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Download the WhitepaperBusinesses don’t grow from startups into global enterprises overnight.
That kind of growth takes time, commitment, and consistency over many years. It demands a willingness to embrace discomfort and implement new ways of doing things, as well as the rigor to apply them at scale. And it requires dedication to listening to users, following the data, and building products and features that don’t just check a box—but solve a critical business need.
But of course, once companies reach the “enterprise” echelon, their growth doesn’t stop there. They need to stay agile and adaptable, and continuously test and incorporate new tactics into how they operate to meaningfully engage with customers and stay in lockstep with the market. Today, that means embracing digital transformation, operating as a data-driven organization, and optimizing every experience your customers have with your business—including leveraging your product to do more with less.
While transforming the way entire well-established businesses operate is a daunting, oftentimes multi-year task (and notoriously challenging to boot)—at this moment in time, product teams have more sway and power to drive successful change than ever before. And leadership views the work they do as more important to overall business health and success than ever before. The companies that are modernizing their customer experiences, rethinking how they use and democratize product data, and investing in digital transformation are the ones that have become—and are poised to continue to be—indispensable to their customers, even in a downturn.
The product experience maturity model is a framework to guide and empower product teams to lead change and digital transformation in their organizations, while optimizing the product experience and driving growth for the business. Think about it as a hierarchy of needs: By understanding what each stage of maturity looks like—and how to leverage product experience tools like Pendo to improve how you and your product function at each step—you’ll be better able to delight your customers and slingshot your entire organization into its next stage of growth.
More than ever before, companies must find ways to work more efficiently and reduce operational waste. A pillar of business efficiency is unifying the organization around a single source of truth about the customer experience. That means cultivating a data-driven understanding of how customers engage with the apps and products the company produces. Armed with this information, organizations can then more effectively measure—and influence—customer experiences across matrixed teams and products.
So, in the foundational stage of product experience maturity, teams should focus on:
Most large organizations entering the foundational stage have a limited view into product engagement across their portfolios. While they may use an analytics tool to track high-level stats like pageviews, they lack visibility into the metrics that actually serve as indicators of user health and happiness, and don’t have a cohesive way to understand how their users move through and between products.
Access to this data can also be restricted—living in data lakes where very few teams are able to access and understand it to inform their decision-making, and making it impossible for non-technical teams to consume. This means the various teams that touch the product end up working with inconsistent access to critical data values. And without a shared knowledge of the customer or employee journey, the end product delivers a conflicting and disjointed user experience.
Oftentimes, product teams are also heavily reliant on engineering to make changes (no matter how big or small) to the product. Without access to self-service in-app messaging tools, product teams can’t deliver timely guidance to customers or employees, disseminate updates that could benefit the entire user base (or even just a segment of affected users), or provide proactive support to struggling users. Instead, they’re forced to wait for the next scheduled development release to request such changes or additions. In the meantime, they face a flood of support tickets and requests from disgruntled users—most of which could have been mitigated with a simple in-app alert.
Operationally, teams throughout foundational-stage enterprises are likely to spend a lot of time in 1:1 engagements with customers—regardless of the value of those accounts. For example, customer success managers (CSMs) and onboarding specialists may spend hundreds of hours helping customers with routine activities like new user onboarding or basic product walkthroughs—taking away time and attention they could be devoting to more bespoke services for their highest-value relationships.
Finally, foundational stage organizations typically have no way of identifying which products or features in their portfolio are actually driving value for the business vs. which are underutilized and prime candidates for sunset. This leads to an excess of time, effort, and resources being wasted on the parts of the product that don’t actually move the needle.
With a foundational product experience, you’ll be able to:
Key tactics:
Once your foundational data layer has been established, it’s time to focus on increasing customer retention and loyalty by engaging with users in more meaningful ways, when and where it matters most: inside your products.
In the competitive stage of product experience maturity, teams should focus on:
Competitive-stage teams advance from establishing a solid foundational data layer to having a comprehensive view into user engagement across their various apps and product lines. They have clear KPIs and dashboards in place to measure success (and frequently derive actionable insights from them), democratizing data throughout the organization. They also share this data across product teams to help eliminate silos and encourage different business units to learn from each other. This creates a common language and—particularly for companies with large product portfolios—makes it easier for disparate teams to build more cohesive, user-friendly multi-product journeys.
Organizations at this level of maturity also continue to build off the work they started in the foundational stage to deepen their understanding of where they should spend their time and resources. They evaluate product and user engagement data to make informed decisions about which features or products to sunset, or which to invest more heavily in. These insights give product teams confidence in what they’re building and help them prioritize the initiatives they know will have the greatest impact on the business.
Most competitive-stage companies use in-app content to engage with a broad audience of users inside their products. They also leverage segment- and behavior-based guidance to further tailor their communications. By using product data to identify which users to engage with—and when—PMs, CSMs, marketers, and salespeople can reach the right users at the right time using personalized messaging that drives desired behaviors and deepens account penetration.
With a competitive product experience, you’ll be able to:
Key tactics:
Companies that reach the best-in-class stage of product experience maturity are well on their way to automating many of the routine processes that once hindered efficiency and ate up their team’s time and energy.
At the best-in-class stage of product experience maturity, teams should focus on:
Best-in-class organizations have a sophisticated understanding of product data and are able to attribute revenue to specific product initiatives. And they use data-informed in-app communication strategies to increase efficiency and grow profitability throughout the user journey.
Companies at this level of maturity also recognize their product experience as central to the overall customer experience. They empower their users to be more productive by bringing key touchpoints and resources—like education and user sentiment measurement—directly inside the product. By doing so, they no longer need to rely on outbound channels to drive critical engagement with customers, saving costs and freeing up internal teams to work on more strategic initiatives.
As they scale their product experience initiatives, best-in-class-stage organizations evolve their “power team” into a center of excellence (COE) to provide oversight over all their product-led initiatives across the product organization. This cross-functional group champions the product experience, advises on best practices, and upholds clear governance standards around activities like in-app guidance and reporting.
With a best-in-class product experience, you’ll be able to:
Key tactics:
Companies operating at the transformative stage of product experience maturity deliver a seamless user journey within and across their apps and products, and operate at the highest levels of efficiency. They have built a strong, digital-first culture that puts their products at the center of their customer experience, and leverage product data to make informed decisions that drive the business forward.
At the transformative stage, teams should focus on:
In transformative-stage enterprises, teams working on different apps and product areas across the organization share a single source of truth for product data. These key data values are fully integrated with the rest of their tech stack, allowing them to easily correlate quantitative performance metrics with qualitative feedback—and making it seamless for them to identify areas of opportunity, spot trends, and close the loop with users.
These initiatives play a critical role driving the company’s overarching transformation strategy by championing scalable and automated strategies that drive cross-functional efficiencies, reign in sprawl, consolidate spend, and reduce costs.
With a transformative product experience, you’ll be able to:
Key tactics: