SlideShare una empresa de Scribd logo
1 de 5
Descargar para leer sin conexión
Google Product Development/Management Process
                Notes taken by Evelyn Rodriguez, http://evelynrodriguez.typepad.com

        From a presentation given on Jan 8, 2003 to Silicon Valley Product Management Association
                                by Google Product Manager Marissa Mayer

Google’s Mission Statement: “Organize the world’s information to make it universally
accessible and useful.”

Formula: Smart people + creative environment + outlet for ideas = innovation

Smart people:
  • High the best
  • Including 50 PhD’s, originated with strong ties to universities and continue strong
       ties to universities (especially Stanford).
  • Also hire range of people with broad experience and non-traditional talents such
       as expert in Italian travel, machine learning, etc.
  • Mostly looking for “enthusiasm and creativity”
  • Very flat organizational structure, not very much hierarchy

Creative Environment:
   • Creative office design. Looks like mix between college campus and playground
       with toys.
   • Called the “GooglePlex”.

Most of this presentation is about “outlet of ideas” and “innovation” part of formula.

Key point stressed several times: User-centered design
User-centered design means building products that people really want and start with
users’ needs and desires for designing products and services.

Cornerstones of Product Development
   1. Build products that people really want
         o Search is #2 after email as most used application on Internet
   2. Generate and capitalize on network effects
   3. Values built into products “don’t be evil”

Process
   1.    Accept ideas from everywhere
   2.    Prioritization – top 100
   3.    Small, agile engineering teams
   4.    Self-organization and visibility
   5.    User-centered design

Accept Ideas From Everywhere

Google Product Development Process                                                                  1
•   Acknowledge that great ideas may come from anyone, anywhere
   •   Have various forums and mediums for idea-collection and participation.
           • Since engineers may be quiet in speaking at meetings, also solicit
              feedback and ideas from
                   i. Collaborative workspaces (on Web – editable pages for ideas and
                      casual conversation) and
                  ii. email.
   •   Employees (called Googlers) are best source for ideas at Google – also some of
       the most intense users of Google with well-formed opinions
   •   Product discussion meeting – like a brainstorming session – every week
           • 6 different ideas per hour average
           • Sometimes they have “themes’ or “categories” for meeting
   •   “We get a lot of our ideas from our users” (including customer support queue)

Prioritization into Top 100 List
   •   Compile all new ideas, currently funded projects and ongoing maintenance efforts
       – anywhere where time and resources are spent or may be spent in future into list
   •   Assign attributes and rank to each item in list
           o How useful will it be to users, will it aid in user retention (decrease churn),
               what is chance for success, does it diversity revenue stream, what is level
               of effort required relative to impact, etc.
           o For each item, rank 1-5 (5=better than 4 and less risk, 4=risky but
               exciting…)
   •   Only 4 and 5’s get any funding and staff to keep the project or start the project
   •   Easier to see priority if you must compare two projects directly - one project
       against another

Small, Agile Engineering Teams
   •   3-person units (like start-ups!)
   •   Unit is a project – they don’t have departments
   •   Unit is co-located (sit next to each other) also with PM
   •   Engineers work on project for 3-4 months, then transition to next project
   •   Very fluid
   •   With 180 engineers, they can work on 60 projects – so they can afford to invest
       on high-risk, high-return projects as well. (They call high-risk projects
       “Googlettes”)
   •   Each project manager works with 9-10 people across units. For example, maybe a
       category such as “Enterprise Infrastructure”
   •   The technical lead in each unit of 3 is responsible for technical excellence of
       project.
   •   Documentation
           o Very sparse, only what is needed in Product Requirements Document
               (PRD)
           o Eric Schmidt: “Late binding decision-making process”


Google Product Development Process                                                        2
o Evolves based on feedback
          o Includes information on general market size, revenue in PRD but believe
            that “if you build something users use, there will be a way to make money”
   • Large Projects
        o Example: Enterprise Product – broken into logical modules, thus 4 units
            (of 3 people) = 12 people
   • Monetization teams
        o Larry Page: “No such thing as a successful failure; if it is useful to people,
            later we can make revenue from it in a logical way.”
        o Focus on providing value to user first.
        o Then create team to execute the “monetization” of most useful
            products/services.
                ! Marissa (speaker) was on team to monetize search
                ! Created AdWords, etc.

Self-organization and Visibility
   •   “Sparrow” Pages
          o Launch calendar
          o Shows each project – when launched, status
   •   Snippets
          o Every Monday sent in by each employee
                 ! Organized by project
                 ! Includes link to employee’s home page
          o Helps with re-use across projects – leveraging what is already being done

User-centered Design
Original minimalist design because founder didn’t really know HTML and did the
simplest design. However, one founder also has Masters degree in human-computer
studies.
        • User studies (1x per week)
        • Focus on quality and ask: What does user really care about?
        • Experimentation
               o Try out on public site and see if users respond well
               o Do statistical analysis on results of use
        • Iteration
               o Make product better over time from feedback
        • Expedient Solutions
               o Better to get it out – “a good (rather than best) solution soon”

User Studies
First User Study:
       • First user study conducted at Stanford University.
       • Offered free pizza to students; marketed with flyers around university – 16
           students came.



Google Product Development Process                                                      3
•   Learned a lot of things about their user’s experience.
       •   Now, recruit through Craig’s List (popular San Fransisco Bay Area, California
           online community site, www.craigslist.com)

Current User Studies:
       • 2 people (they talk to each other more), 1 observer (from Google, does not
          interfere with user’s experience or reactions)
       • “Tell us the parts of the page you see starting from top to bottom and left to
          right.”
              o Found that eyes go to results links first and did not see the rest
                  including advertiser logos, navigation bar, “help”, etc.
       • “Tell us what cached means?”
              o Found too many technical terms that users did not understand.
                  “Cached”, “Boolean search”
              o Better explanations and less assumptions were result.
       • Ask user to find answer to a trivia question using the search engine and
          observe their interaction.
       • They have an in-house user studies lab with a one-way mirror. Software that
          records mouse-clicks.
       • Also, use laptops at bookstores – offer $25 gift certificates for participants in
          study.
       • They test before and after releases.

Quality
       •   Initial spell-checker was low-quality (outsourced); eventually built their own
       •   Learned that “Good quality by itself improves usage”
               o Usage doubled on first day without any changes to user interface
               o Eventually improved user interface “Do you mean…” in distinctive
                    red letters – doubled usage again
               o Larger font doubled usage again
               o Repeated “do you mean” at bottom of screen and doubled usage again

Experimentation
       •   If we have a good idea, try it
       •   Thumbnails of the web page next to results link was failure
               o Trial was Excite@Home users and it was default
               o Did not experiment with internal employees first
               o Both trial and Googlers turned off in preferences
                      • Users said most important to have “information density”
                      • Thumbnails decreased results links “above the fold” (that fit on
                          one screen)
                      • Picture not useful if never visited page before
                      • Learned “any new information must be MORE important than
                          what is lost” – limited screen real estate



Google Product Development Process                                                           4
Iteration
       •    Google News was result of watching engineering email (one employee wrote
            the demo after being frustrated trying to read news after Sept 11 event.
       •    Started as a demo created by one engineer on a weekend
       •    Googlers started to use it to read their news
       •    Then assigned 3 people (one was UI designer) and one PM to work on it
       •    Iteration example
                o Original: all news on one screen
                o Pre-release:
                        ! break into sections with a “google” look and feel
                        ! lots of mock-ups of the layout
                o User interface testing (user studies); Asked “Go to Entertainment
                    Page” but users couldn’t find their way around – poor navigation
                o Next iteration: Didn’t make it to user studies because Googlers hated it
                o Next iteration: Finally got to put something on the public site, but
                    found users not using the navigation bar at all
                o Next iteration: simplified navigation and moved it
       •    They use “test marketing” techniques where they try two styles when they
            can’t decide which is best. Statistical analysis shows which is used more.

Expedient Solutions
   •   Internationalization Example
   •   Originally used a translation company, but not working well; answer came from
       users
   •   Volunteer translators from user community worked on portion of web sites
   •   42,000 volunteer translators signed up (88 languages so far)
   •   How:
           o Created a form for “stings of text” needing translation
           o Quality control
                  ! Confidence ratings for each translator – others vote on how good
                      the translation is
                  ! You can override the current translator by proving your credibility
                      on new strings
                          • New strings are added each week, if your rating is higher,
                              you can start being regular contributor

Conclusion
   •   Use idea gathering and prioritization process that works for your company –
       adjust and adapt to your company
   •   Use a combination and mix techniques – statistical, user studies, etc.
   •   The service has to ultimately provide value to users
   •   Service must be designed FOR users

More Information: Google Labs (engineering demos): http://labs.google.com/



Google Product Development Process                                                       5

Más contenido relacionado

La actualidad más candente

Google Executive Summary
Google Executive SummaryGoogle Executive Summary
Google Executive Summary
Kelsey Gernert
 
BCG MATRIX AND TOWS MATRIX OF GOOGLE
BCG MATRIX AND TOWS MATRIX OF GOOGLEBCG MATRIX AND TOWS MATRIX OF GOOGLE
BCG MATRIX AND TOWS MATRIX OF GOOGLE
Shalu Maria Paul
 
Communication networks at google
Communication networks at googleCommunication networks at google
Communication networks at google
Saurabh Gupta
 

La actualidad más candente (20)

Google Brand Success
Google Brand SuccessGoogle Brand Success
Google Brand Success
 
Google company - A Detailed Analysis
Google company - A Detailed AnalysisGoogle company - A Detailed Analysis
Google company - A Detailed Analysis
 
Strategic Plan on Google
Strategic Plan on GoogleStrategic Plan on Google
Strategic Plan on Google
 
Google swot analysis 2017
Google swot analysis 2017Google swot analysis 2017
Google swot analysis 2017
 
Case Analysis - Google
Case Analysis - GoogleCase Analysis - Google
Case Analysis - Google
 
Google Inc: Company Analysis
Google Inc: Company AnalysisGoogle Inc: Company Analysis
Google Inc: Company Analysis
 
Nike n google
Nike n googleNike n google
Nike n google
 
Case Study Google
Case Study GoogleCase Study Google
Case Study Google
 
Google International Research - London, October 15
Google International Research - London, October 15Google International Research - London, October 15
Google International Research - London, October 15
 
S.W.O.T on Google
S.W.O.T on GoogleS.W.O.T on Google
S.W.O.T on Google
 
Best transaction site of payment gateway for school
Best transaction site of payment gateway for schoolBest transaction site of payment gateway for school
Best transaction site of payment gateway for school
 
Google Executive Summary
Google Executive SummaryGoogle Executive Summary
Google Executive Summary
 
BCG MATRIX AND TOWS MATRIX OF GOOGLE
BCG MATRIX AND TOWS MATRIX OF GOOGLEBCG MATRIX AND TOWS MATRIX OF GOOGLE
BCG MATRIX AND TOWS MATRIX OF GOOGLE
 
Customer Profile for Google Inc.
Customer Profile for Google Inc.Customer Profile for Google Inc.
Customer Profile for Google Inc.
 
Google case study
Google case studyGoogle case study
Google case study
 
Eureka Analytics Seminar Series - Product Management for Data Science Products
Eureka Analytics Seminar Series - Product Management for Data Science ProductsEureka Analytics Seminar Series - Product Management for Data Science Products
Eureka Analytics Seminar Series - Product Management for Data Science Products
 
Presentation nakr google
Presentation  nakr googlePresentation  nakr google
Presentation nakr google
 
Google Business Model
Google Business ModelGoogle Business Model
Google Business Model
 
Communication networks at google
Communication networks at googleCommunication networks at google
Communication networks at google
 
Strategic Management Google Case
Strategic Management Google CaseStrategic Management Google Case
Strategic Management Google Case
 

Similar a Google Product Dev Process

Google Product Development Process
Google Product Development ProcessGoogle Product Development Process
Google Product Development Process
Abhinav Goel
 
Skribb.it Berkeley Final Presentation
Skribb.it Berkeley Final PresentationSkribb.it Berkeley Final Presentation
Skribb.it Berkeley Final Presentation
Stanford University
 
Perfecting User Experience
Perfecting User ExperiencePerfecting User Experience
Perfecting User Experience
Jeremy Duimstra
 

Similar a Google Product Dev Process (20)

Google Product Development Process
Google Product Development ProcessGoogle Product Development Process
Google Product Development Process
 
Social Sourcing as a Collaborative Design Process: Story of GetPaid (Plone Co...
Social Sourcing as a Collaborative Design Process: Story of GetPaid (Plone Co...Social Sourcing as a Collaborative Design Process: Story of GetPaid (Plone Co...
Social Sourcing as a Collaborative Design Process: Story of GetPaid (Plone Co...
 
"Open" includes users - Leverage their input
"Open" includes users - Leverage their input"Open" includes users - Leverage their input
"Open" includes users - Leverage their input
 
Improving your site's usability - what users really want
Improving your site's usability - what users really wantImproving your site's usability - what users really want
Improving your site's usability - what users really want
 
Biz Product Learnings
Biz Product LearningsBiz Product Learnings
Biz Product Learnings
 
Jonathon Rochelle @ FOWA Feb 07
Jonathon Rochelle @ FOWA Feb 07Jonathon Rochelle @ FOWA Feb 07
Jonathon Rochelle @ FOWA Feb 07
 
Introduction To Usability
Introduction To UsabilityIntroduction To Usability
Introduction To Usability
 
Agile product development
Agile product developmentAgile product development
Agile product development
 
Virtual Collaboration
Virtual CollaborationVirtual Collaboration
Virtual Collaboration
 
Skribb.it Berkeley Final Presentation
Skribb.it Berkeley Final PresentationSkribb.it Berkeley Final Presentation
Skribb.it Berkeley Final Presentation
 
Product Culture with Property Finder VP Product
Product Culture with Property Finder VP ProductProduct Culture with Property Finder VP Product
Product Culture with Property Finder VP Product
 
User Experience 101 - A Practical Guide
User Experience 101 - A Practical GuideUser Experience 101 - A Practical Guide
User Experience 101 - A Practical Guide
 
Citrix Labs Rapid Prototyping Workshop
Citrix Labs Rapid Prototyping WorkshopCitrix Labs Rapid Prototyping Workshop
Citrix Labs Rapid Prototyping Workshop
 
UX 101: A quick & dirty introduction to user experience strategy & design
UX 101: A quick & dirty introduction to user experience strategy & designUX 101: A quick & dirty introduction to user experience strategy & design
UX 101: A quick & dirty introduction to user experience strategy & design
 
Top 3 ways to use your UX team - producttank DFW Meetup
Top 3 ways to use your UX team - producttank DFW MeetupTop 3 ways to use your UX team - producttank DFW Meetup
Top 3 ways to use your UX team - producttank DFW Meetup
 
Walk, Don't Run: Incremental Change in Enterprise UX
Walk, Don't Run: Incremental Change in Enterprise UXWalk, Don't Run: Incremental Change in Enterprise UX
Walk, Don't Run: Incremental Change in Enterprise UX
 
Perfecting User Experience
Perfecting User ExperiencePerfecting User Experience
Perfecting User Experience
 
What are the Assumptions About Data Products by Hiya.com Lead PM
What are the Assumptions About Data Products by Hiya.com Lead PMWhat are the Assumptions About Data Products by Hiya.com Lead PM
What are the Assumptions About Data Products by Hiya.com Lead PM
 
Usability Testing by Rajdeep Gupta, Misys
Usability Testing by Rajdeep Gupta, MisysUsability Testing by Rajdeep Gupta, Misys
Usability Testing by Rajdeep Gupta, Misys
 
Selling UX in Your Organization - Stir Trek 2012
Selling UX in Your Organization - Stir Trek 2012Selling UX in Your Organization - Stir Trek 2012
Selling UX in Your Organization - Stir Trek 2012
 

Más de Nont Banditwong

Más de Nont Banditwong (7)

MySQL Multi-Master Replication Using Tungsten Replicator 2.0.5
MySQL Multi-Master Replication Using Tungsten Replicator 2.0.5MySQL Multi-Master Replication Using Tungsten Replicator 2.0.5
MySQL Multi-Master Replication Using Tungsten Replicator 2.0.5
 
Regex cheatsheet
Regex cheatsheetRegex cheatsheet
Regex cheatsheet
 
Regular expressions-cheat-sheet-v2
Regular expressions-cheat-sheet-v2Regular expressions-cheat-sheet-v2
Regular expressions-cheat-sheet-v2
 
การประมูลหมายเลขทะเบียนรถ
การประมูลหมายเลขทะเบียนรถการประมูลหมายเลขทะเบียนรถ
การประมูลหมายเลขทะเบียนรถ
 
Svn refcard
Svn refcardSvn refcard
Svn refcard
 
Svn workflow
Svn workflowSvn workflow
Svn workflow
 
The Function Pointer Tutorials
The Function Pointer TutorialsThe Function Pointer Tutorials
The Function Pointer Tutorials
 

Último

+971581248768>> SAFE AND ORIGINAL ABORTION PILLS FOR SALE IN DUBAI AND ABUDHA...
+971581248768>> SAFE AND ORIGINAL ABORTION PILLS FOR SALE IN DUBAI AND ABUDHA...+971581248768>> SAFE AND ORIGINAL ABORTION PILLS FOR SALE IN DUBAI AND ABUDHA...
+971581248768>> SAFE AND ORIGINAL ABORTION PILLS FOR SALE IN DUBAI AND ABUDHA...
?#DUbAI#??##{{(☎️+971_581248768%)**%*]'#abortion pills for sale in dubai@
 
Modular Monolith - a Practical Alternative to Microservices @ Devoxx UK 2024
Modular Monolith - a Practical Alternative to Microservices @ Devoxx UK 2024Modular Monolith - a Practical Alternative to Microservices @ Devoxx UK 2024
Modular Monolith - a Practical Alternative to Microservices @ Devoxx UK 2024
Victor Rentea
 
Architecting Cloud Native Applications
Architecting Cloud Native ApplicationsArchitecting Cloud Native Applications
Architecting Cloud Native Applications
WSO2
 

Último (20)

ProductAnonymous-April2024-WinProductDiscovery-MelissaKlemke
ProductAnonymous-April2024-WinProductDiscovery-MelissaKlemkeProductAnonymous-April2024-WinProductDiscovery-MelissaKlemke
ProductAnonymous-April2024-WinProductDiscovery-MelissaKlemke
 
MS Copilot expands with MS Graph connectors
MS Copilot expands with MS Graph connectorsMS Copilot expands with MS Graph connectors
MS Copilot expands with MS Graph connectors
 
Ransomware_Q4_2023. The report. [EN].pdf
Ransomware_Q4_2023. The report. [EN].pdfRansomware_Q4_2023. The report. [EN].pdf
Ransomware_Q4_2023. The report. [EN].pdf
 
+971581248768>> SAFE AND ORIGINAL ABORTION PILLS FOR SALE IN DUBAI AND ABUDHA...
+971581248768>> SAFE AND ORIGINAL ABORTION PILLS FOR SALE IN DUBAI AND ABUDHA...+971581248768>> SAFE AND ORIGINAL ABORTION PILLS FOR SALE IN DUBAI AND ABUDHA...
+971581248768>> SAFE AND ORIGINAL ABORTION PILLS FOR SALE IN DUBAI AND ABUDHA...
 
DEV meet-up UiPath Document Understanding May 7 2024 Amsterdam
DEV meet-up UiPath Document Understanding May 7 2024 AmsterdamDEV meet-up UiPath Document Understanding May 7 2024 Amsterdam
DEV meet-up UiPath Document Understanding May 7 2024 Amsterdam
 
Modular Monolith - a Practical Alternative to Microservices @ Devoxx UK 2024
Modular Monolith - a Practical Alternative to Microservices @ Devoxx UK 2024Modular Monolith - a Practical Alternative to Microservices @ Devoxx UK 2024
Modular Monolith - a Practical Alternative to Microservices @ Devoxx UK 2024
 
[BuildWithAI] Introduction to Gemini.pdf
[BuildWithAI] Introduction to Gemini.pdf[BuildWithAI] Introduction to Gemini.pdf
[BuildWithAI] Introduction to Gemini.pdf
 
TrustArc Webinar - Unlock the Power of AI-Driven Data Discovery
TrustArc Webinar - Unlock the Power of AI-Driven Data DiscoveryTrustArc Webinar - Unlock the Power of AI-Driven Data Discovery
TrustArc Webinar - Unlock the Power of AI-Driven Data Discovery
 
Architecting Cloud Native Applications
Architecting Cloud Native ApplicationsArchitecting Cloud Native Applications
Architecting Cloud Native Applications
 
Emergent Methods: Multi-lingual narrative tracking in the news - real-time ex...
Emergent Methods: Multi-lingual narrative tracking in the news - real-time ex...Emergent Methods: Multi-lingual narrative tracking in the news - real-time ex...
Emergent Methods: Multi-lingual narrative tracking in the news - real-time ex...
 
2024: Domino Containers - The Next Step. News from the Domino Container commu...
2024: Domino Containers - The Next Step. News from the Domino Container commu...2024: Domino Containers - The Next Step. News from the Domino Container commu...
2024: Domino Containers - The Next Step. News from the Domino Container commu...
 
Apidays New York 2024 - The Good, the Bad and the Governed by David O'Neill, ...
Apidays New York 2024 - The Good, the Bad and the Governed by David O'Neill, ...Apidays New York 2024 - The Good, the Bad and the Governed by David O'Neill, ...
Apidays New York 2024 - The Good, the Bad and the Governed by David O'Neill, ...
 
Exploring the Future Potential of AI-Enabled Smartphone Processors
Exploring the Future Potential of AI-Enabled Smartphone ProcessorsExploring the Future Potential of AI-Enabled Smartphone Processors
Exploring the Future Potential of AI-Enabled Smartphone Processors
 
Artificial Intelligence Chap.5 : Uncertainty
Artificial Intelligence Chap.5 : UncertaintyArtificial Intelligence Chap.5 : Uncertainty
Artificial Intelligence Chap.5 : Uncertainty
 
Boost Fertility New Invention Ups Success Rates.pdf
Boost Fertility New Invention Ups Success Rates.pdfBoost Fertility New Invention Ups Success Rates.pdf
Boost Fertility New Invention Ups Success Rates.pdf
 
Strategies for Landing an Oracle DBA Job as a Fresher
Strategies for Landing an Oracle DBA Job as a FresherStrategies for Landing an Oracle DBA Job as a Fresher
Strategies for Landing an Oracle DBA Job as a Fresher
 
Rising Above_ Dubai Floods and the Fortitude of Dubai International Airport.pdf
Rising Above_ Dubai Floods and the Fortitude of Dubai International Airport.pdfRising Above_ Dubai Floods and the Fortitude of Dubai International Airport.pdf
Rising Above_ Dubai Floods and the Fortitude of Dubai International Airport.pdf
 
Apidays New York 2024 - Passkeys: Developing APIs to enable passwordless auth...
Apidays New York 2024 - Passkeys: Developing APIs to enable passwordless auth...Apidays New York 2024 - Passkeys: Developing APIs to enable passwordless auth...
Apidays New York 2024 - Passkeys: Developing APIs to enable passwordless auth...
 
presentation ICT roal in 21st century education
presentation ICT roal in 21st century educationpresentation ICT roal in 21st century education
presentation ICT roal in 21st century education
 
Polkadot JAM Slides - Token2049 - By Dr. Gavin Wood
Polkadot JAM Slides - Token2049 - By Dr. Gavin WoodPolkadot JAM Slides - Token2049 - By Dr. Gavin Wood
Polkadot JAM Slides - Token2049 - By Dr. Gavin Wood
 

Google Product Dev Process

  • 1. Google Product Development/Management Process Notes taken by Evelyn Rodriguez, http://evelynrodriguez.typepad.com From a presentation given on Jan 8, 2003 to Silicon Valley Product Management Association by Google Product Manager Marissa Mayer Google’s Mission Statement: “Organize the world’s information to make it universally accessible and useful.” Formula: Smart people + creative environment + outlet for ideas = innovation Smart people: • High the best • Including 50 PhD’s, originated with strong ties to universities and continue strong ties to universities (especially Stanford). • Also hire range of people with broad experience and non-traditional talents such as expert in Italian travel, machine learning, etc. • Mostly looking for “enthusiasm and creativity” • Very flat organizational structure, not very much hierarchy Creative Environment: • Creative office design. Looks like mix between college campus and playground with toys. • Called the “GooglePlex”. Most of this presentation is about “outlet of ideas” and “innovation” part of formula. Key point stressed several times: User-centered design User-centered design means building products that people really want and start with users’ needs and desires for designing products and services. Cornerstones of Product Development 1. Build products that people really want o Search is #2 after email as most used application on Internet 2. Generate and capitalize on network effects 3. Values built into products “don’t be evil” Process 1. Accept ideas from everywhere 2. Prioritization – top 100 3. Small, agile engineering teams 4. Self-organization and visibility 5. User-centered design Accept Ideas From Everywhere Google Product Development Process 1
  • 2. Acknowledge that great ideas may come from anyone, anywhere • Have various forums and mediums for idea-collection and participation. • Since engineers may be quiet in speaking at meetings, also solicit feedback and ideas from i. Collaborative workspaces (on Web – editable pages for ideas and casual conversation) and ii. email. • Employees (called Googlers) are best source for ideas at Google – also some of the most intense users of Google with well-formed opinions • Product discussion meeting – like a brainstorming session – every week • 6 different ideas per hour average • Sometimes they have “themes’ or “categories” for meeting • “We get a lot of our ideas from our users” (including customer support queue) Prioritization into Top 100 List • Compile all new ideas, currently funded projects and ongoing maintenance efforts – anywhere where time and resources are spent or may be spent in future into list • Assign attributes and rank to each item in list o How useful will it be to users, will it aid in user retention (decrease churn), what is chance for success, does it diversity revenue stream, what is level of effort required relative to impact, etc. o For each item, rank 1-5 (5=better than 4 and less risk, 4=risky but exciting…) • Only 4 and 5’s get any funding and staff to keep the project or start the project • Easier to see priority if you must compare two projects directly - one project against another Small, Agile Engineering Teams • 3-person units (like start-ups!) • Unit is a project – they don’t have departments • Unit is co-located (sit next to each other) also with PM • Engineers work on project for 3-4 months, then transition to next project • Very fluid • With 180 engineers, they can work on 60 projects – so they can afford to invest on high-risk, high-return projects as well. (They call high-risk projects “Googlettes”) • Each project manager works with 9-10 people across units. For example, maybe a category such as “Enterprise Infrastructure” • The technical lead in each unit of 3 is responsible for technical excellence of project. • Documentation o Very sparse, only what is needed in Product Requirements Document (PRD) o Eric Schmidt: “Late binding decision-making process” Google Product Development Process 2
  • 3. o Evolves based on feedback o Includes information on general market size, revenue in PRD but believe that “if you build something users use, there will be a way to make money” • Large Projects o Example: Enterprise Product – broken into logical modules, thus 4 units (of 3 people) = 12 people • Monetization teams o Larry Page: “No such thing as a successful failure; if it is useful to people, later we can make revenue from it in a logical way.” o Focus on providing value to user first. o Then create team to execute the “monetization” of most useful products/services. ! Marissa (speaker) was on team to monetize search ! Created AdWords, etc. Self-organization and Visibility • “Sparrow” Pages o Launch calendar o Shows each project – when launched, status • Snippets o Every Monday sent in by each employee ! Organized by project ! Includes link to employee’s home page o Helps with re-use across projects – leveraging what is already being done User-centered Design Original minimalist design because founder didn’t really know HTML and did the simplest design. However, one founder also has Masters degree in human-computer studies. • User studies (1x per week) • Focus on quality and ask: What does user really care about? • Experimentation o Try out on public site and see if users respond well o Do statistical analysis on results of use • Iteration o Make product better over time from feedback • Expedient Solutions o Better to get it out – “a good (rather than best) solution soon” User Studies First User Study: • First user study conducted at Stanford University. • Offered free pizza to students; marketed with flyers around university – 16 students came. Google Product Development Process 3
  • 4. Learned a lot of things about their user’s experience. • Now, recruit through Craig’s List (popular San Fransisco Bay Area, California online community site, www.craigslist.com) Current User Studies: • 2 people (they talk to each other more), 1 observer (from Google, does not interfere with user’s experience or reactions) • “Tell us the parts of the page you see starting from top to bottom and left to right.” o Found that eyes go to results links first and did not see the rest including advertiser logos, navigation bar, “help”, etc. • “Tell us what cached means?” o Found too many technical terms that users did not understand. “Cached”, “Boolean search” o Better explanations and less assumptions were result. • Ask user to find answer to a trivia question using the search engine and observe their interaction. • They have an in-house user studies lab with a one-way mirror. Software that records mouse-clicks. • Also, use laptops at bookstores – offer $25 gift certificates for participants in study. • They test before and after releases. Quality • Initial spell-checker was low-quality (outsourced); eventually built their own • Learned that “Good quality by itself improves usage” o Usage doubled on first day without any changes to user interface o Eventually improved user interface “Do you mean…” in distinctive red letters – doubled usage again o Larger font doubled usage again o Repeated “do you mean” at bottom of screen and doubled usage again Experimentation • If we have a good idea, try it • Thumbnails of the web page next to results link was failure o Trial was Excite@Home users and it was default o Did not experiment with internal employees first o Both trial and Googlers turned off in preferences • Users said most important to have “information density” • Thumbnails decreased results links “above the fold” (that fit on one screen) • Picture not useful if never visited page before • Learned “any new information must be MORE important than what is lost” – limited screen real estate Google Product Development Process 4
  • 5. Iteration • Google News was result of watching engineering email (one employee wrote the demo after being frustrated trying to read news after Sept 11 event. • Started as a demo created by one engineer on a weekend • Googlers started to use it to read their news • Then assigned 3 people (one was UI designer) and one PM to work on it • Iteration example o Original: all news on one screen o Pre-release: ! break into sections with a “google” look and feel ! lots of mock-ups of the layout o User interface testing (user studies); Asked “Go to Entertainment Page” but users couldn’t find their way around – poor navigation o Next iteration: Didn’t make it to user studies because Googlers hated it o Next iteration: Finally got to put something on the public site, but found users not using the navigation bar at all o Next iteration: simplified navigation and moved it • They use “test marketing” techniques where they try two styles when they can’t decide which is best. Statistical analysis shows which is used more. Expedient Solutions • Internationalization Example • Originally used a translation company, but not working well; answer came from users • Volunteer translators from user community worked on portion of web sites • 42,000 volunteer translators signed up (88 languages so far) • How: o Created a form for “stings of text” needing translation o Quality control ! Confidence ratings for each translator – others vote on how good the translation is ! You can override the current translator by proving your credibility on new strings • New strings are added each week, if your rating is higher, you can start being regular contributor Conclusion • Use idea gathering and prioritization process that works for your company – adjust and adapt to your company • Use a combination and mix techniques – statistical, user studies, etc. • The service has to ultimately provide value to users • Service must be designed FOR users More Information: Google Labs (engineering demos): http://labs.google.com/ Google Product Development Process 5