Work Backward to Drive Innovation Forward

Work Backward to Drive Innovation Forward

Here's how Amazon defines the ideal customer experience and then works backward to create it.

Everyone wants to uncover the secret to the perfect business model that will unlock their true potential. The best business strategies focus on meeting and exceeding customer needs and expectations. This means envisioning customer problems as well as ideal solutions to those problems before actually developing a product or service. And this is exactly how Amazon innovates.

Amazon uses four simple steps to innovate as highlighted in the book Working Backward:

Step 1: Define the customer problem or pain point

Start by determining what the customer problem is that you’re trying to solve. If you don’t know what that customer problem is, then you won’t be able to build a meaningful solution. Identify customer pains that are not going away and are persistent and repetitive, like how many aggravating clicks it takes to purchase a product. Remember that if you have a clear idea of the problem you are trying to solve, you will be better able to develop a working prototype or minimum viable product (MVP) quickly. If you focus on the wrong problem, the product won’t be viable when it reaches the masses. 

Step 2: Define the ideal product solution

After defining the right customer pain point and problem, brainstorm and describe the ideal solution or product that will help. Remember that the right solution may require bringing on new staff members or individuals with different skill sets and ideas. Don’t allow this to be a barrier or a constraint, rather, look at it as an opportunity to grow your business more quickly. Focus on what would be the ideal product solution from your customer’s point of view and then act on that. This is the same way that Amazon developed Amazon Web Services (AWS), by engaging and empathizing with target customers more closely and helping to establish entire new business categories that didn’t exist before. 

Step 3: Work backwards from the ideal customer experience

In this step you assess and define the ideal customer experience, and then identify challenges or issues associated with making your new product or service a reality that achieves the experience. During this stage, it is very important to be as detailed as possible to identify the technical, financial, legal, partnerships and other hurdles you’ll have to overcome to bring this ideal product to life. 

Step 4: Refine and repeat steps 1 through 3

Continue to iterate and operate using “sprints” that focus on short-term milestones. The perfect product, service, or customer experience usually doesn’t occur on the first try. All of Amazon’s most successful products required iteration over the course of many months, and sometimes years.

Most of us have heard about the age-old idea that we should “start with the end in mind.” That’s exactly what Working Backwards is all about. But it’s also more than that. Yes, you need a vision of what you want to achieve. But you also need the tactical tools and approaches to get you there. When you focus on the customer in everything you do, innovation moves from an ambiguous concept into a concrete way to change the world.

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Soren Kaplan is the best-selling and award-winning author of Leapfrogging and The Invisible Advantage, an affiliate at USC’s Center for Effective Organizations, a columnist for Inc. Magazine, a leading keynote speaker and the founder of Praxie.com. Business Insider and the Thinkers50 have named him one of the world’s top management experts and consultants.


This article adapted from Soren's original version in Inc. Magazine


John Peters

Special Improvement District Executive Director ♦ Travel, Media, & Technology ♦ Innovator, Executive, Entrepreneur ♦ Marketer♦ Revenue Generator♦ Strategic Partnerships Expert ♦ Digital Innovation ♦ Board Member ♦Speaker

2y

Well written and wonderfully explained, Soren.

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Andrea Goeglein, PhD

Success Catalyst | Knowledge Champion | Your Success is My Business

2y

The process they use maybe familiar and I personally have of experienced a company who has done it as well. I just got off a 5 hr flight with wifi on JetBlue who has a partnership with Amazon. When I got a text from home that we needed something I ordered from 30,000 ft and it will be there for them tomorrow.

Daniel Bassill

President, CEO at Tutor/Mentor Institute, LLC

2y

I wonder if Amazon's thinking was influenced by an article about Backward Mapping by Dr. Richard F. Elmore, published in the Political Science Quarterly, Vol. 94, No. 4 (Winter, 1979-1980). I stumbled across a copy of the article in the 1990s and it influenced my thinking of how social sector organizations should be supported. Instead of gov't funding micro managing how a problem is solved, it should set a vision for solving a problem and provide ample resources and flexibility for organizations to find a path to that solution.

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