
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or
In this episode, Kristyn Corrigan shares insights from a recent Voice of the Customer (VOC) research project for the Product Development and Management Association (PDMA). We explore how product professionals can move beyond assumptions to capture meaningful customer insights, the methodologies behind robust VOC research, and actionable findings that can transform both products and organizations. Key takeaways include practical steps for conducting qualitative and quantitative VOC and understanding how to identify the most valuable unmet customer needs.
Here’s the brutal truth about customer research: Most product managers and innovators think they know their customers, but they’re building products for assumptions, not real people. In this discussion, we are detailing a recently completed Voice of the Customer project that’s helping the longest existing professional association for—guess who—product managers and innovators! That’s right—the VOC project was to better understand who the ideal customers of the professional association are and what their needs are. The association is one I’ve talked about before—PDMA, the Product Development and Management Association. If you’ve ever struggled to get meaningful customer insights, felt overwhelmed by diverse customer segments, or wondered how to turn research findings into actual product changes, this episode is for you.
Our guest is Kristyn Corrigan, Principal at Applied Marketing Science and PDMA Board of Directors member. With 17 years of consulting experience, she’s helped companies transform customer insights into successful products. She leads the Insights for Innovation practice, has published work in Fast Company, and guest lectured at MIT Sloan.
“It takes as much time to solve a bad problem as it does a good problem. And if you’re not working on good problems, you’re really wasting your time.” – Abbie Griffin
Kristyn Corrigan is a principal at Applied Marketing Science (AMS) where she leads the Insights for Innovation Practice. In her over 20 years of consulting experience, she has helped dozens of companies use customer insights to create more successful products, services, and customer experiences. Kristyn has extensive experience leading both domestic and international research engagements in business-to-business and consumer markets. She specializes in helping her clients to not only understand customer needs through in-depth interviewing and ethnographic observation, but also with how to measure their criticality to innovation. In addition to consulting work, Kristyn trains companies to implement their own in-house insights and Voice of the Customer (VOC) programs and is a frequent presenter at leading industry conferences. Kristyn currently serves on the Product Development and Management Association (PDMA) Board of Directors.
Thank you for taking the journey to product mastery and learning with me from the successes and failures of product innovators, managers, and developers. If you enjoyed the discussion, help out a fellow product manager by sharing it using the social media buttons you see below.
Source
4.9
6464 ratings
In this episode, Kristyn Corrigan shares insights from a recent Voice of the Customer (VOC) research project for the Product Development and Management Association (PDMA). We explore how product professionals can move beyond assumptions to capture meaningful customer insights, the methodologies behind robust VOC research, and actionable findings that can transform both products and organizations. Key takeaways include practical steps for conducting qualitative and quantitative VOC and understanding how to identify the most valuable unmet customer needs.
Here’s the brutal truth about customer research: Most product managers and innovators think they know their customers, but they’re building products for assumptions, not real people. In this discussion, we are detailing a recently completed Voice of the Customer project that’s helping the longest existing professional association for—guess who—product managers and innovators! That’s right—the VOC project was to better understand who the ideal customers of the professional association are and what their needs are. The association is one I’ve talked about before—PDMA, the Product Development and Management Association. If you’ve ever struggled to get meaningful customer insights, felt overwhelmed by diverse customer segments, or wondered how to turn research findings into actual product changes, this episode is for you.
Our guest is Kristyn Corrigan, Principal at Applied Marketing Science and PDMA Board of Directors member. With 17 years of consulting experience, she’s helped companies transform customer insights into successful products. She leads the Insights for Innovation practice, has published work in Fast Company, and guest lectured at MIT Sloan.
“It takes as much time to solve a bad problem as it does a good problem. And if you’re not working on good problems, you’re really wasting your time.” – Abbie Griffin
Kristyn Corrigan is a principal at Applied Marketing Science (AMS) where she leads the Insights for Innovation Practice. In her over 20 years of consulting experience, she has helped dozens of companies use customer insights to create more successful products, services, and customer experiences. Kristyn has extensive experience leading both domestic and international research engagements in business-to-business and consumer markets. She specializes in helping her clients to not only understand customer needs through in-depth interviewing and ethnographic observation, but also with how to measure their criticality to innovation. In addition to consulting work, Kristyn trains companies to implement their own in-house insights and Voice of the Customer (VOC) programs and is a frequent presenter at leading industry conferences. Kristyn currently serves on the Product Development and Management Association (PDMA) Board of Directors.
Thank you for taking the journey to product mastery and learning with me from the successes and failures of product innovators, managers, and developers. If you enjoyed the discussion, help out a fellow product manager by sharing it using the social media buttons you see below.
Source
1,830 Listeners
1,460 Listeners
1,034 Listeners
519 Listeners
30,223 Listeners
194 Listeners
3,995 Listeners
1,759 Listeners
9,188 Listeners
9,189 Listeners
2,186 Listeners
28,304 Listeners
144 Listeners
1,346 Listeners
84 Listeners