Perspectives

Introduction à la gestion de produit : exploitation des produits (product ops)

Published Apr 3, 2020

As product management has grown from a little-known field to a key driver of business results, the function has expanded in scope. Today’s PMs have access to more data and software solutions than ever before. However, managing all of these tools and processes is a job unto itself. That’s where product ops comes in.

Que désigne l'exploitation des produits ?

Product ops (short for product operations) is an operational function that optimizes the intersection of product, engineering, and customer success. It supports the R&D team and their go-to-market counterparts to improve alignment, communications, and processes around the product. Effective product ops teams accelerate feedback loops, increase efficiencies, and improve feature adoption.

L'exploitation produit peut être considérée comme un poste (ou une équipe) au sein d'une entreprise, ainsi qu'une compétence accessible aux professionnels. Les priorités spécifiques à cette fonction peuvent varier en fonction de la maturité de l'entreprise, de son secteur et de la nature du produit lui-même.

Pourquoi l'exploitation des produits (product ops) est-elle importante ?

For product-led companies, the product is the focal point for each stage of the customer journey — from trial and purchase all the way through onboarding, expansion, and referrals — and product ops is key to the optimization of that experience. Just as sales ops, marketing ops, and DevOps became essential for their respective teams, product teams also benefit from an operational complement.

Product ops pros are often responsible for helping product management make more reliable decisions by equipping them with relevant usage data. Because product data is collected automatically (no manual entry, like with a CRM, for example), it tends to be among the “cleanest” data available to decision-makers. Gartner predicts that by 2021, 75% of software providers will rely on insights from embedded software analytics to inform product decisions and measure customer health.

En quoi consiste le product ops ?

Les responsabilités liées à cette fonction sont partagées entre les aspects suivants :

Tools: Similar to other ops roles, product ops manages the product tech stack, establishes internal best practices, and ensures team members are using tools effectively.

Data: Product ops collects, organizes, and analyzes quantitative and qualitative product data and enables the entire organization to make the most of their insights. Data can include everything from product usage data, Net Promoter Score (NPS), and product stickiness to customer feedback, feature requests, and support tickets.

Experimentation: To help eliminate friction within the product experimentation process, product ops tracks, sequences, and implements all experiments, and creates processes to drive efficiency.

Strategy: Product ops fosters cross-departmental collaboration around the product, and uses their product insights to identify areas for improvement and inform business decisions.

Le conseil de confiance : En fournissant des informations sur les produits aux principaux décideurs, l'équipe product ops est un des référents importants pour les directeurs et les vice-présidents en charge des produits, ainsi que pour les responsables R&D.

Pourquoi une entreprise a-t-elle besoin de la fonction product ops ?

La principale raison de créer une équipe product ops est d'alléger la charge de travail des chefs de produit en leur retirant les tâches opérationnelles, très chronophages, afin qu'ils puissent se concentrer sur la création de produits qui ravissent les clients. La communication et l'efficacité en ressortent améliorées, car l'équipe opérationnelle fait office de source d'expertise produit pour les autres équipes de l'entreprise.

Recommended Reading

“A Product Ops Meeting Template” by Sara Estes

We know, we know — no one wants more meetings. But with this template, your product ops meeting can be productive, informative, and even motivational.

“The Rise of Product Ops: the New Discipline Powering Product Excellence” by Shaun Juncal

What factors are contributing to the rise of this new function within product? In this article, Shaun Juncal of ProductPlan discusses the history of marketing ops and how it applies to the growth of its product management-based counterpart.

“Product Ops and the Mini CEO Dilemma” by Julia Baker

Many have described product managers as the “mini-CEOs” of the product. However, this mindset can discourage collaboration, innovation, and communication. Here’s how product ops fits into this controversial paradigm.

“Making it Official: When to Hire for Product Ops” by Kim Blight

Is it time for your team to bring on an “official” product ops person (or even team)? Here are some signs it’s time to formalize your product ops function.

“What the Heck is Product Ops? (And … Do We Need It?)” by Drew Falkman

Need a quick overview of what product operations entails? This quick read gives you a high-level overview of the what and why of product ops.

“Product Operations: Why Now?” by Christine Itwaru

We’ve all heard of sales ops, marketing ops, and DevOps. Now product ops is the new ops function on the block. Why is it suddenly on the rise?