What separates products that quietly launch from those that achieve real adoption? In this webinar, Censis Technologies Director of Product Management Susan Isaac explores how early customer buy-in shapes successful product development. Drawing on real-world examples from healthcare and beyond, she shares practical insights on validation versus affirmation, balancing buyer and end-user needs, and using experimentation and beta testing to drive meaningful adoption.
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Show Notes:
- Adoption—not launch—is the real measure of product success. A release email is a milestone; sustained usage is the outcome that matters.
- “Ship and pray” is a fallacy. Releasing without deep customer validation leads to low adoption and reactive firefighting.
- Pricing is rarely the root cause of poor adoption. It is often the easiest explanation, but usually not the real problem.
- A foothold customer is the real, primary end user of your solution—not just any customer segment.
- Not every persona can be your foothold customer. You must narrow down to the specific users whose workflow your solution directly impacts.
- Talking to real customers cannot be replaced by AI-generated insights. Tools can accelerate synthesis, but they cannot substitute firsthand understanding.
- Aggregated market data can mislead roadmap decisions. Just because competitors have a feature does not mean your users need it.
- Solving for the loudest stakeholder often leads to misalignment. Volume of feedback does not equal importance of the problem.
- True validation is different from polite affirmation. Customers saying “this is great” does not mean they will adopt or pay.
- Validation shows up as time commitment. Engaged customers are willing to meet repeatedly and go deep.
- Validation shows up as data sharing. Invested users share workflows, context, and relevant information to help you understand the problem.
- Validation shows up as access. Customers who allow observation of their real environment provide richer insights than virtual conversations alone.
- In B2B, the end user and the economic buyer are often different. Designing for one while ignoring the other creates adoption friction.
- You design for the user but align with the buyer. The value proposition must resonate financially and operationally with decision makers.
- Framing the problem in the customer’s language strengthens product marketing and internal alignment.
- Early experimentation reduces waste. Iterative prototyping and usability testing uncover issues before heavy engineering investment.
- Technical feasibility must be evaluated early. Ignoring feasibility risks can stretch timelines and erode margins.
- Beta products should solve roughly 80% of the core problem. Too little functionality leads to noisy, low-quality feedback.
- Avoid becoming a feature factory. Prioritize features that serve a statistically significant portion of your user base.
- If you build the right solution for the right foothold customer, adoption follows more naturally. When adoption lags despite strong user alignment, the issue likely lies in messaging, positioning, or awareness—not product-market fit.
About the speaker
About the host
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