"People don’t want to buy a quarter-inch drill bit. They want a quarter-inch hole!” This classic description of the jobs-to-be-done framework by HBS Professor Theodore Levitt famously captures what most companies miss.
Products and services may vary, evolve, and eventually disappear, but people continue to buy products and services to get jobs done.
Join us for a Virtual Espresso☕ on March 24th at 5 PM PST, as we will talk more about creating products/services/offers to get your customers’ functional, social, and emotional jobs done.
To help our client, Recology, meet their customer, the City of San Francisco, achieve their Zero Waste goals, we applied the jobs-to-be-done framework to deconstruct an abstract goal into actionable steps for the residents of San Francisco.
Human-centered innovations require breaking from the backward-looking, data-driven trends that traditionally inform product and service development. To do this, we talk to users, gather their feedback, and use the jobs-to-be-done framework to analyze their motives behind their actions to uncover the “why” behind the “what”.
Here is the checklist of questions to prompt your team as you explore the three main axes of the jobs-to-be-done framework, using the Zero Waste case study.
These are the specific, defined tasks your customers are trying to achieve.
At The Berkeley Innovation Group, we co-create alongside our clients to generate innovative, customer-centered value propositions. Our greatest skill is helping find the “why” motivations behind the “what” actions taken by your customers.
Join us for a Virtual Espresso☕ on March 24th at 5 PM PST, as we will talk more about unlocking the right opportunities that align with your customers’ jobs to be done.
References:
1Christensen, C., M., Hall, T., Dillon, K., and Duncan, C. S. (September, 2016). Know Your Customers’ “Jobs to Be Done.” Harvard Business Review.
https://hbr.org/2016/09/know-your-customers-jobs-to-be-done
2Etiemble, F. (March, 2019). Are Gains the Opposite of Pains? Strategyzer.
https://www.strategyzer.com/blog/posts/are-gains-the-opposite-of-pains