Today’s leading organizations are increasingly employing agile tactics in marketing, innovation and customer experience. By adopting an agile approach and leveraging agile qualitative research, your organization is able to continuously iterate, ensuring your go-to-market strategy fits with consumers lifestyle, personality and needs.
Companies in all industries and verticals are using agile principles to move faster, make better decisions and deliver more value to their customers. Some examples of agile businesses include Grubhub, Lending Tree, Spotify and Salesforce.
Let’s take a step back: What exactly does it mean to operate as an agile business?
The agile philosophy began as a software development movement in the early 2000s. At a very basic level, agile involves working collaboratively with both colleagues and customers and leveraging recent feedback to influence future software releases—instead of sticking to a plan written months ago. This enables companies to rapidly test and iterate, using feedback from their users and customers to drive improvements and changes in the product roadmap.
Beyond that, agile provides a number of benefits to organizations:
In recent years, the agile philosophy has evolved; it’s increasingly seen as being applicable to just about every business and job function. That’s because, at its core, agile is about breaking down projects into smaller testable solutions that are then assessed and optimized by empowered cross-functional teams.
Though agile started in software development, it’s since moved to product development—and even marketing and HR. Where will it go next?
Because of the benefits it provides, today’s leading organizations are increasingly adopting an agile approach to innovation.
Very generally, this involves three distinct steps, which are repeated in a cyclical, never-ending loop:
To do this effectively, companies need deeper, in-context learning that helps teams understand why customers and users feel certain ways about certain product features or marketing campaigns. This enables them to iterate with confidence.
Agile can be applied both early and late in development cycles. In fact, companies can use agile principles as they move from strategy to concept to development to in-market, iterating several times in each stage.
Unfortunately, iterating with confidence requires having trustworthy data that’s current and reliable. Many organizations, however, have a big problem with agile research—which prevents them from moving as quickly as they might hope.
Large companies, for example, tend to use traditional market research to inform their decisions. That research isn’t very conducive to agile. Big data isn’t specific to the exact solution you’re building. Surveys that assess yes-or-no decisions don’t really inform iteration adequately. In-person research is slow and expensive and you don’t really get the best data there, either. Ongoing communities aren’t targeted enough. The list goes on.
Small companies, on the other hand, have fewer resources and tend to view research skeptically. They believe research will slow them down, cost too much or be too outdated to be useful. Many of them ultimately decide that it’s simply not worth their while to do research at all.
Instead of trusting their guts or making decisions based on whimsy, organizations need a new way forward: applying the agile philosophy to research. When done correctly, this enables them to get the right insights from the right people at the right time—which ultimately translates into better products and stronger marketing campaigns.
How exactly can organizations leverage agile research effectively?
Here are three principles that should drive your agile efforts:
Now that you have a good idea of the principles that should influence agile research, let’s take a look at how you can apply agile at your organization.
Enacting an agile approach to development at your organization can be tricky. Change is often difficult, after all. But with the right approach, it’s definitely possible.
With that in mind, let’s take a look at five tactics you can employ to transform your organization into an agile one:
By now, you’ve got a good idea on why agile is important and what specific steps you can take to establish agile at your organization. It’s time to turn our attention to how you can optimize agile for each stage of the product development cycle.
For the best results, you’ll need to tweak your agile approach at each stage of the development cycle. Here’s how:
Agile is a relatively new way of thinking. It’s a philosophy that is driving today’s leading organizations—and leading them to impressive results. Agile can help strengthen and optimize each stage of the product development cycle, and the benefits speak for themselves.
By optimizing as you go—and using smaller, more targeted research studies to inform your decisions—you can build better products and services that are well-received by your target audience. That’s the ticket to a healthier, more financially secure organization—and much happier customers.
Employing agile research processes can be easier than you think. To get started and learn more, check out our complimentary Agile Research Guide: How Consumer Product Teams Can Innovate Faster.