Many feel like deer caught in headlights when first asked to assess opportunities at hand and prioritize ones to invest in. That was certainly my experience until I frequently engaged with it in my role as a Product Strategist.
I have been asked this quite a few times now: How do I systematically assess opportunities and make investments in the right ones? These queries came from new Product Strategists. However a few ago an old school friend of mine asked the same question, but in the context of another domain.
Outlined below is a foundational approach I start with that you can utilize. As you amass experience and consider industry-specific and organizational nuances, you can refine this methodology to suit your needs better.
The Steps:
Step 1: Rooted in your organization’s vision, enumerate the key priorities. Here are some typical priorities:
- Increase revenue: Boosting the company’s incoming money
- Improve margins: Enhancing the profitability percentage
- Reduce cost: Cutting unnecessary expenditures
- Reduce operational expense: Streamlining processes to save costs
- Improve customer experience: Enhancing user satisfaction
- Improve employee experience: Creating a better workplace
- Increase revenue funnel: Expanding potential sales opportunities
- Avoid opportunity cost: Sidestepping losses linked to missed opportunities
- Build a competitive edge: Establishing unique market advantages
For example, in your specific area of responsibility, you might zero in on the following priorities:
- Increase revenue
- Improve margins
- Enhance customer experience
- Build a competitive edge
Step 2: Recognize that not all priorities hold equal importance. Allocate weightage accordingly, using labels like Critical, High, Medium, and Low. Aim to adopt the 10-20-30-40 model, where no more than 10% of priorities are deemed critical, no more than 20% as high, and so forth. Avoid assigning weightage based solely on individual merits; this can skew your perspective. Prioritize based on comparative significance.
For instance, given your chosen priorities, the weightage might be:
- Increase revenue – Critical
- Increase revenue funnel – High
- Improve customer experience – Medium
- Build competitive edge – Low
Note: It’s acceptable to label multiple items as Low or Medium when dealing with a smaller set of priorities.
Step 3: Considering your organizational duties and your industry, catalog the risks associated with seizing an opportunity, especially if it fails to yield the intended value or returns. Here are some conventional risks:
- Opportunity and organizational mismatch
- Potential reputation damage
- Risk to current product lines
- Team reputation jeopardy
- Information security threats
- Financial investment loss
Step 4: Weigh these risks in line with the organization’s risk tolerance. Don’t assess in isolation; compare risks to one another. Apply the 10-20-30-40 framework as used in Step 2. If too many risks seem critical, seek guidance from senior leadership.
- Opportunity and organizational mismatch – Low
- Potential reputation damage – High
- Information security threats – Critical
- Financial investment loss – Low
Step 5: Organizations typically navigate opportunities in three phases:
- Validation
- Seizing the opportunity
- Market domination
During the assessment, focus primarily on the Validation stage. Various methods to validate opportunities include:
- Market research
- Data-driven projections
- Business modeling
- MVP (Minimum Viable Product) to validate assumptions
Each approach entails some cost; strive to quantify it.
Step 6: Opportunities might not always present immediate value. Yet, you can project the potential value, referencing the priorities from Step 2.
Step 7: Examine each opportunity across these dimensions:
- Determine the addressed priorities and assign appropriate weightage.
- Identify potential risks and allocate the corresponding weightage.
- Estimate the cost of validating the associated hypothesis.
- Forecast the potential benefits to the organization.
Armed with this information, you’ll be well-equipped to evaluate opportunities, enabling informed decisions about which ventures to back and to what extent.
Scenario
You are a senior Product Strategist in a large enterprise. You work closely with an MD who runs a team of 500 people and manages 5 initiatives/systems. Two of these are the management of customer-facing products. One is a data platform and one is a Transformation Program.
Every six months, he solicits ideas from the team that will help the organization grow its business. He picks one or two ideas and invests in them from his discretionary budget. You have been asked to run this program in a systematic manner. Previously the MD used to do the privatization on his own. This meant that his method wasn’t clear to all and often confused his team on why he chose one idea over the other. Also, most of the time the decision used to get delayed as he was very busy, ending up being a bottleneck.
Applying Opportunity Prioritization Method
Step 1: Enumerate the key priorities:
- Increase revenue
- Increase revenue funnel
- Enhance customer experience
- Build a competitive edge
Step 2: Assign weightage
- Increase revenue – Critical (score of 5)
- Increase revenue funnel – High (score of 3)
- Enhance customer experience – Medium (score of 2)
- Build competitive edge – Low (score of 1)
Step 3: Enumerate possible risks
- Opportunity and organizational mismatch
- Potential reputation damage
- Risk to current product lines
- Team reputation jeopardy
- Information security threats
- Financial investment loss
Step 4: Assign weightage to applicable risks
- Opportunity and organizational mismatch – Low (score of -1)
- Potential reputation damage – High (score of -3)
- Information security threats – Critical (score of -5)
- Financial investment loss – Low (score of -1)
Step 5: List opportunities and costs for their validation
Idea | Validation Cost | Cost Bucket |
Fitness & Finance Integration | $50,000 | Medium |
Collaborative Group Savings | $50,000 | Medium |
Interactive Financial Workshops | $30,000 | Low |
Social Payment Integration | $100,000 | High |
Subscription-based Banking | $100,000 | High |
Localized Language Support | $30,000 | Low |
QR Code Payments | $50,000 | Medium |
Instant Cross-Border Payments | $300,000 | Very High |
UPI Integration | $100,000 | High |
Step 6: Analyzing each opportunity against key priorities
Simple Approach
Idea | Increase revenue | Improve revenue funnel | Enhance customer experience | Build a competitive edge | # of ‘Yes’ |
Collaborative Group Savings | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | 4 |
Fitness & Finance Integration | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | 4 |
Interactive Financial Workshops | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | 4 |
Subscription-based Banking | No | Yes | No | No | 4 |
Instant Cross-Border Payments | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | 4 |
Social Payment Integration | Yes | Yes | Yes | No | 3 |
QR Code Payments | No | No | Yes | Yes | 2 |
UPI Integration | Yes | No | Yes | No | 2 |
Localized Language Support | No | No | Yes | No | 1 |
- Collaborative Group Savings
- Fitness & Finance Integration
- Interactive Financial Workshops
- Subscription-based Banking
- Instant Cross-Border Payments
Deeper Approach
Idea | Increase revenue (5) | Increase revenue funnel (3) | Enhance customer experience (2) | Build a competitive edge (1) | Score |
Social Payment Integration | High (3) | High (3) | Medium (2) | No (0) | 28 |
Collaborative Group Savings | Medium (2) | Medium (2) | High (3) | High (3) | 25 |
Instant Cross-Border Payments | Medium (2) | Medium (2) | High (3) | High (3) | 25 |
Fitness & Finance Integration | Medium (2) | Low (1) | High (3) | Medium (2) | 21 |
UPI Integration | Medium (2) | No (0) | High (3) | No (0) | 16 |
Interactive Financial Workshops | Low (1) | Low (1) | Low (1) | Low (1) | 11 |
Subscription-based Banking | No (0) | Medium (2) | No (0) | No (0) | 6 |
QR Code Payments | No (0) | No (0) | Medium (2) | Low (1) | 5 |
Localized Language Support | No (0) | No (0) | Low (1) | No (0) | 2 |
- Social Payment Integration
- Collaborative Group Savings
- Instant Cross-Border Payments
- Fitness & Finance Integration
- UPI Integration
You will notice that the list of prioritized opportunities changes as now more nuanced analysis is done.
Step 7: Now if you consider the cost bucket, the picture may change still:
Idea | Cost Bucket | Increase revenue (5) | Increase revenue funnel (3) | Enhance customer experience (2) | Build a competitive edge (1) | Score |
Social Payment Integration | High (3) | High (3) | High (3) | Medium (2) | No (0) | 28 |
Collaborative Group Savings | Medium (2) | Medium (2) | Medium (2) | High (3) | High (3) | 25 |
Instant Cross-Border Payments | Very High (5) | Medium (2) | Medium (2) | High (3) | High (3) | 25 |
Fitness & Finance Integration | Medium (2) | Medium (2) | Low (1) | High (3) | Medium (2) | 21 |
UPI Integration | High (3) | Medium (2) | No (0) | High (3) | No (0) | 16 |
Interactive Financial Workshops | Low (1) | Low (1) | Low (1) | Low (1) | Low (1) | 11 |
Subscription-based Banking | High (3) | No (0) | Medium (2) | No (0) | No (0) | 6 |
QR Code Payments | Medium (2) | No (0) | No (0) | Medium (2) | Low (1) | 5 |
Localized Language Support | Low (1) | No (0) | No (0) | Low (1) | No (0) | 2 |
Now, if you consider the risk bucket, the picture may change still:
Idea | Cost Bucket | Risk Bucket | Increase revenue (5) | Increase revenue funnel (3) | Enhance customer experience (2) | Build a competitive edge (1) | Score |
Social Payment Integration | High (3) | Opportunity and organizational mismatch – Low (score of 1) | High (3) | High (3) | Medium (2) | No (0) | 28 |
Instant Cross-Border Payments | Very High (5) | Financial investment loss – Low (score of 1) | Medium (2) | Medium (2) | High (3) | High (3) | 25 |
Collaborative Group Savings | Medium (2) | Potential reputation damage – High (score of 3) | Medium (2) | Medium (2) | High (3) | High (3) | 25 |
Fitness & Finance Integration | Medium (2) | Potential reputation damage – High (score of 3) | Medium (2) | Low (1) | High (3) | Medium (2) | 21 |
UPI Integration | High (3) | Financial investment loss – Low (score of 1) | Medium (2) | No (0) | High (3) | No (0) | 16 |
Interactive Financial Workshops | Low (1) | No (0) | Low (1) | Low (1) | Low (1) | Low (1) | 11 |
Subscription-based Banking | High (3) | Financial investment loss – Low (score of 1) | No (0) | Medium (2) | No (0) | No (0) | 6 |
QR Code Payments | Medium (2) | Information security threats – Critical (score of 5) | No (0) | No (0) | Medium (2) | Low (1) | 5 |
Localized Language Support | Low (1) | Opportunity and organizational mismatch – Low (score of 1) | No (0) | No (0) | Low (1) | No (0) | 2 |
So now you have a systematic, transparent, re-configurable and business vision based method for opportunity prioritization!
- Social Payment Integration
- Instant Cross-Border Payments
- Collaborative Group Savings
- Fitness & Finance Integration
- UPI Integration