{"id":770,"date":"2017-07-27T21:16:00","date_gmt":"2017-07-27T20:16:00","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/scrummable.com\/?p=770"},"modified":"2017-07-27T21:16:00","modified_gmt":"2017-07-27T20:16:00","slug":"mcdonalds-sauce-dispenser-is-the-greatest-product-ever","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"http:\/\/scrummable.com\/mcdonalds-sauce-dispenser-is-the-greatest-product-ever\/","title":{"rendered":"McDonald’s Sauce Dispenser is the greatest product ever"},"content":{"rendered":"
OK, that’s a bold statement! I guess I should elaborate. Like a lot of teenagers, I worked in a Maccies one summer and I was struck by how awesome the sauce dispenser was.<\/div>\n
Basically, it’s a funnel attached to a handle with a trigger. Pulling the trigger releases 5 dots of ketchup in a quincunx<\/a> onto the bun. I used this device almost every day and, now that I work in software development, I have decided it’s the greatest product ever.<\/p>\n The greatest product ever!<\/p><\/div><\/p>\n The amount of effort and money that has gone into developing this device is surely astounding. McDonald’s are a decidedly profit-driven enterprise<\/a>. The sauce gun dispenses exactly<\/em> the right amount of condiment – enough to finely coat the meat when the bread is put on top but not cost the company unnecessary overheads.<\/p>\n What makes this relevant to software development is that the sauce dispenser does what every good product should do – one thing…and one thing really well<\/strong>.<\/p>\n The best products don’t try to be everything to everyone – the ones that do always seem to come across as novelty items. To use an example from the real world, I’m not convinced that a coffee maker and toaster in one<\/a> would make coffee and toast better that a coffee-machine and<\/em> a toaster as separate appliances.<\/p>\n Yes, that’s a knispork!<\/p><\/div><\/p>\n Similarly, the best apps only do one thing and they do it really well. 500px for photo sharing, DropBox for storing files in the cloud, Google Keep for taking notes. I love Keep. Sure there’s Evernote and Quip and [insert any other “note-taking” app here], but Keep is so ridiculously simple it’s a dream to use.<\/p>\n Too many products suffer from “feature bloat” where stakeholders keep adding new shiny features into a product. Of course, additional functionality isn’t necessarily a bad thing but these things usually come at a cost. How many times have you had to sideline tech debt to implement a new feature? How often do you see “delighters” put into an app instead of fixing a glaring bug?<\/p>\n It is the equivalent of the pub that puts a pool table in but never cleans the floor – and we’ve all been there!<\/p>\n One reason additional features can be the worst thing for your product is alienating your core audience.<\/p>\n Earlier this year, Atlassian bought Trello<\/a>, reportedly to serve a chunk of their core demographic that was turning away from Jira.<\/p>\n Jira started life as a bug-tracker. A simple piece of software for tracking tickets, now it’s one of the most popular project management tools<\/a> in the world used by big names such as Twitter, Skype, and NASA as well as over 50,000 more<\/a>.<\/p>\nEverything to everyone<\/h2>\n
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Alienating your core audience<\/h2>\n