198. From Problem Solving to Problem Finding (Part 2)
Have you ever worked to launch a product or a service only to see it go flat in the market?
Have you ever developed an initiative internally at work only to see the launch fall completely
flat?
Have you ever put time and energy and resources into a relationship only to see it go south?
Today I will share a powerful failure story, something counterintuitive I have learned
and some actionable advice.
By the end of this episode you will have a six word question that you can use at work
and at home to make sure that you are solving the right problem.
Let's begin.
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Have you ever heard of Quibi?
Exactly.
I ask people all over the world, large audiences, capable executives, that question, have you
heard of Quibi?
And it is rare that anybody raises a hand.
And this is a startling thing.
Because in the glittering world of Hollywood, around the dawn of the 2020s, a new venture
was stirring.
The venture was Quibi.
A mobile first streaming platform set to deliver quick bites of content tailored for the rush
hour consumer.
At the helm of Quibi were two well-known characters, Jeffrey Katzenberg, the Hollywood Titan with
a knack for storytelling and a gold-plated reputation and Meg Whitman herself, a seasoned
technology executive who had led eBay and HP, both as CEO, their collaboration was underlined
by a strong vision and seemingly unlimited resources.
Quibi, if you can believe it, amassed 1.75 billion in funding prior to its launch.
1.75 billion without having a single customer.
So you have talent from Hollywood combined from talent from Silicon Valley.
You have unthinkable funding.
And their aim is simple.
To redefine the streaming industry with these snack-sized content consumable on the go,
they anticipated the needs of a mobile-centric generation and they sought to bridge the
gap between technology and content.
However, just eight months after they launched, the company was officially shut down.
A venture that started with unprecedented promise and substantial backing had come to
an end almost before they had begun.
They spent, if I'm recalling it correctly, $1.2 billion of that founding capital.
On what?
On stars in Hollywood?
On cutting-edge technology?
On talent everywhere?
What went wrong?
I watched the rise and fall of Quibi with complete fascination.
I'd already spent 15 years working with Silicon Valley and I was living right next to Hollywood
at the time.
The emerging of those two business ecosystems was already happening in real time.
Just think of Netflix as an example.
The complete merging of these two massive but often completely separate industries.
They seemed like they had all the ingredients.
It seemed like this was truly going to be the next big thing.
I remember even thinking it almost seems a little unfair to all of these other startups
that have to grind their way through a lean innovation model in order to be able to even
get up and compete.
They died.
They spectacularly died.
You can blame the shutdowns from the pandemic.
Some of the leaders in that organization have absolutely pointed to that.
What I wonder is if they made an error in understanding the problem they were trying to
solve in an era of constant innovation and competition they focused on redefining the
way content was consumed rather than ensuring the content itself was compelling enough to
attract and retain an audience.
One of the lessons of Quibi is to understand the importance of correctly identifying the
right problem.
That innovation to be useful at all must be aligned with the real needs and preferences
of the audience.
How could Quibi have better identified the true needs of its audience?
And more importantly for you, how can you learn on the cheap, the lessons that were so
expensive for them?
How can you make sure that you don't spend your limited time, attention, effort, money
on solving the wrong problem?
How can you do that in your business?
How can you do that on your team?
How can you do that in your professional work?
How can you do it in your personal life at home?
Quibi serves as a compelling reminder that solving the right problem is at the heart
of any successful venture.
It's not enough merely to innovate, to come up with new product services.
It's not enough just to put in more effort, time, attention.
The innovation must address a true need in order to provide a meaningful solution.
The vital pulse of any successful venture, the lifeblood that pumps through every facet
of our work, has become our greatest strength and yet, paradoxically, our greatest point
of contention.
A McKinsey survey paints a compelling picture.
84% of executives around the globe express that innovation is paramount, excuse the pun,
to their growth strategies.
But 94% voice dissatisfaction with their respective organization's performance in innovation.
It's as if we've found ourselves at a grand feast yet we remain hungry, unable to savour
the fullness of the spread from a logical standpoint.
This is a conundrum.
We've never been more connected to our customers.
The dawn and promise of the big data revolution has gifted us with this astonishing capacity
to gather an extensive spectrum of customer information in real time and at a scale never
before possible.
We can dissect this information, examine it under a magnifying glass, revealing insights
that define our understanding of the market.
Many firms have streamlined innovation processes and assembled top-tier talent to navigate
all of these uncharted waters.
Yet despite the meticulous risk calculations and mitigation strategies, the science of
innovation remains more art than precision.
Why is it that we have seemingly tamed the innovation beast yet it refuses to truly be
domesticated the multitude of processes in this vast ocean of data?
Have we lost sight of the essence of innovation?
What if the essence of innovation is really about understanding and then surprising our
customers in ways that touch their hearts?
Have we allowed the noise of the data to drown out the symphony of the true purpose of innovation?
And how do we fine-tune our approach to make our song resonate once again?
What we're talking about in this series about solving the right problem.
This four-part series is about solving the right problem.
And one of the metaphors that has been used for about the last 50 years in management
literature is the jobs to be done paradigm.
Theodore Levitt was the American economist and it seems reasonable to share a little
bit of the history of that jobs to be done perspective.
If we were to write the genealogy of this idea we certainly would get back to Theodore
Levitt who was an American economist and a professor at Harvard Business School.
He's most well known for his work in the field of marketing and business management with
significant contributions to the understanding of globalization, corporate purpose and customer
orientation.
We may have heard of him without even realizing it because of his assertion that people don't
want to buy a quarter-inch drill, they want a quarter-inch haul.
That statement encapsulates his perspective on the importance of focusing on the customer's
needs and desired outcomes rather than merely the products or services a company offers.
We often quote that line not knowing that it's Levitt who put it into writing.
In other words, customers are interested in solutions to their problems or ways to fulfill
their needs not just the physical products or the services themselves.
One of his most influential articles, Marketing Myopia, that was published in Harvard Business
Review in 1960 argued that businesses will do better in the long run if they concentrate
on meeting customers' needs rather than on selling products.
His ideas have significantly shaped modern marketing theory and practice.
His drill versus haul quote is often cited as a central or the central idea within the
jobs to be done framework in innovation, which itself emphasizes that companies should focus
on the customer's task or problem or objective, the job to be done.
Levitt's book, The Marketing Mode in 1969, put even more color on this fascinating perspective.
Peter Drucker developed this further in 1985 with innovation and entrepreneurship.
Tony Ulwick gave a different term for the same idea with what he calls outcome-driven
innovation and introduced that idea to Clayton Christensen in 1999.
I'll come back to Tony in some more of this history in a coming episode of this series.
But let's turn all of this into actionable advice.
A six-word question specifically.
One succinct yet powerful question.
So let's shift this to some actionable advice.
A single question that you can ask immediately, it's six words long, to be able to shift
yourself from this very surface shallow understanding that we do in marketing and in our interactions
with our relationships at home and at work to a deeper more causation focus.
A question to help us grasp the true motivation behind the customer or the person that we're
trying to connect with.
The question is this?
What's the job to be done?
It's not a new question but it's still the beginning place.
In a business setting, what's the customer hiring this product or service to do?
I never felt that Quibi answered that question.
Their use case was people standing in line at a grocery store.
You have five or ten minutes in their estimation and so you want to fill that boredom with
an episode from Quibi.
But self-evidently, customers did not feel either that they had that problem or that
Quibi was the best solution to that problem.
Speaking personally, I have never heard of anybody say, I'm just so bored standing in
line at the supermarket.
Now, I'm not saying nobody ever has but it's just not a pain point sufficient to justify
this massive $1.7 billion investment and to the extent that one does experience the problem,
there are many alternative competitors, YouTube among them, podcasts among them.
I love the idea that somebody right now, maybe it's you, are standing in line and you're
listening to this and your need is being met differently than Quibi's potential solution
was.
That simple question allows us to see past superficial patterns and understand the actual
causative factors that lead people to a purchase.
Rather than focusing on demographic similarities or preference patterns, it propels us to uncover
the task that the customer is trying to accomplish, the real reason they choose to hire the product
or service and in doing so, it provides a more accurate, deeper understanding of the
customer's choice.
Far beyond what the raw data could reveal, understanding the jobs to be done framework
is not just limited to customer product interactions.
It can be extended to personal relationships and employee management as well.
Let's just take a quick look at how you can apply it to different relationships.
As a manager, you can ask, what job is my employee hiring me to do as their manager?
What are they trying to achieve?
Employees expect certain things from their managers, leadership support, clear communication,
fairness, growth opportunities by understanding what your employees need from you as a manager.
You can foster a more engaged and productive team and you can also eliminate masses of wasted
time.
Doing for them things they don't value at all.
What about with your partner or spouse?
You can ask, what job is my spouse hiring me to do in our relationship?
In this context, it's about understanding your partner's needs, desires and the roles
you play in fulfilling them.
Are they looking for support, companionship, a problem solver or maybe a confidant?
And of course, that job changes from interaction to interaction, but pausing to ask, what is
the job to be done in this moment?
Allows you to enhance mutual understanding and improve your relationship.
What about as a parent?
What job is my child hiring me to do as their parent?
What job is my teenager hiring me to do as a parent?
What job is my adult child hiring me to do as their parent?
Children might hire their parents for various jobs, guidance, emotional support, help with
homework or simply as a playmate.
Recognizing and fulfilling these roles effectively can result in healthier communication and
of course a much stronger parent-child bond in each of these cases.
It cares to shift your perspective and to try to understand the other person's needs
and expectations so that you can better fulfill the job they're hiring you to do.
This approach promotes empathy and understanding leading to more satisfying and successful
relationships.
Well, thank you.
Really, thank you for listening.
What is one idea that stood out to you today?
What is one thing you can do immediately to put it into action?
Within the next two minutes at your very first opportunity and who is somebody that you can
share this episode with so that they can subscribe to the podcast and continue this and other
conversations together with you?
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Just go to essentialism.com forward slash podcast promo for more details.
Thank you again really for listening and I'll see you next time.
Bye.
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