Search
Close this search box.
Search
Close this search box.
Search
Close this search box.

Agile Marketing Validation Board

Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn
Pinterest
WhatsApp

Note: This post was originally published in Yuval Yeret’s personal blog

“Validated Learning Over Opinions and Conventions” is the first value in the Agile Marketing Manifesto. A couple of weeks ago I was helping form what we call a “Marketing Agile Release Train” – a group of Agile Marketing teams each focused on supporting the business activities of a key product/solution in a large portfolio. The way we do this is typically a combination of some Agile Marketing training followed up by actual high-level planning of their first quarter followed by a deep dive into their first iterations/sprints.

One of my personal peeves while teaching Agile Marketing is this whole validation/experimentation/learning thing. In other words the difference between increments and iterations. It’s not iterating if you’re not inspecting and possibly adapting along the way.

Let me emphasize – Just taking a big campaign and breaking it into small tasks and planning two weeks at a time while running demos to show what you’ve accomplished and daily standups to make sure progress is according to plan and solving emerging problems is just a glimpse of what Agile Marketing is really about.

This is why when we got to high-level planning I felt something was missing from how the teams were planning. They were working on an MVP BOM – A Minimally Viable Program Bill Of Materials describing the minimum aspects of the campaign/program they were focusing on. It was a good start to focus on smaller more minimal programs/campaigns and working incrementally, but I felt the iterative/learning message was missing from the discussion once we moved from theory to practice.

At that point, I recalled the “Lean Startup Validation Board”. I first learned about the Validation Board and practiced using it as a mentor in a “Lean Startup Machine” event back in Tel Aviv. It is a practical hands-on planning tool that focuses you on what you don’t know and need to learn.

In the classic Lean Startup context, it should help you in your search for a Product Market Fit. You start by identifying your hypothesis around who are your potential customers, what’s problem you think they have, and what solution might fit their needs. You then try to think what are your core assumptions that would need to be true in order for all your hypothesis to be true. You look for the riskiest assumption – the one you feel might be the first one to bring your house of cards down. Then you structure experiments/validated learning around that. If your experiment validates your assumption you move to the next assumption. If it invalidates it you need to pivot to another set of hypothesis and start the core assumptions validation process again.

Is this a good fit for an Agile Marketing context? While watching the teams plan their “MVP”s I was trying to think about that. My conclusion is that the core idea is very useful but needs a bit of tweaking.

The “Minimum” tweaking I would do is to change from “Solution Hypothesis” to “Marketing Solution Hypothesis”. When I say Marketing Solution I include things like channel or message. An example of a channel hypothesis might be – “we think that Snapchat can be a useful marketing channel for us”. A messaging hypothesis might be “During a snow storm people would really connect to messages regarding vacations in warm places”. 

Most of the teams we were working with this time around were focused on scaling/growing revenue which means that there’s already a Product Market Fit and they were trying to find new creative ways to leverage that fit by getting to more people in the identified market and optimizing the customer’s journey.

In general, I think we need to differentiate between the search for Product Market Fit which is mainly a Product Development activity (in which Marketing can be a supporting function in) and the search for the best way to streamline the customer’s journey – which is typically the role of Agile Marketing teams. These two activities might use similar tools and techniques but are quite differently focused. And in both cases, there’s the potential for a lot of uncertainty therefore stating your hypothesis and validating your core assumptions are key.

So if you’re serious about Agile Marketing, don’t just plan tasks. Plan experiments aimed at validating assumptions. Plan to learn. Plan to iterate.

Subscribe for Email Updates:

Categories:

Tags:

BDD
Lean Budgeting
Development Value Streams
Kanban 101
Agile India
Atlassian
Agile Games and Exercises
Large Scale Scrum
Program Increment
Software Development Estimation
Introduction to Test Driven Development
IT Operations
GanttBan
Atlaassian
Agile in the Enterprise
Coaching Agile Teams
Frameworks
Agile Testing Practices
Principles of Lean-Agile Leadership
Lean Software Development
ARTs
Applying Agile Methodology
User stories
speed at scale
Kanban
Agile Mindset
System Team
Agile Release Planning
Jira admin
Scrum
Professional Scrum Master
Agile Games
DevOps
Entrepreneurial Operating System®
Managing Risk on Agile Projects
RSA
Agile Risk Management
Lean-Agile Budgeting
Agile Community
Introduction to ATDD
Implementing SAFe
Lean and Agile Principles and Practices
NIT
Nexus and Kanban
Product Management
Scrum Primer
Agile Marketing
LeSS
Continuous Deployment
Lean Agile Basics
Change Management
Artificial Intelligence
Lean Agile Organization
Presentation
Tools
Certified SAFe
Agile Project
Manage Budget Creation
Agile Assembly Architecture
ScrumMaster Tales
Sprint Retrospectives
Daily Scrum
Jira Plans
Legacy Enterprise
Tips
Story Slicing
Planning
Reading List
Code
Agile Project Management
Engineering Practices
Agile for Embedded Systems
TDD
PI Objectives
Agile Release Management
Built-In Quality
Video
The Agile Coach
Scrum and XP
Certification
Scrum Master Role
Agile Basics
ATDD
An Appreciative Retrospective
Nexus
Keith Sawyer
Games and Exercises
Legacy Code
Kanban Basics
Lean and Agile Techniques
chatgpt
Lean Risk Management
Agile Israel Events
Business Agility
SAFe
speed @ scale
Nexus and SAFe
Kanban Game
Risk-aware Product Development
Kaizen Workshop
Nexus vs SAFe
WIP
SA
Agile Techniques
QA
SPC
Systems Thinking
Implementation of Lean and Agile
Team Flow
Nexus Integration Team
Accelerate Value Delivery At Scale
Portfolio for Jira
Continuous Improvement
Agile Development
Professional Scrum with Kanban
Scrum Guide
Agile Exercises
Advanced Roadmaps
A Kanban System for Software Engineering
predictability
Hybrid Work
ATDD vs. BDD
Agile and DevOps Journey
Scrum Values
Amdocs
Perfection Game
Jira Cloud
Managing Projects
Slides
Achieve Business Agility
EOS®
Product Ownership
Agile Outsourcing
RTE Role
Scrum Master
Iterative Incremental Development
ROI
Lean Agile Leadership
Releases Using Lean
Covid19
Professional Scrum Product Owner
LPM
The Kanban Method
RTE
Jira
System Archetypes
Kaizen
Continuous Planning
Lean Agile
Kanban Kickstart Example
Agility
Release Train Engineer
Lean Startup
ALM Tools
PI Planning
Lean-Agile Software Development
Test Driven Development
LAB
Operational Value Stream
Continuous Integration
ART Success
AI Artificial Intelligence
Software Development
SAFe Release Planning
Agile Program
Agile
Risk Management on Agile Projects
Agile Israel
Elastic Leadership
Process Improvement
agileisrael
POPM
Rapid RTC
Enterprise DevOps
Agile Contracts Best Practices
Acceptance Test-Driven Development
Risk Management in Kanban
lean agile change management
What Is Kanban
Scrum.org
Continuous Delivery
System Integration Environments
AI
Agile Delivery
Scrum With Kanban
Sprint Planning
AgileSparks
Agile Product Development
SAFe DevOps
Value Streams
Pomodoro Technique
Spotify
Scaled Agile Framework
Self-organization
Quality Assurance
Agile Product Ownership
Sprint Iteration
Effective Agile Retrospectives
Limiting Work in Progress
Webinar
AgileSparks
Logo
Enable registration in settings - general

Contact Us

Request for additional information and prices

AgileSparks Newsletter

Subscribe to our newsletter, and stay updated on the latest Agile news and events

This website uses Cookies to provide a better experience
Shopping cart