she went.
Three days later she calls me from the road, almost speechless with
rage.
The GPS looked great and had the lasted hardware features anyone
could want.
What it didn’t have was accurate maps.
Every time my wife searched for rest stops, it came up
empty.
When she finally made it out west, she met me for lunch at the
HP cafeteria.
The head of our division that developed the product came up and
asked her what she thought.
Her response?
“Well, it was clearly designed by a guy; I stopped at every crummy gas-station bathroom between here and Kentucky!”
The GPS was super-fast, looked great, but had completely
missed the mark on why people buy GPS devices, which is based
almost purely the quality of the maps and the points of
interests along the way.
Great hardware can’t compensate for faulty
software.
The GPS device failed the wife test, and it had failed my test
too.
It was sent back to the drawing board.
There are two ways to uncover these kinds of potential
annoyances in your new or existing products.
One is to observe your customers and see what they are doing with
your product and what their experience with it is.
The other is, use the product yourself.
Either way, you need to be fanatical about constantly improving the
product and getting rid of the problems you uncover.
Keep in mind that I’ve observed major differences between how men
and women handle these issues.
Guys have ego wrapped up in their new devices; they won’t let the
gadget win.
A woman will give it three chances; if she tries to use a new
product three times and it doesn’t work, she’ll take it back to the
store because she doesn’t have any interest in fighting with the
product and winning.
Men are much more likely to keep tinkering with the device and, if
all else fails, stick it in the garage and forget about
it.
If it doesn’t work for a woman, she’ll let you know, and you’ll
have a returned product on your store shelves.
This is one of the reasons I rely so heavily on the wife test; my
wife is a zero-tolerance consumer.
If you don’t have a zero-tolerance consumer, you need to find one
and embrace them.
Have them test your products and give you the unvarnished truth
about your products’ real usefulness and value.
That way – you can answer the question ---
What is surprisingly inconvenient about my product?
But don’t stop there .. ask yourself ..
[Sparking Points]
How do you uncover what customers perceive to be inconvenient about your product?
Are you aware of the inconveniences?
Do you use your own product or service?
What’s your version of the wife test?
Go beyond the obvious by ignoring your own likes and dislikes about any given product. You are NOT the best gauge of your customer. Get up – and go talk to them.