BUx: Product Management with Lean, Agile and System Design Thinking
Learn how to use lean, agile and systems design thinking in all aspects of the digital products lifecycle.
About this course
Strong product management drives successful business model implementation. Learn about the key decisions, underlying tradeoffs, and implementation decisions needed for each phase of the product life and master business and organizational logic to ensure product success in the marketplace.
In this course, part of the Digital Product Management MicroMasters program, you will be introduced to key frameworks for decision-making based on both economic and organizational considerations. These frameworks inform a rising product manager on how to:
use customer co-creation and understanding of their needs to become a “champion” for user-centric development in digital technology.
set up and manage specific work flows (e.g. either lean, agile or stage gate development tasks) that result in timely launch and upgrades of products.
use a data-and metrics-driven approach to make product life cycle decisions including pricing, versioning, maintenance, helpdesks and end of life.
shape the direction of the product based on experimentation and system design thinking by learning from product roadmaps, competitive considerations, and allied evolution of demand in digital markets.
Caveat: This is not a course on software development, architecture or product marketing. The role of a product manager is to work with these functions effectively, such that the interests of a product (e.g., its profitability) and its customers are best served. Thus, the perspectives and skills covered in this course are integrative and allied with decision-making in their orientation.
At a Glance:
Institution: BUx
Subject: Computer Science
Level: Advanced
Prerequisites:
Secondary school (high school) algebra; basic mathematics concepts
Backgroundin three areas:
Project and process (operations) management concepts
Marketing concepts
Software engineering concepts
Learners may develop background in these three areas either through on the job exposure or by auditing 3rd or 4th year university level or online courses before taking DI503.
Associated programs:
MicroMasters® Program in Digital Product Management
MicroMasters® Program in Digital Transformation Leadership
Language: English
Video Transcript: English
Associated skills:Software Development, Software Versioning, Product Management, Business Modeling, Technology Roadmaps, Decision Making, Digital Product Management, Product Lifecycle, Product Marketing, Agile Methodology, Product Roadmaps, Systems Design
What You’ll Learn:
About this course
Strong product management drives successful business model implementation. Learn about the key decisions, underlying tradeoffs, and implementation decisions needed for each phase of the product life and master business and organizational logic to ensure product success in the marketplace.
In this course, part of the Digital Product Management MicroMasters program, you will be introduced to key frameworks for decision-making based on both economic and organizational considerations. These frameworks inform a rising product manager on how to:
use customer co-creation and understanding of their needs to become a “champion” for user-centric development in digital technology.
set up and manage specific work flows (e.g. either lean, agile or stage gate development tasks) that result in timely launch and upgrades of products.
use a data-and metrics-driven approach to make product life cycle decisions including pricing, versioning, maintenance, helpdesks and end of life.
shape the direction of the product based on experimentation and system design thinking by learning from product roadmaps, competitive considerations, and allied evolution of demand in digital markets.
Caveat: This is not a course on software development, architecture or product marketing. The role of a product manager is to work with these functions effectively, such that the interests of a product (e.g., its profitability) and its customers are best served. Thus, the perspectives and skills covered in this course are integrative and allied with decision-making in their orientation.
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