Strategy Blocks: An operator’s guide to product strategy
Strategy Blocks: An operator’s guide to product strategyFive steps to map out and build alignment around the future of your company
👋 Welcome to a 🔒 subscriber-only edition 🔒 of my weekly newsletter. Each week I tackle reader questions about building product, driving growth, and accelerating your career. For more: Lennybot | Podcast | Courses | Hiring | Swag Annual subscribers get a free year of Perplexity Pro, Notion, Superhuman, Linear, and Granola, along with access to the entire 5-year back catalog and a thriving members-only Slack community. Subscribe now. Below, you’ll find what I believe is the most actionable, specific, and straightforward framework for crafting a strategy, for both your product and your company. Chandra Janakiraman came on my podcast to share it, and afterward, we realized that it would be 10x more helpful as a newsletter post. So we teamed up to make that happen. As Chandra shares below, his framework sits on top of the best strategy wisdom out there (e.g. Michael Porter, Good Strategy Bad Strategy, Playing to Win), and turns that advice into a step-by-step guide that you and your leaders can put into practice immediately. The post includes plug-and-play strategy templates, recommended timelines, the stakeholders to involve at each step, and more 🔥 For more from Chandra, follow him on LinkedIn, and VRChat is hiring! At Headspace back in 2016, we had established our product roadmap and success metrics and our mission and vision, but teams were still confused about why we were working on the projects we chose. Without that clarity, teams weren’t able to get several projects off the ground and had unproductive debates on what to build. I worked closely with a seasoned board member to trace this back to a lack of product strategy—both articulated and aligned. With her help, I wrote the first strategy document for Headspace, which eventually led to the complete reimagination of Headspace, maximizing growth for our guided mindfulness product and adjacent spaces. I translated our journey from confusion to clarity into bite-size steps to create a product strategy, called Strategy Blocks. Over the past 10 years, I’ve used Strategy Blocks in six different high-stake contexts, at companies large and small, including Headspace, Meta, and VRChat. It has helped in gaining alignment on complex topics with senior leaders at Meta (Sheryl Sandberg, Chris Cox, and Andrew Bosworth), paving the way for key launches like Facebook digital well-being tools, privacy protections for youth, and Quest referrals. It has also jump-started innovation at VRChat on the VRChat+ subscription product, with a strong community response, while helping to steer VRChat toward an exciting long-term future. Strategy Blocks is particularly helpful for product leaders looking to upgrade their strategy skills and for chief product officers looking for a comprehensive strategy architecture that balances action and aspiration. Basic definitionsStrategy has benefited from several excellent foundational frameworks over the years, from Michael Porter’s work to Good Strategy Bad Strategy, Playing to Win, and The Art of War, to name a few. Strategy Blocks uses concepts from many of these frameworks and converts them into bite-size steps to map out the future of your company. Let’s establish some basic definitions before diving into the details of Strategy Blocks: 1. What exactly is product strategy?
Part 1: Crafting the 2-year strategy (small “s” strategy)Crafting the small “s” strategy requires about 8 to 12 weeks to produce a high-quality output (see output template). The weeks are split into five distinct steps:
This process is typically led by a senior product leader. Let’s dive into detailed guidance for each step. Step 1: Preparation (3-5 weeks)The preparation step is a foundational effort where a lot of the groundwork and due diligence is done to inform the strategy selection process. The work here is not full-time and can run alongside other projects for the people involved. Let’s go through the steps and action items.
All the above material is consolidated into a comprehensive share-out deck. People should spend zero effort in polishing this deck. The focus is really on substance over style, and the consolidated deck will power the next step of the process: the strategy sprint. Step 2: Strategy sprint (1 week)The strategy sprint is the heart of the strategy process. This is where strategy selection happens. The product lead facilitates and the full strategy working group participates. Let’s walk through a day-by-day account of how to run the sprint.
Step 3: Design sprint (1 week)The design sprint builds on the strategy sprint. It takes the three strategic pillars and the “how might we’s” as its primary input and aims to produce a set of illustrative concepts to bring the strategy document to life. As the saying goes, a picture is worth a thousand words, so these illustrative concepts can paint a better picture for leadership of how the strategic pillars might translate into product concepts and directions. These illustrative concepts are not intended to be “shovel-ready” for engineering to build on. Instead, they’re meant to help the reader understand the strategy document better. The strategy working group design lead heads up the design sprint, while the others take on a participatory role. There are different ways to run the sprint (e.g. some variation of the Google Ventures Design Sprint could be used). Any style can work as long as there is clear alignment on the inputs (strategic pillars and “how might we’s”) and the outputs (illustrative concepts for each strategic pillar). Step 4: Document writing (1-2 weeks)At this point, the product leader has significant leverage built up from steps 1 to 3. Let us recall everything that is now available: user insights (behavioral and user research), competitive analysis, three strategic pillars, associated “how might we’s,” 2-year winning aspiration, and illustrative concepts. These are excellent building blocks for writing the strategy document. The product lead should approach this activity in a relatively solo fashion and combine, connect, and edit all the pieces into a coherent document. The integrity of the process ensures that there are no major surprises for the stakeholders when the document is fully written. Here is a template for that document. Step 5: Roll-out (2-3 weeks)The final step is to roll out and operationalize the strategy. A few key steps are recommended for this step:
The advantages of this approach are that:
This kind of problem-focused 2-year strategy is absolutely necessary to drive action and near-term execution but is only half of the story. To complete the picture, let’s rotate to a complementary and more aspirational strategy process called Big “S” strategy. Part 2: Crafting the 3/5/10-year strategy (Big “S” strategy)“Life has to be about more than just solving problems.” —Elon Musk There needs to be an aspirational and exciting component to a company’s strategy, which is not just focused on solving problems with the current product but maps more closely to the eventual mission and vision of the company. The approach to craft this kind of strategy is called the big “S” strategy. It also takes about five steps, but the process is intentionally a bit more open-ended and greenfield and can take up to six months. Typically a senior design leader at the company heads up this process. Let’s dive into detailed guidance for each step. Step 1: Preparation
Step 2: Distinct futures
Step 3: PrototypesOnce these distinct futures and the associated key learning goals are verbally articulated, the team should generate prototypes to help with discovery and deeper understanding. Think of these prototypes as concept cars. Concept cars are never commercialized, but they spark inspiration, and there are certain components or technologies that make it into mainstream production down the road. Step 4: ConvergenceUX research should then test these prototypes with a set of carefully selected users to answer the key learning goals previously established. Through this process, a lot of sub-ideas are eliminated, some are modified, and others are combined with each other, and eventually clarity emerges on the winning components that are likely to resonate with users even in the present-day context, which accelerates the company toward the desired future. Step 5: Roadmap/testingThe winning components are then pushed into the active roadmap so that they can be tested live with a broader set of users. And this process could be triggered again depending on a need to explore a potentially new area. Combining the twoThe product roadmap and plan is built through a combination of small “s” (present-forward) and big “S” (future-backward) work, which can run in parallel. This is akin to building a bridge from both sides of a river. Now that we’ve established both parts of Strategy Blocks—small “s” and big “S”—let’s wrap with some practical tips for success. Overcoming challenges and myths...Subscribe to Lenny's Newsletter to unlock the rest.Become a paying subscriber of Lenny's Newsletter to get access to this post and other subscriber-only content. A subscription gets you:
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