
There’s no time for product failures, yet they still happen
I’m really proud about my latest talk I gave at @nenewtech. So I uploaded it to @speakerdeck. I attempt to draw a connection between how to best make products by distilling the ideals of rising popularity from Lean Startup by @ericries and Behaviour Driven Development by @tastapod.
One should learn, build, and measure a product that answers a problem through behaviour—how users interact with a product based on their known conventions and inference. I attempt to bridge a point that virtual and physical products all have interfaces we interact with by our direct feedback. This feedback is how we interpret how an interface behaves in accordance to our behaviour with it.
After my talk, I talked with some friends in the audience and we got to talking about product failures and how money relates as a huge factor. It costs more money to make better products. I disagreed. There will always be cheap products, but even expensive ones fail. By doing the right things right than the wrong things well, consumers will have better options than cheap and expensive but still shit.
