Using Storyboards to Animate Customer Discovery

The increasingly popular rubric of ‘customer development’ encompasses the traditional disciplines of marketing, product management, and entrepreneurship. It re-segments and combines these disciplines into something entirely focused on new product/business creation. It’s practice (and its originator, Steve Blank) has one overriding directive: get out into the world and understand the customer. Paired with design thinking, the discipline is highly useful in today’s dynamic, hyper competitive environment.

My work is about helping put this and other related techniques into practice. Crucial to your ultimate success is anchoring your understanding of the customer in a picture of how you think they experience life before and after they have your product- before and after, basically. For this, I love storyboarding.

Storyboarding Before and After Scenarios

I use a (fictional) example company called Enable Quiz in my book. They offer lightweight technical quizzes for anyone looking to assess the skill sets of engineers they’re looking to hire. The personas are ‘Helen the HR Manager’, ‘Chris the Candidate’, and ‘Frank the Functional Manager’. Helen’s responsible for doing initial interviews, Chris is being interviewed for the job, and Frank’s the hiring manager (Chris’ hypothetical future boss).

The panels below show a before and after for Enable Quiz’s customers:

Breaking Down Our Story

I like to start the customer discovery process with personas– vivid depictions of your customers in context (think-see-feel-do is a good checklist for describing them). These personas have problem scenarios- needs and desires they’d like to fulfill. They also have current alternatives- things they doing (or not doing) about the problem scenario today. You have a value proposition- something you’re going to offer that you hope is better enough than the current alternatives to win over the customer. Personas-Problem-Scenarios-Value-Propositions-Sml

In our example, Helen the HR Manager’s top problem scenario is that it’s just about impossible for her to assess the technical abilities of candidates who come in for interviews. For Frank the Functional Manager, it’s possible, he has the expertise, but  it’s time consuming and awkward. Right now, the alternatives for HR managers are to scan the resumes and maybe call references. For functional managers, it’s to go through an awkward, patchy assessment- or, equally likely, take it on a combination of faith and hope that the candidate has the necessary skills. The ‘Before’ board below describes this situation.

BEFORE

NOTES BOARD

Helen the HR Manager does an initial screening on Chris the Candidate. She can look at experience but doesn’t really have the ability to validate the candidate’s skill set.

Chris the Candidate is then passed along to Frank the Functional Manager.

Customer Development Storyboard-Before (1/3)

Frank the Functional Manager is really busy and just goes and make the hire.

Customer Development Storyboard-Before (2/3)

But in this case a stitch in time would have saved nine- the candidate doesn’t actually have the required skills to the degree Frank understood/expected/wanted.

Now Frank the Functional Manager has to figure out how to fix a situation where his employee doesn’t have the right skill sets.

Customer Development Storyboard-Before (3/3)

AFTER
The next board narrates the process once the personas of interest have access to the value propositions the Enable Quiz product offers.

Notes

Board

Helen the HR Manager now has a simple way to screen out candidates missing the skills Frank the Functional Manager has said are an absolute requirement.

Customer Development Storyboard-After (1/3)

Making good hires is rarely easy but Frank the Functional Manager now at least knows they’ll have a certain baseline skill set.

Customer Development Storyboard-After (2/3)

And life’s a lot better.

Customer Development Storyboard-After (3/3)

Where? How?

All you need to storyboard is a surface and a writing implement. That said, getting started is daunting for some and I particularly like what they’ve done at Storyboardthat.com. Their tool’s approachable and easy to get going with since it’s web-based. The outputs are available in a few different formats. I usually grab the individual panels they output and put them in the type of table you see above.

My advice is sit down and do a storyboard right now. A simple one will probably take you around 30 minutes. The first board above is actually embedded from the original on their site and you can use it as a starting point if you want.

More?

If you’d like more on storyboards, I recommend the Storyboarding Tutorial or the Online Storyboarding Workshop.

Your Turn

What techniques have you used to better illustrate what you’ve supposed and what you’ve learned in your customer discovery? In particular, have you tried storyboards and how did they work for you? If you’re just trying them out, please let me know how it goes. Post a comment, respond to the related Tweet, drop me a line, post on LinkedIn- we’re in this together!