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UX & Growth Podcast
Austin Knight
41 episodes
9 months ago
What factors breed innovation? How do you take a product from zero to one, launching and iterating quickly? What does it mean to create sustainable growth? In this episode, Cambria Davies (Product Manager at Ro) tells us the story of launching one of HubSpot's flagship products from scratch, and all of the critical steps her team took along the way. We dive into jobs-to-be-done, activation metrics, and the significance of sustainable growth. Plus, Cambria gives us a peek into her new role at Ro, and some of their recent fast-paced COVID-19 launches. "For those who might not be familiar with the Jobs-to-be-Done framework, the basic premise is that people hire products to fulfill jobs for them. So in the morning when I wake up, I have a job of waking up as efficiently as possible and I can either hire a cup of coffee to perform that job for me, or I could hire a green juice. So, you really shift the way that you think about competition and how people explore solutions to their problems, which is rooted in acute pain points or problems they have, as opposed to it being this generalizable demographic that will always drink coffee in the mornings." — Cambria at 12:29 Cambria's site: https://cambriadavies.com/ Cambria's blog: https://www.shipsh.it/blog Cambria on Twitter: https://twitter.com/cambria_davies Ro: https://ro.co/ (P.S. They're hiring. Ping Cambria if you're interested.) Book about JTBD: When Coffee and Kale Compete by Alan Klement Book about error reduction: The Checklist Manifesto by Atul Gawande Austin on Twitter: https://twitter.com/ustinknight More about the show and host: https://austinknight.com/
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Technology
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What factors breed innovation? How do you take a product from zero to one, launching and iterating quickly? What does it mean to create sustainable growth? In this episode, Cambria Davies (Product Manager at Ro) tells us the story of launching one of HubSpot's flagship products from scratch, and all of the critical steps her team took along the way. We dive into jobs-to-be-done, activation metrics, and the significance of sustainable growth. Plus, Cambria gives us a peek into her new role at Ro, and some of their recent fast-paced COVID-19 launches. "For those who might not be familiar with the Jobs-to-be-Done framework, the basic premise is that people hire products to fulfill jobs for them. So in the morning when I wake up, I have a job of waking up as efficiently as possible and I can either hire a cup of coffee to perform that job for me, or I could hire a green juice. So, you really shift the way that you think about competition and how people explore solutions to their problems, which is rooted in acute pain points or problems they have, as opposed to it being this generalizable demographic that will always drink coffee in the mornings." — Cambria at 12:29 Cambria's site: https://cambriadavies.com/ Cambria's blog: https://www.shipsh.it/blog Cambria on Twitter: https://twitter.com/cambria_davies Ro: https://ro.co/ (P.S. They're hiring. Ping Cambria if you're interested.) Book about JTBD: When Coffee and Kale Compete by Alan Klement Book about error reduction: The Checklist Manifesto by Atul Gawande Austin on Twitter: https://twitter.com/ustinknight More about the show and host: https://austinknight.com/
Show more...
Technology
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Balancing Design & Conversion with Dr. David Darmanin (CEO of Hotjar)
UX & Growth Podcast
36 minutes 16 seconds
9 years ago
Balancing Design & Conversion with Dr. David Darmanin (CEO of Hotjar)
What is the relationship between design and conversion? Is one more important than the other? Is it possible to quantify the aesthetics of a design? In this episode, we sit down with Dr. David Darmanin (CEO of Hotjar) to discuss these difficult problems, and ultimately rethink everything we’ve ever known about them. “I think conversion is actually a bad thing to be good at if you want to be an entrepreneur. Because the thing is, an entrepreneur should never be an optimizer. It’s different with design though. I don’t think you can be a successful entrepreneur or build a successful organization without a true appreciation of design. And design, to me, is not pixel design. It’s having that mindset of, if the user has a problem, it’s always our fault.” — Dr. David Darmanin at 8:23 Get Hotjar: www.Hotjar.com Dr. Darmanin's CRO Action Plan: Hotjar.com/action-plan Dr. Darmanin on Twitter: Twitter.com/daviddarmanin Hotjar on Twitter: Twitter.com/hotjar Email us: Hello@UXandGrowth.com Austin on Twitter: Twitter.com/ustinKnight Geoff on Twitter: Twitter.com/dailydaigle Matt on Twitter: Twitter.com/mattrheault
UX & Growth Podcast
What factors breed innovation? How do you take a product from zero to one, launching and iterating quickly? What does it mean to create sustainable growth? In this episode, Cambria Davies (Product Manager at Ro) tells us the story of launching one of HubSpot's flagship products from scratch, and all of the critical steps her team took along the way. We dive into jobs-to-be-done, activation metrics, and the significance of sustainable growth. Plus, Cambria gives us a peek into her new role at Ro, and some of their recent fast-paced COVID-19 launches. "For those who might not be familiar with the Jobs-to-be-Done framework, the basic premise is that people hire products to fulfill jobs for them. So in the morning when I wake up, I have a job of waking up as efficiently as possible and I can either hire a cup of coffee to perform that job for me, or I could hire a green juice. So, you really shift the way that you think about competition and how people explore solutions to their problems, which is rooted in acute pain points or problems they have, as opposed to it being this generalizable demographic that will always drink coffee in the mornings." — Cambria at 12:29 Cambria's site: https://cambriadavies.com/ Cambria's blog: https://www.shipsh.it/blog Cambria on Twitter: https://twitter.com/cambria_davies Ro: https://ro.co/ (P.S. They're hiring. Ping Cambria if you're interested.) Book about JTBD: When Coffee and Kale Compete by Alan Klement Book about error reduction: The Checklist Manifesto by Atul Gawande Austin on Twitter: https://twitter.com/ustinknight More about the show and host: https://austinknight.com/