jobs-to-be-done

Solid

Uncover customer jobs, pains, and gains in a structured JTBD format. Use when clarifying unmet needs, repositioning a product, or improving discovery and messaging.

Code & Development 328 stars 19 forks Updated yesterday MIT

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Skill Content

## Purpose Systematically explore what customers are trying to accomplish (functional, social, emotional jobs), the pains they experience, and the gains they seek. Use this framework to uncover unmet needs, validate product ideas, and ensure your solution addresses real motivations—not just surface-level feature requests. This is not a survey—it's a structured lens for understanding *why* customers "hire" your product and what would make them "fire" it. ## Key Concepts ### The Jobs-to-be-Done Framework Influenced by Clayton Christensen and the Value Proposition Canvas (Osterwalder), JTBD breaks customer needs into three categories: **1. Customer Jobs:** - **Functional jobs:** Tasks customers need to perform (e.g., "send an invoice") - **Social jobs:** How customers want to be perceived (e.g., "look professional to clients") - **Emotional jobs:** Emotional states customers seek or avoid (e.g., "feel confident in my work") **2. Pains:** - **Challenges:** Obstacles customers face - **Costliness:** What's too expensive in time, money, or effort - **Common mistakes:** Errors customers make that could be prevented - **Unresolved problems:** Gaps in current solutions **3. Gains:** - **Expectations:** What would exceed current solutions - **Savings:** Time, money, or effort reductions that delight - **Adoption factors:** What increases likelihood of switching - **Life improvement:** How a solution makes life easier or more enjoyable ### Why This Structure Works - **Separates j...

Details

Author
getcrew44
Repository
getcrew44/crew44
Created
4 weeks ago
Last Updated
yesterday
Language
Go
License
MIT

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