The Core Tenets of Jobs-to-be-Done Theory

The Core Tenets of Jobs-to-be-Done Theory

A theory, on the other hand, is supported by evidence: it’s a set of principles or tenets formed as an attempt to explain things that have already been substantiated by data. With decades of scrutiny in both academic and practitioner settings, these core tenets of Jobs Theory have emerged as the building blocks of predictable growth.

The Hypothesis

If a product team could know what metrics its customers were going to use to judge its new offering well in advance of product development, it could design the product to address those metrics and predictably deliver a winning solution.

A Job-to-Be-Done is Solution Agnostic

Innovation isn’t about “a faster horse,” it’s about getting a job done better

Tenet 6: A deep understanding of the customer’s job makes marketing more effective and innovation far more predictable

If a team can agree on what a need is, what the customer’s needs are, and which are unmet, they are able to (1) better position and sell more of the company’s existing products, (2) improve existing products and services, (3) create new products & services.

Tenet 8: People seek products and services that enable them to get the entire job done on a single platform

Your product strategy should never change

Tenet 2: Jobs are functional with emotional and social components

Customers want to feel a certain way and be perceived in a certain light by their peers and/or friends and others.

Innovation becomes predictable when “needs” are defined as the metrics customers use to measure success when getting the job done

Define Customer Needs As Constants

A Job-to-be-Done is Stable Over Time

A functional job is stable over time. What changes over time are the products and services that companies offer to help get the job done better.

Success comes from making the “job” the unit of analysis

The job is the thing that is studied, dissected, and understood at a granular level

Jobs-to-be-Done Theory

A theory is a set of tenets that attempts to explain things that have already been substantiated by data

People Buy Products and Services to Get a Job Done

A “job” is not a description of what the customer is doing, the solution they are using, or the steps they are taking to get a job done.

People want products and services that will help them get a job done better and/or more cheaply

Knowing what types of customers exist in your market and in what proportions forms the foundation for a new way to think about growth strategy

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