12 KiB
Lesson 7: Workshop 5 - Feature Impact
Score Features by Strategic Impact
Overview
Workshop 5 is where strategy becomes actionable roadmap. You'll systematically score your feature ideas against the prioritized psychological drivers from Workshop 4, creating a data-driven feature prioritization.
Duration: 20-30 minutes
Format: Conversational with Saga
Output: Scored and ranked feature list
What You'll Do
1. List Features
Brainstorm all potential features:
- Ideas from Product Brief
- Stakeholder requests
- Competitive features
- User feedback
- Team suggestions
Aim for: 10-20 features to evaluate
2. Score Each Feature
Rate against top 5-7 prioritized drivers:
- How well does this feature address each driver?
- Use 0-3 scale for each driver
- Be honest (don't inflate scores)
Scoring scale:
- 3 = Directly addresses this driver (core solution)
- 2 = Significantly helps with this driver
- 1 = Somewhat related to this driver
- 0 = Doesn't address this driver
3. Calculate Total Scores
Sum scores across all drivers:
- Add up the scores for each feature
- Higher total = higher strategic impact
- This becomes your prioritization data
4. Rank and Create Roadmap
Sort features by total score:
- Highest scores = Phase 1 (highest impact)
- High scores = Phase 2
- Medium scores = Phase 3
- Low scores = Backlog or cut
Key Questions Saga Asks
Listing Features
- "What features are you considering for this product?"
- "What ideas came up in your Product Brief?"
- "What have stakeholders requested?"
- "What do competitors offer that you're considering?"
- "Are there any features you're unsure about?"
Scoring Each Feature
- "How well does [feature] address [top driver]?"
- "Does this feature create gain or reduce pain for this persona?"
- "On a scale of 0-3, how much impact does this have on [driver]?"
- "Why that score? What specifically does it address?"
- "Is this a 2 or a 3? What's the difference?"
Validation
- "Are there features that would score higher that we haven't listed?"
- "Could we modify any features to increase their impact?"
- "Do these scores match your intuition? If not, why?"
- "Which features are you surprised scored high or low?"
Generic Example: Scoring Matrix
Context
Top 5 Prioritized Drivers (Remote Team Leads):
- Fear of team burnout without noticing (NEGATIVE)
- Want to demonstrate effective leadership (POSITIVE)
- Fear of losing top performers (NEGATIVE)
- Want to build strong team culture (POSITIVE)
- Fear of missed deadlines (NEGATIVE)
Features to Score
| Feature | Burnout Fear | Leadership | Retention | Culture | Deadlines | Total |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Daily team pulse check | 3 | 2 | 2 | 1 | 1 | 9 |
| Team workload dashboard | 3 | 2 | 2 | 0 | 2 | 9 |
| Recognition system | 1 | 1 | 2 | 3 | 0 | 7 |
| 1-on-1 scheduling assistant | 2 | 2 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 6 |
| Meeting summaries | 0 | 1 | 0 | 1 | 2 | 4 |
| Async video updates | 1 | 1 | 0 | 2 | 0 | 4 |
| Team chat | 0 | 0 | 1 | 2 | 0 | 3 |
Detailed Scoring Example
Feature: Daily Team Pulse Check
Against "Fear of team burnout without noticing" (Score: 3)
- Directly addresses the fear
- Provides daily visibility into team health
- Early warning system for burnout indicators
- Core solution to the problem
Against "Want to demonstrate effective leadership" (Score: 2)
- Provides data to show proactive management
- Enables evidence-based leadership decisions
- Significantly helps but not the primary purpose
Against "Fear of losing top performers" (Score: 2)
- Early warning helps prevent burnout-driven turnover
- Identifies at-risk team members
- Significantly helps with retention
Against "Want to build strong team culture" (Score: 1)
- Shows you care about team wellbeing
- Somewhat related but not primary benefit
Against "Fear of missed deadlines" (Score: 1)
- Can identify capacity issues early
- Somewhat helps but not main purpose
Total: 9 points (Highest strategic impact)
Feature: Team Chat
Against "Fear of team burnout" (Score: 0)
- Doesn't address burnout visibility
- No impact on this driver
Against "Want to demonstrate leadership" (Score: 0)
- Doesn't provide leadership insights
- No impact on this driver
Against "Fear of losing performers" (Score: 1)
- Helps with connection (minor retention factor)
- Somewhat related
Against "Want to build team culture" (Score: 2)
- Enables team connection
- Significantly helps with culture
Against "Fear of missed deadlines" (Score: 0)
- Doesn't address deadline management
- No impact on this driver
Total: 3 points (Low strategic impact for this persona)
Prioritized Roadmap
Based on scores, create phases:
Phase 1: Highest Impact (8-10 points)
- Daily team pulse check (9)
- Team workload dashboard (9)
Why first: Directly address top fears, highest strategic value
Phase 2: High Impact (6-7 points)
- Recognition system (7)
- 1-on-1 scheduling assistant (6)
Why second: Good strategic value, support top priorities
Phase 3: Medium Impact (4-5 points)
- Meeting summaries (4)
- Async video updates (4)
Why third: Some value but lower priority
Backlog: Low Impact (0-3 points)
- Team chat (3)
Why backlog: Doesn't address top strategic drivers for this persona
Why This Works
It's Strategic
Every score connects to:
- A prioritized psychological driver
- A prioritized target group
- A business goal
Not arbitrary - traceable to strategy
It's Objective
Traditional approach: "I think Feature A is more important"
Feature Impact approach: "Feature A scores 9, Feature B scores 4"
Data beats opinions
It's Defensible
When stakeholders ask "Why aren't we building X?"
You can show:
- Here's our Trigger Map
- Here are our top prioritized drivers
- Here's how features score against them
- Feature X scores lower than our current roadmap
Strategic reasoning, not politics
It's Flexible
When priorities change:
- Update driver rankings
- Re-score features
- New roadmap emerges automatically
Strategy drives features, not the reverse
Scoring Guidelines
Be Honest
Don't:
- Inflate scores to justify pet features
- Score based on what you want to build
- Let politics influence scoring
Do:
- Score based on actual impact
- Accept that some features score low
- Challenge your own assumptions
Be Specific
When scoring, ask:
- "How SPECIFICALLY does this address the driver?"
- "What about this feature reduces that pain?"
- "What evidence supports this score?"
Use the Full Scale
0-3 scale exists for a reason:
- 0 is okay - not everything addresses everything
- 3 should be rare - only direct solutions
- 1-2 is where most scores land
Consider Both Positive and Negative
Features can address:
- Negative drivers (reduce pain, prevent fears)
- Positive drivers (enable goals, create gains)
- Both (most powerful features)
Common Patterns
Pattern 1: High Scores Across Multiple Drivers
What it means: High-leverage feature addressing multiple needs
Example: Daily pulse check scores high on burnout fear, leadership goals, retention fear
Action: Prioritize - strategically valuable
Pattern 2: High Score on Top Driver Only
What it means: Laser-focused solution for most important need
Example: Workload balancing scores 3 on burnout fear, low on others
Action: Still high priority if that driver is #1
Pattern 3: Moderate Scores Across Many
What it means: Nice-to-have that helps a bit with everything
Example: Team chat scores 1-2 on multiple drivers
Action: Lower priority - not solving urgent problems
Pattern 4: Low Scores Everywhere
What it means: Feature doesn't connect to strategy
Example: Fancy animations score 0-1 across all drivers
Action: Cut it or deprioritize significantly
Beyond the Numbers
The Conversation Matters
Questions that emerge:
- "Why doesn't this feature score higher?"
- "Could we modify it to address more drivers?"
- "Are we missing a feature that would score higher?"
- "Do these scores match our intuition?"
Insights from discussion:
- Features can be refined to increase impact
- Missing features can be identified
- Assumptions can be challenged
- Strategy can be sharpened
Combining with Other Factors
Feature Impact = Strategic value
Also consider:
- Feasibility: How hard to build?
- Dependencies: What's required first?
- Market timing: Competitive urgency?
- Resources: Do we have capacity?
Combined formula:
Priority = (Strategic Impact × Feasibility) + Urgency Bonus
What You Get from Workshop 5
✅ Scored feature list - Quantified strategic impact
✅ Ranked roadmap - Clear prioritization
✅ Strategic justification - Defensible decisions
✅ Data-driven priorities - Not opinions
✅ Traceable reasoning - Feature → Driver → Group → Goal
Common Mistakes to Avoid
Mistake 1: Inflating Scores
Problem: Scoring pet features higher than deserved
Why it fails: Undermines the whole system
Fix: Be brutally honest, challenge yourself
Mistake 2: Scoring Too Many Features
Problem: Trying to score 50+ features
Why it fails: Takes too long, loses focus
Fix: Start with 10-20 most viable features
Mistake 3: Ignoring Low Scores
Problem: "But we still need to build it"
Why it fails: Wastes resources on low-impact features
Fix: Accept that some features should be cut
Mistake 4: Not Re-Scoring
Problem: Never updating scores as you learn
Why it fails: Roadmap becomes stale
Fix: Re-score quarterly or when strategy shifts
Mistake 5: Forgetting Feasibility
Problem: Prioritizing impossible features
Why it fails: Can't actually execute
Fix: Combine strategic score with feasibility
Using the Scored Feature List
For Sprint Planning
Each sprint:
- Reference the scored list
- Focus on highest-impact features
- Validate against Trigger Map
- Make trade-offs based on strategy
For Stakeholder Communication
When presenting:
- Show the Trigger Map
- Show the scoring matrix
- Show the prioritized list
- Explain the strategic reasoning
Stakeholders appreciate:
- Clear methodology
- Traceable decisions
- Strategic foundation
- Data-driven approach
For Design Decisions
During design:
- Reference the scores
- Focus on high-impact features first
- Ensure design addresses the drivers
- Validate against scoring
Example: "We're designing the pulse check (score: 9). It needs to address burnout fear, so let's include early warning indicators and actionable suggestions."
The Complete Chain
Now you have the full Trigger Mapping system:
Workshop 1: Business Goals (Vision + Objectives)
↓
Workshop 2: Target Groups (3-5 prioritized personas)
↓
Workshop 3: Driving Forces (positive + negative for each)
↓
Workshop 4: Prioritization (ranked groups and drivers)
↓
Workshop 5: Feature Impact (scored feature list)
↓
Strategic Roadmap (data-driven priorities)
Every feature traces back to:
- A psychological driver
- A target group
- A business goal
No orphaned features. No guesswork. Strategic clarity.
What's Next
You're ready to create your own Trigger Map. The tutorial walks through all 5 workshops step by step with Saga, and the next lessons cover how to create and use the visual Trigger Map.
Key Takeaways
✅ Systematic scoring - Features rated 0-3 against prioritized drivers
✅ Data-driven roadmap - Total scores determine priorities
✅ Strategically defensible - Every decision traces to strategy
✅ Flexible and updateable - Re-score when strategy shifts
✅ Beyond numbers - The conversation reveals insights
✅ Complete traceability - Feature → Driver → Group → Goal
← Back to Lesson 7 | Next: Lesson 9 - Positive & Negative Drivers →
Part of Module 05: Trigger Mapping