Miro, a rapidly growing B2B startup, has implemented a Product Alignment Approach to manage its product development process. This approach revolves around a single document called PAD (Product Alignment Document) and accompanying ceremonies. The PAD is a structured framework that guides the team through three distinct stages: Opportunity/Problem Framing, Solution Framing, and Post-launch Recap. Each stage involves a detailed analysis of the problem, potential solutions, and post-launch reflection.
The approach encourages collaboration and knowledge sharing through weekly Product Alignment Meetings, where teams present their PADs to leadership and peers for feedback and alignment. These meetings ensure that product development efforts are strategically aligned with business goals, fostering accountability, improving presentation skills, and promoting a shared understanding of product challenges and solutions across the organization. The PAD template provides a detailed structure for documenting the process, with sections for problem statement, audience, success metrics, competitive analysis, proposed solutions, dependencies, risks, mitigations, and post-launch reflections.
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When I first joined Miro, less than a year ago, we had 3 million users and around 300 employees. A lot has changed since then. We have since grown Miro to around 12 million users and 600 employees, making Miro one of the fastest-growing B2B startups in history.
With such hyper-growth, there’s been an ever-growing need to scale the way we do product. In this article, I’m going through the approach that I recently introduced at Miro and is currently at the heart of how we center ourselves around the product strategy.
The goal of the product alignment approach is to guide structural opportunity discovery, solution discovery, ensure product collaboration and knowledge sharing in the product org as the company rapidly grows. This approach can be used at companies of all sizes. In fact, the earlier a company adopts this approach, the easier it will be to overcome product collaboration and alignment issues arising from the company’s growth.
The Product Alignment approach consists of a single document called PAD (short for Product Alignment Document) as well as ceremonies that go along with this document as it evolves and goes through different stages.
Product Alignment Document (PAD for short) is the artifact where we document the result of the product discovery and impact. PAD consists of 3 main pillars listed below. Each part is associated with the stages that the document goes through.
Ready-to-use PAD templates are added at the end of this blog post.
PAD Template on Miro
PAD content is not something new. All great product teams perform detailed product discovery in one way or another. What is equally important to crafting a PAD is to have a relevant audience who reviews your PAD to challenge you and provide feedback.
At Miro, we hold weekly product alignment meetings where teams present their problem framing, solution framing or post-launch recap stages of PADs to be challenged, receive feedback, exchange knowledge and ensure buy-in from the leadership team.
Depending on the size of your company, you can either go as wide as inviting the whole product guild and even the leadership team or as narrow as inviting the product people in your product stream. If it’s well-organized, you can easily have up to 20+ people in this meeting and still stay productive.
Product alignment meetings have multiple advantages:
How we run Product Alignment Meetings at Miro:
This meeting takes place weekly at Miro and each team who has something to present will add their topic to the agenda and specify whether they need a problem framing or solution framing review. Each team summarizes their PAD in a couple of slides (in Miro) to present and each presentation normally takes less than 30 minutes including Q&A.
Every product alignment meeting at Miro includes 10+ PMs, product leadership team and the CEO — Yes, our CEO attends every single product alignment session and this is the best thing I’ve seen the CEO do, as it helps him to stay on top of where the product is moving. The required and optional attendees are specified in the calendar invite.
There are four classes of possible outcomes coming from the leadership / relevant sponsors for each team who present:
At the end of every quarter, we have a big post-launch recap session where teams share the outcome on whether they achieved success for the PADs that were launched in this quarter. They also share any learnings which might be insightful for the whole product guild.
OWNER:
TEAM:
STATUS:
What problem are we trying to solve? What is the opportunity that we’re addressing?
For whom are we solving this problem?
How do we know this is the right problem to solve? Why this opportunity and not others?
Does this relate to current OKRs and if yes which one? Or is this a proposal for a future OKRs (based on business strategy)?
Is this leading to a competitive neutralizer, differentiator or delighter?
Any links to customer research, conversations or observation from data.
How do we know if we solved this problem?
How did others capture this opportunity / solve this problem?
What are some high-level solution directions we explore for capturing this opportunity / solving this problem? Describe potential solutions through short descriptions or high-level sketches / low-fi prototypes (no implementation details at this stage). Compare the high-level solution directions through impact vs complexity (e.g. using high-level t-shirt sizing estimation).
What is the scope of the proposed solution?
What are the key features? Provide job stories, main flows and mock-ups
How complex is it to realize the solution?
Provide some context on why this solution was picked and the rest of the proposed high-level solution directions were not pursued. Any links to user research, customer data, etc.
What is not in the scope of the proposed solution?
What are the dependencies?
What are the risks associated with the solution (e.g. compliance, legal, privacy, security, strategic risk, operational, infrastructure stability/scaling risk, etc.) and potential mitigations?
What is the release plan? List the key milestones e.g. dev complete, alpha, beta, general accessibility.
What are the marketing and operational supports needed for this launch?
What’s the pricing and packaging strategy?
How successful we were in achieving our goals according to success metrics and the actual results?
What are the learnings that we can take to improve further?