241 lines
6.6 KiB
Markdown
241 lines
6.6 KiB
Markdown
# Module 06: Trigger Mapping
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## Lesson 1: The Missing Link
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**Why Product Brief Alone Isn't Enough**
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---
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## The Problem
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You've created a brilliant Product Brief. You know:
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- **WHAT** you're building (vision, positioning)
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- **WHO** it's for (target users)
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- **WHY** it matters (business goals)
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- **HOW** you'll measure success (metrics)
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You're ready to start designing, right?
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**Wrong.**
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There's a critical gap between your Product Brief and your design decisions. A gap that causes even well-planned projects to build the wrong things beautifully.
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---
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## The Gap: Strategy to Design
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Your Product Brief tells you the business strategy. But it doesn't tell you:
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- **What actually drives the business?**
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- **What actually motivates your users?**
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- **What psychological triggers drive their behavior?**
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- **Which features will have the most impact?**
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- **Why users would choose your solution over alternatives?**
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Without this connection, you're guessing. And guessing is expensive.
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---
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## What Happens When You Skip This Step
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### Scenario 1: The Feature Factory
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**The team says:** "Let's build everything users might want!"
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**The result:**
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- 50 features, none deeply solving real problems
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- Users overwhelmed by complexity
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- Development time wasted on low-impact features
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- No clear prioritization strategy
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**The cost:** 6 months of development, mediocre product
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### Scenario 2: The Assumption Trap
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**The team says:** "We know what users need!"
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**The result:**
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- Features based on team assumptions, not user psychology
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- Beautiful designs that don't address real pain points
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- Users don't adopt because it doesn't match their mental models
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- Expensive redesigns after launch
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**The cost:** 3 months of design work thrown away
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### Scenario 3: The Stakeholder Whiplash
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**The team says:** "Let's ask stakeholders what to build!"
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**The result:**
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- Every stakeholder has different opinions
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- Features change based on who spoke last
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- No strategic foundation for decisions
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- Team loses confidence in the direction
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**The cost:** Endless meetings, demoralized team, delayed launch
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---
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## The Real Cost
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**Time:**
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- Weeks of designing the wrong features
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- Months of building things nobody uses
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- Endless debates about priorities
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**Money:**
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- Wasted development resources
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- Expensive post-launch pivots
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- Lost market opportunity
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**Morale:**
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- Team frustration from constant changes
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- Designer confidence eroded
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- Stakeholder trust damaged
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---
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## What's Missing: The Strategic Bridge
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The Product Brief tells you **where you're going**.
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But you need to know **why users will come with you**.
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That's where Trigger Mapping comes in.
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---
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## What Trigger Mapping Does
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Trigger Mapping creates the strategic bridge between business goals and user psychology:
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**It answers:**
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- Which user groups can actually help you achieve your business goals?
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- What positive outcomes are they seeking?
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- What negative outcomes are they trying to avoid?
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- Which psychological drivers are strongest?
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- Which features will have the most strategic impact?
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**It provides:**
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- A visual map connecting business goals → target groups → psychological drivers
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- Prioritized list of user groups ranked by strategic value
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- Scored feature list based on psychological impact
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- Clear reasoning for every design decision
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- Team alignment around strategic priorities
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---
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## The Strategic Sequence
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Here's how it all connects:
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```
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Product Brief
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↓
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Trigger Map
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↓
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Design Decisions
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↓
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Features That Work
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```
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**Product Brief** = Business strategy (what, why, who at high level)
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**Trigger Map** = User psychology (who specifically, why they act, what drives them)
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**UX Design** = Solutions that connect strategy to psychology
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**Features** = Implementations that deliver on both
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---
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## A Generic Example
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**Product Brief says:**
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- Vision: Help busy professionals stay healthy
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- Target: Working professionals
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- Goal: 10,000 active users in 6 months
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**But you still don't know:**
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- Which professionals? (Executives? Freelancers? Remote workers?)
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- What's their real pain? (Time? Motivation? Knowledge?)
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- What are they trying to avoid? (Burnout? Weight gain? Medical issues?)
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- Which features matter most? (Meal planning? Quick workouts? Sleep tracking?)
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**Trigger Mapping reveals:**
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- **Top Group:** Remote workers (30-45, sedentary jobs)
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- **Positive Driver:** Want to feel energized during work hours
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- **Negative Driver:** Fear of burnout and health decline
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- **Top Feature:** 5-minute desk exercises with energy tracking
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- **Why:** Addresses both drivers, fits into work schedule, immediate benefit
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Now you know exactly what to design and why.
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---
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## Your Insurance Policy
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Think of Trigger Mapping as insurance against:
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- ❌ Building features nobody uses
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- ❌ Designing for the wrong user groups
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- ❌ Guessing at priorities
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- ❌ Stakeholder opinion battles
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- ❌ Post-launch pivots
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It's 60-90 minutes of strategic work that saves months of wasted effort.
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---
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## The Investment vs. Payoff
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**Investment:**
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- 60-90 minutes with Saga running 5 workshops
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- Structured questions that pull out strategic insights
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- Visual map that everyone can understand
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**Payoff:**
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- Clear feature prioritization (no more guessing)
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- Team alignment around user psychology
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- Confident design decisions backed by strategy
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- Features that actually drive business goals
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- Traceable reasoning for every choice
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**ROI:** 90 minutes saves 3-6 months of building the wrong things
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---
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## What You'll Learn Next
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In the following lessons, you'll discover:
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- The 20+ year heritage of this methodology (proven, not trendy)
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- How the 5 workshops actually work (step by step)
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- The power of negative drivers (why fear is stronger than desire)
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- How to create the visual Trigger Map (one-page strategy)
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- How to score features systematically (data-driven decisions)
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---
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## Key Takeaways
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✅ **Product Brief alone isn't enough** - It tells you business strategy, not user psychology
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✅ **The gap is expensive** - Weeks of wasted design, months of wrong features
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✅ **Trigger Mapping bridges the gap** - Connects business goals to psychological drivers
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✅ **It's strategic insurance** - 90 minutes prevents months of rework
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✅ **You get clarity** - Know exactly what to design and why
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---
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## Reflection Questions
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Before moving to the next lesson, consider:
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1. Have you ever built features that users didn't adopt? What was missing?
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2. How do you currently decide which features to prioritize?
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3. What would change if you knew exactly which psychological drivers mattered most?
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---
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[← Back to Module Overview](module-06-overview.md) | [Next: Lesson 2 - Heritage & Evolution →](lesson-02-heritage-evolution.md)
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*Part of Module 06: Trigger Mapping*
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