11 KiB
Module 06: Trigger Mapping
Lesson 10: The Visual Trigger Map
Your One-Page Strategic Document
What Is the Trigger Map?
The Trigger Map is a visual diagram that shows the strategic connections between:
- Business Goals (center) - What you need to achieve
- Target Groups (radiating out) - Who can help you achieve it
- Usage Goals (connected to each group) - What drives their behavior
It's a one-page strategy document that everyone can understand.
Why Visual Matters
The Problem with Text Documents
Traditional strategy documents:
- 20+ pages of text
- Nobody reads them completely
- Hard to see connections
- Difficult to reference quickly
- Become outdated and ignored
The Power of Visual
A Trigger Map:
- ✅ One page, scannable in 30 seconds
- ✅ Shows strategic connections visually
- ✅ Easy to reference during design
- ✅ Stakeholders understand immediately
- ✅ Stays relevant as features evolve
Visual = Accessible = Actually Used
The Structure
The Trigger Map flows horizontally from left to right in four layers:
Layer 1: Business Goals (Left)
What it shows:
- Vision statement(s) - inspirational direction
- 3-5 strategic objectives - measurable targets
- Multiple goals can feed into the product
Visual cues:
- Blue boxes on the left
- Clear hierarchy of goals
- All connect to the product/solution
Layer 2: Product/Solution (Center)
What it shows:
- Product name
- Brief description of what it does
- Central hub of the map
Why it's central:
- Connects business goals to users
- Shows what you're building
- Everything flows through here
Layer 3: Target Groups (Middle-Right)
What it shows:
- 3-5 prioritized personas
- Priority indicators (👥 primary, 👤 secondary)
- Connected from the product
Visual cues:
- Orange boxes
- Emoji indicators show priority
- Lines connect from product to each group
Layer 4: Usage Goals (Right)
What it shows:
- Positive drivers (✅ green) - What they want to achieve
- Negative drivers (❌ red) - What they want to avoid
- Separated into distinct boxes per target group
Visual organization:
- Green boxes for positive drivers
- Red boxes for negative drivers
- Each target group has both types
- Top drivers emphasized
Generic Example Structure
GOALS PRODUCT TARGET GROUPS DRIVERS
───────────────────── ─────────────────── ─────────────────── ────────────────────
[BUSINESS GOAL 1] [PRODUCT/ [👥 PRIMARY [✅ POSITIVE]
Vision Statement 1 ──→ SOLUTION ──────→ TARGET GROUP] ───→ • Positive Goal 1
Strategic Obj 1-3 Name & Brief profile • Positive Goal 2
Description │
[BUSINESS GOAL 2] │ [❌ NEGATIVE]
Vision Statement 2 ──→ └─────────────→ • Negative Goal 1
Strategic Obj 1-3 • Negative Goal 2
[👤 SECONDARY [✅ POSITIVE]
────→ TARGET GROUP] ─────→ • Positive Goal 1
Brief profile • Positive Goal 2
│
│ [❌ NEGATIVE]
└─────────────→ • Negative Goal 1
• Negative Goal 2
How to Read the Map
Following the Strategic Chain
Start at center: "We want to achieve [business goal]"
Move to groups: "[Target group] can help us achieve this"
Look at drivers: "They're motivated by [positive drivers] and avoiding [negative drivers]"
Design implication: "So we should build features that address their top drivers"
Generic Example Walkthrough
Center: "Achieve 10,000 active users by Q4"
Group 1: "Remote team leads" (Priority #1)
Top positive driver: "Want to demonstrate effective leadership"
Top negative driver: "Fear team burnout without noticing"
Design insight: "Build features that help leaders monitor team health and take action - this serves both their drivers AND our user growth goal"
What Makes a Good Trigger Map
Clarity
Good:
- Clear hierarchy (what's most important)
- Specific drivers (not generic wants)
- Visual connections obvious
- Scannable in under a minute
Bad:
- Everything seems equal priority
- Vague statements
- Cluttered with too much detail
- Requires explanation to understand
Actionability
Good:
- Designers can reference it for decisions
- Clear which drivers to address first
- Obvious connections to features
- Guides prioritization
Bad:
- Too abstract to guide design
- No clear priorities
- Doesn't connect to actual features
- Purely theoretical
Longevity
Good:
- Focuses on strategy, not features
- Stays relevant as product evolves
- Updated only when strategy changes
- Long-term reference document
Bad:
- Includes specific features (becomes outdated)
- Needs constant updating
- Tied to current implementation
- Becomes obsolete quickly
How Teams Use the Trigger Map
Designers
Use it to:
- Guide every design decision
- Validate feature ideas
- Prioritize design work
- Explain design rationale
Example: "Should we add this feature? Let me check the Trigger Map... Yes, it addresses the top negative driver for our #1 target group."
Developers
Use it to:
- Understand the "why" behind features
- Make implementation trade-offs
- Suggest technical alternatives
- Stay aligned with strategy
Example: "This technical approach would be faster but wouldn't address the key driver. Let's find a solution that serves the strategy."
Product Managers
Use it to:
- Prioritize roadmap
- Evaluate feature requests
- Communicate strategy
- Make scope decisions
Example: "This stakeholder request doesn't connect to any of our top drivers. Let's deprioritize it."
Stakeholders
Use it to:
- Understand strategic direction
- See how decisions connect to goals
- Provide informed feedback
- Trust the process
Example: "I can see how this feature addresses the fear of [negative driver] for our top group. That makes sense."
Creating Your Map
Tools
Simple options:
- Pen and paper (sketch it first)
- Whiteboard (team workshops)
- Miro or FigJam (digital collaboration)
- Markdown with indentation (text-based)
What matters:
- Visual hierarchy is clear
- Connections are obvious
- Easy to reference
- Team can access it
Process
During Workshop 2-4:
- Saga helps you build it iteratively
- Start with goals
- Add groups
- Add drivers
- Refine and prioritize
After workshops:
- Create clean visual version
- Share with team
- Post where everyone can see
- Reference in all design discussions
Keeping It Current
When to Update
Update when:
- ✅ Business goals change significantly
- ✅ New user research reveals different drivers
- ✅ Strategic priorities shift
- ✅ New target group becomes important
Don't update when:
- ❌ Features change (map is strategy, not features)
- ❌ Minor tweaks to objectives
- ❌ Tactical decisions
- ❌ Short-term experiments
Living Document Approach
The map should:
- Be referenced weekly in design discussions
- Be updated quarterly (or when strategy shifts)
- Be visible to entire team
- Be the source of truth for strategic decisions
It should NOT:
- Be created once and forgotten
- Be updated constantly
- Include implementation details
- Replace other documentation
The Power of One Page
Why One Page Matters
Cognitive load:
- Humans can't hold complex strategy in working memory
- One page = graspable at a glance
- Visual connections = easier to remember
Accessibility:
- Everyone can understand it
- No special training needed
- Quick reference during meetings
- Easy to share
Alignment:
- Entire team sees same picture
- Reduces misunderstandings
- Creates shared language
- Builds strategic consensus
Common Mistakes
Mistake 1: Too Much Detail
Problem: Map becomes cluttered and unusable
Solution: Keep it strategic - details go in supporting docs
Mistake 2: Including Features
Problem: Map becomes outdated as features change
Solution: Features are scored separately (Workshop 5)
Mistake 3: No Visual Hierarchy
Problem: Everything seems equally important
Solution: Use size, color, position to show priority
Mistake 4: Creating It Once and Forgetting
Problem: Map doesn't guide actual decisions
Solution: Reference it constantly, update when strategy shifts
Mistake 5: Making It Too Pretty
Problem: Spending hours on design instead of strategy
Solution: Clarity > beauty. Sketch is fine.
The Strategic Conversation
The real value isn't the map itself - it's the strategic conversation that creates it.
The map is:
- A record of strategic thinking
- A tool for alignment
- A guide for decisions
- A living reference
The conversation is:
- Where insights emerge
- Where assumptions are challenged
- Where priorities become clear
- Where strategy is forged
Both matter. The map captures the conversation so you don't lose it.
What You'll Learn Next
The final lesson covers Feature Impact Scoring - how to systematically evaluate and rank features based on your Trigger Map. This is where strategy becomes actionable roadmap.
Key Takeaways
✅ One-page visual document - Scannable, accessible, actually used
✅ Shows strategic connections - Goals → Groups → Drivers
✅ Guides all design decisions - Reference it constantly
✅ Stays relevant - Focuses on strategy, not features
✅ Creates team alignment - Everyone sees same strategic picture
✅ Living document - Update when strategy shifts, not when features change
Reflection Questions
- How would having a one-page strategy map change your design process?
- What strategic decisions could you make faster with this reference?
- How would this help align your team around priorities?
← Back to Module Overview | ← Back to Lesson 9 | Next: Lesson 11 - Feature Impact Scoring →
Part of Module 06: Trigger Mapping