Job Scoping and Nine Boxes

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Carnegie Mellon Qatar ©2011 - 2012 Robert T. Monroe Course 70-446 Job Scoping and Nine Boxes Robert Monroe Innovative Product Development February 6, 2012

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Job Scoping and Nine Boxes. Robert Monroe Innovative Product Development February 6, 2012. By The End Of Class Today, You Should:. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Job Scoping and Nine Boxes

Carnegie Mellon Qatar ©2011 - 2012 Robert T. Monroe Course 70-446

Job Scoping and Nine Boxes

Robert Monroe

Innovative Product Development

February 6, 2012

Page 2: Job Scoping and Nine Boxes

Carnegie Mellon Qatar ©2011- 2012 Robert T. Monroe Course 70-446

By The End Of Class Today, You Should:

• Be able to apply the Job Scoping technique to explore the underlying issues that your JTBD addresses (focusing up) as well as the detailed, ancilliary jobs you may need to consider to successfully address your JTBD (focusing down)

• Be able to use the Nine Boxes technique to understand the context (past/present/future, subsystems/systems/supersystems) in which your JTBD lives

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Carnegie Mellon Qatar ©2011- 2012 Robert T. Monroe Course 70-446

Phase 1: Identify The Opportunity

• Goals:– Identify and evaluate a set of promising Product Opportunity Gap

(POG’s)– Choose the most appropriate POG to move forward with

• Primary results:– Product opportunity statement (hypothesis)– Initial scenario that illustrates the opportunity

Source: Cagan and Vogel, Creating Breakthrough Products, [CV02] Chapter 5.

Launch* Realize Conceptualize UnderstandIdentify

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Carnegie Mellon Qatar ©2011- 2012 Robert T. Monroe Course 70-446

Discussion: Challenge Problem 1

• What made this exercise:– Easy or hard?– Interesting or boring?– Frustrating or pleasant?

• Did you find it challenging to focus on your customers’ needs, and their Jobs To Be Done without jumping to propose solutions?– Why do you think that is?

• Key idea: it takes discipline and practice to focus on your customers’ challenges, problems, needs, wants, and desires rather than the product or service you hope to sell them!

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Carnegie Mellon Qatar ©2011- 2012 Robert T. Monroe Course 70-446

Some Thoughts On Challenge Problem 1

• Practice, practice, practice– De-emphasizing finding solutions right away is intentional– Simple is better than complicated

• Outcome expectations:– It is more important to give a clear, simple statement of what

the expected/desired outcome is, than it is to follow the format for writing these statements too strictly

• Value Analysis Graphs: – The gaps that you are looking for are places where current

practice is far away from the ‘perfect world’ solution

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Carnegie Mellon Qatar ©2011 - 2012 Robert T. Monroe Course 70-446

Job Scoping Analysis

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Carnegie Mellon Qatar ©2011- 2012 Robert T. Monroe Course 70-446

Jobs Scoping Analysis

• Goals: – Refine your JTBD to something more specific, or more general– Identify additional JTBD’s related to the original

• JTBD analysis steps– List current focus – state JTBD– Identify barriers (focus down)– Develop new jobs (lower level, more specific)– Identify reasons (focus up)– Develop new jobs (higher level, more general)– Determine your project focus

Source: [SSD09] pages41-43.

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Carnegie Mellon Qatar ©2011- 2012 Robert T. Monroe Course 70-446

Job Scoping Worksheet

Source: [SSD09] page 41.

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Carnegie Mellon Qatar ©2011- 2012 Robert T. Monroe Course 70-446

Exercise: Job Scoping

1. Use the Job Scoping technique and worksheet to identify new jobs, with both broader and more narow foci for the following JTBD:

- Record images from vacations to share with friends

2. Use Job Scoping to expand your exploration of the JTBD you selected for challenge problem 1

- Be prepared to share with the class

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Carnegie Mellon Qatar ©2011 - 2012 Robert T. Monroe Course 70-446

Nine Windows Analysis

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Carnegie Mellon Qatar ©2011- 2012 Robert T. Monroe Course 70-446

Nine Windows Analysis

• Goal: the goal of the nine windows analysis is to understand the context in which the Job To Be Done is currently handled, and identify important related (ancilliary) Jobs To Be Done

• Structured technique in which you look at a JTBD in the context of all permutations of time (past, present, future) and scale (subsystem, system, supersystem)

• Nine windows steps1. Prepare the nine windows grid

2. Fill in the JTBD in the center box (can also use an innovation opportunity not expressed as a JTBD)

3. Identify Super-system and Subsystem for curent state (and time)

4. Determine the past and future for current state

5. Complete the grid – fill in the four corners to show how it could be

6. Reassess your opportunitySource: [SSD09] pages 27-39.

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Carnegie Mellon Qatar ©2011- 2012 Robert T. Monroe Course 70-446

Nine Windows Analysis Grid

Nine WindowsPast Present Future

Super System      

System      

Sub System      

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Carnegie Mellon Qatar ©2011- 2012 Robert T. Monroe Course 70-446

Exercise: Job Scoping

1. Complete the Nine Boxes grid to expand your exploration of the following Job To Be Done:

- Record images from vacations to share with friends

2. Use Job Scoping to expand your exploration of the JTBD you selected for challenge problem 1

- Be prepared to share with the class

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Carnegie Mellon Qatar ©2011- 2012 Robert T. Monroe Course 70-446

References

[SSD09] David Silverstein, Philip Samuel, Neil DeCarlo, The Innovator’s Toolkit, John Wiley and Sons, 2009, ISBN: 978-0-470-34535-1.