Development of pilot pase mobile application

Once you’ve surpassed proof of concept, tested your minimum viable product, and created a prototype, it’s time to pilot your product. This is your opportunity to test assumptions, evaluate the feasibility, and gain valuable insights that will either help improve your design or inform alternative solutions. A pilot typically involves rolling out the solution to a small test group to get feedback and smoke-test your technical capabilities in real-world scenarios.

Executing Successful Pilot Tests

It’s a critical stage in your product development, yet many pilots are doomed before they’ve even begun. Poor pilot planning and a lack of dedicated resources are among the many reasons pilots fail, and when they do, it’s a waste of time and energy for all involved.

How can you do a better job of piloting? In this post, we’ll walk through 6 questions you should ask as you plan the various components of your pilot so that you can set your next pilot up for success.

1. Who is responsible for the pilot implementation?

This is the number one reason we see pilots fail: limited bandwidth. When running a pilot is just another task on a team member’s already-overloaded plate, your test is set up to fail.

A pilot can’t be a side-job run on top of your existing workload. Consider what’s at stake: the challenge of winning buy-in for unsatisfying technology or possibly even investing a substantial amount of money in a completely wrong solution. A solution worthy of being piloted is worth doing it right.

2. What’s the purpose of our pilot?

Pilots can fail by not being allowed to fail. If the assumption at the onset is that you’re moving forward and this is just a necessary step, it can’t prove value to your business. You’re sabotaging your own pilot before it even gets off the ground.

At this stage in your product strategy and innovation, the investment shouldn’t be so large that you can’t turn back. Make sure that all stakeholders understand the purpose of your pilot. At its core, a pilot’s purpose is to evaluate, uncover knowledge and useful insights, and result in either design improvements or alternative solutions.

3. What are our key performance metrics and measures of success?

Allow the right analytics to guide your future decision-making. Your pilot’s success metrics should align with your company’s core values and measure the achievement of relevant business goals like operational efficiency, revenue generation, etc.

But business value only captures the actual value of the initiative. You’ll need to measure user satisfaction — the value of the solution itself — as well.

4. How can we accurately measure user satisfaction?

This is an area where pilots often fail, as you can’t just give a group of people a piece of technology and ask them how they feel about it. Ask yourself: