Lenny's Podcast: Product | Growth | Career: The ultimate guide to JTBD | Bob Moesta (co-creator of the framework)

Lenny Rachitsky Lenny Rachitsky 8/24/23 - Episode Page - 1h 10m - PDF Transcript

I think one of the biggest misconceptions around jobs to be done is this notion that

it's pain and gain as opposed to context and outcome.

When you hear somebody's story and it seems irrational, like we'll have people go, oh

my God, that's an anomaly.

That doesn't happen.

But what you realize is that the context makes the irrational rational.

So the moment you hear a story and you go, I can't believe that nine times out of 10,

it's because you don't have the rest of the story.

And so part of it is being able to understand the rest of that context that would drive

somebody to say like, why would somebody cut their arm off?

Well, if they're in this situation and this and this and this, like there's nobody who

would say they want to cut their arm off.

But in certain situations, you'll do it.

And so that's what we're trying to do is find where will people change behavior?

Welcome to Lenny's podcast, where I interview world-class product leaders and growth experts

to learn from their hard-won experiences building and growing today's most successful

products.

Today, my guest is Bob Mesta.

Bob is the co-creator of the jobs to be done framework alongside Clay Christensen.

And as you'll hear at the top of our conversation is maybe the most anticipated guest I've

had on based on the LinkedIn response.

Bob has started eight companies and is currently the co-founder and CEO of the Rewired Group

and currently spends his time helping companies of all sizes unlock hidden insights and create

successful products and services.

In our conversation, we get deep into all aspects of the jobs to be done framework.

What is it?

How to apply to your product?

When it's not a good fit?

How to interview customers to get accurate insights into their struggles?

Less examples of how jobs to be done works for zero to one products and a ton more.

Thank you to everyone who suggested questions and topics for our conversation.

Enjoy my chat with Bob Mesta after a short word from our sponsors.

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Bob, thank you so much for being here.

Welcome to the podcast.

Thanks Lenny.

Excited to be here.

Big fan.

I'm a big fan of yours.

I wasn't even super familiar with you before we started organizing this podcast chat.

And then as you saw, I posted on LinkedIn what questions people had for you and around

jobs to be done in general.

And I've never seen so many comments and questions and so much passion for guests I had on.

I think there was over, absolutely, there's, I don't know, 130 questions and comments and

like folks like Jason Freed, founder of 37 Signals and Des from Intercom came out and

just like, I am excited for this episode.

So we got some here.

I've worked with all of them.

They're great, great people and fun to work with.

I just had no idea.

There's so much passion for jobs to be done.

I have a million questions for you, a lot of them coming from the audience, some for

me.

So I'm excited to dig into a lot of this stuff.

All right, let's dive in.

Okay.

So I thought it'd be useful just to start with the very basics briefly, just what is

the simplest way to understand the jobs to be done framework?

I think the easiest way to think about it is that I'm an engineer.

I've basically, electrical basically have been building products for almost 30 years

and one of the lies I was told growing up was build it and they will come, right?

And so we always start to think about it from a technological point.

How do I build this thing?

And all right, who wants this product?

And what I realized very early in my career is that didn't, that really didn't make,

it didn't work.

I couldn't make it work.

And so jobs to be done is this whole premise is that people hire products, right?

They don't buy them.

They hire them to make progress in their life.

And if we can take a step back and look at it, we see it in a very different light to

realize like at some point they're in some context and there's some outcome they want.

And if we can understand that, we start to realize that different things compete, right?

Simple example is think of Snickers and Milky Way, right?

They're both candy bars.

They're both bought in the, in the checkout aisle, you know, they're both made almost

with the same ingredients.

One has peanuts, one doesn't.

But and if you start to compare the products and like do a competitive benchmark, you know,

you start to get to one's a little softer, one's a little harder, one's, one's got a

few more calories, one's got a less calories.

But when you talk to people about when the, when's the last time they ate the Snickers,

right?

I went to Edge the last time they ate a Milky Way.

You start to realize that Snickers typically is a case where they're, they had missed the

last meal.

They've got a lot of work to do.

They're running out of energy and they want to basically get to back to the tasks as fast

as possible.

And so you start to realize that Snickers, you know, is, is about almost like a meal replacement,

right?

And it's about the, the, the stomach is growling and things like that.

And you start to realize that if, if they didn't have a Snickers, it competes with a protein

drink.

It competes with, with, you know, a Red Bull, a coffee, right?

But a Milky Way typically is eaten after an emotional experience.

Could be positive, could be negative.

It's usually eaten alone, right?

And it's taking time to regroup after this emotional thing.

And you start to realize that it competes with things like, you know, a glass of wine, a

brownie, and to be honest, a run.

And so you start to realize that Jobs helps you see the true competitive set from what

we call the demand side of the world, as opposed to the competitive set from the supply side

of the world, which is the technology or the underlying business model by how which we're,

we're making it.

And so it allows you to actually see what customers really want, as opposed to trying

to figure out how do we sell things to people?

To maybe follow up on this example a bit.

How often do you find these jobs emerge after they've developed a product?

Like in this case, I guess if Snickers or Milky Way, how often is it just like they see

this problem and actually apply this approach with even accidentally?

What's interesting is that, at least for me, the thing is what I learned was that supply

and demand are not as connected as everybody thinks.

Most people think they create a product and that creates demand.

But the real thing that if you start to study causality is that a struggling moment causes

demand.

And you start to realize that in some cases that struggling moment exists and can exist

for a long time and nobody solved it.

So one of the companies I helped was Southern New Hampshire University and Paula Blank.

And one of the things in 2010, we found basically these anomalies, these people who are going

to school but not actually coming to class and watching everything online.

And it was like 50 or 60 of them.

And the anomalies basically, and they're paying full price, they didn't want to come.

It was very, for Paula, it was kind of like, why are they doing this?

And when we went to study them, we realized that they actually had a very different job

than a typical 18 to 24 year old because when they were a little bit older, typically they

had either already had a degree or they basically had tried to go to college and it didn't work.

And it was about basically time now that they had responsibility to do something new.

And so they didn't actually build the product at all.

And as they started to look and say, how many people want to go back to school but can't,

they started to realize that it's not 1,000 people, it's not 10,000 people, they have

over 200,000 students, they're one of the largest universities in the world.

And so it starts, all of this starts with a struggling moment, not with a product.

And so that's what we mean when we're customer centric is that we're studying the struggling

moments they have and that people like Intercom and Basecamp, they look at struggling moments

and that becomes their roadmap.

Because again, think about a roadmap, I'm literally trying to tell you what I'm going

to build in the next 24 months, for example, but none of us saw chat GPT coming.

And so all of a sudden, I have to go undo the roadmap.

But if I talk about the struggling moments that I'm trying to go after, all of a sudden

I realize that the roadmap is not, when I get to that struggling moment, there's multiple

ways I can solve it.

So instead of just talking about features, it's typically talking about features for

the first 90 to 120 days.

But after that, we just talk about struggling moments, because that's the seed for real

innovation and basically where new products come from.

To unpack the framework a little bit more, if you were to come to a founder and tell

them, hey, you should be paying attention to struggling moments, I feel like all of

them will say, yeah, we know that, like we do that, we look for pain and we try to solve

it.

So what I'm curious, there maybe is just, what is maybe the right way to do it?

But it's not just the pain, what we were taught in business school was pain and gain.

But the reality is it's the context, it's the fact that I didn't eat lunch before, the

fact that I still have a lot of work to do, the fact that I have this podcast going on.

It's not that I'm in pain, but it's the context that makes me value this in the moment that

much more than something else.

And so part of this is it's not just about pain and gain, it's about context and outcomes.

And so when you frame it that way, it becomes a vector, a vector of progress or a vector

of intention of what they're trying to do.

And once we frame that, then we can actually wrap technology around it.

And the crazy part is that I was always told or taught, if I build the best product, it

will sell better.

And what I've learned is actually a kick-ass half is better than a half-ass hole, and that's

what Jason talks about.

But the reality is like, if you look at QuickBooks, QuickBooks is half the features and double

the price.

And you start to realize that at some point in time, it's about meeting customers where

they are, not trying to wow them and not trying to convince them.

They convince themselves to make the progress.

I'd like to understand this vector piece more because that feels really important.

So you're saying that it's not just, there's a pain point, solve that.

What you're saying is what's even more important is this context around that pain point and

things that precede it.

Yeah.

So the first thing is we don't ask, we don't talk to people who just want to.

For people listening on the podcast, Bob pulled up a drawing, so you should try to

check out the YouTube video of this to see what he's doing.

So there's some product A is the old product, and there's some product B, which is the new

product.

And ultimately, people don't randomly do anything.

And so the real heart of the method of jobs we've done is understanding the causation

of what pushes people to say, today's the day I got to do something different.

And the push or the context they're in has nothing to do with the new product.

It's the only reason why they would leave the old product.

And if there's no push, they can't even see your product because we're creatures of habit.

And so as soon as I have a push, I call that F1, force one, and I have some idea of what's

possible, then I create something called F2, which is basically the pull to a new outcome,

a new state, a new thing.

And so at some point in time, it's like, I have to be in this situation and I have to

want this outcome.

But here's the other part, is that there's this water line that there's these other forces

and there's two other forces.

Every time I show somebody something new, it actually creates anxiety, anxiety of the

new.

And I call this F3.

And then the other thing is I have to get them to leave old thing.

So I call this habit of the present.

And what you start to realize, and I call that F4, and as if F1 and F2 are not greater

than F3 and F4, they're not going to move.

They're not going to do anything.

And so ultimately, what we're doing is we're framing the market as a system of behavior.

And most people say, if I just add more features, create more pull people will buy.

It's not true.

More features create actually anxiety.

Can it do all those things?

And what you start to realize is if I reduce friction, which is the bottom part, I actually

don't have to do anything with the product.

I just have to make it easier.

So for example, one of the things I did is I built houses.

And one of the frictional points that people had in moving was the fact of moving to those

was basically packing all their stuff up and going somewhere.

And so I would literally sell them a condo.

They'd go from a 3,000 square foot home to a 1,500 square foot condo and they'd cancel

six weeks later because they didn't know how to get rid of all their stuff, which is a

frictional point.

So what did I do?

I actually raised the price of the condo included moving in two years of storage in the, you

know, in is part of the deal with the condo because it's the frictional coefficient and

I increased sales over 30%.

I love that.

So what this is, is it's really about focusing on the customer.

It's about understanding the causation behind it and then using design thinking to actually

start to realize how do we actually enable people to make progress?

We don't need to sell them.

We need to enable them to buy.

And so I wrote a book called Demand-Side Sales that basically took the premise of like stop

trying to sell people and just help them make progress, help them buy.

And so the whole book is instead of trying to base the sales process on how we want to

sell, we need to actually design the sales process on how they want to buy and it seems

like it's the same thing, but they're actually really, really different things.

Is there an example that can make this even more real of a company or product?

So one of the companies I work with a lot lately is a company called Auto Books.

They're based here in Detroit and they basically do, they help banks basically do invoicing

through let's say Apple Pay.

And so instead of having to use Square or PayPal, you literally can use your bank now

to do these things.

And so there's two things.

They have to sell small business on it, but they also have to sell banks on it.

And when we started talking about it, they talked about why do banks want it?

And the first thing we did is we found out there's three really different reasons why

banks want them.

But the thing is that the where the process looked at is they would talk about the struggling

moment, they talk about what was going on and then everything was about getting them

to a demo.

And once we got them to a demo, we had to close them.

Well, it turns out that the buying process literally has different phases in it.

There's a first thought, there's something called passive looking where they're problem

aware and solution unaware and they have to learn a bunch of things.

And then there's active looking where they're both problem and solution aware and they're

trying to figure it out and frame a solution.

And then there's deciding, which is about making trade offs.

And so what we end up doing is when I started to talk to the team about it, what they started

to realize is I said, where is the customer in their timeline of buying?

And he looked at me like, huh?

I said, no, no, you have a timeline of how you want to sell to them.

And after the demo, you try to close.

But what if they're actually in passive looking and want a demo to learn more?

It's very different than if I'm trying to close.

And so what we end up doing is breaking the demo apart, asking people where they were in

their buying process.

And by doing that, we actually then found out a way in which to give them three different

demos, one about telling stories and giving them the background about the problem, another

one about showing them all the alternatives.

And then the last one is about basically giving them choices between ways to move forward.

Right.

And you'd think that it would make the sales process longer.

It actually made the sales process almost half.

And it four acts basically conversion because now we meet them where they are as opposed

to where we want them to be.

And is that something you find generally in the sales process?

There's these three phases that everyone goes through and you got to think about them individually.

Yeah, there's actually I call them six phases.

First thought, passive looking, active looking, deciding, first use and then ongoing use.

How do we build the new habit?

And so if we don't actually study that part of how do people transform themselves through

a struggling moment, we don't know what they want.

Like if I talk to people who want to buy a house, they tell me they want granted and

hardwood and they'll make everything these things they want.

But when you actually talk to people who bought a house, they actually made a lot of tradeoffs.

And although, for example, everybody I would survey before buying a house, I had 93% say

they wanted an energy star compliant house.

It costs 30 grand to make it energy star compliant at the time.

And the reality is, is like, nobody bought it.

They all bought the finished basement.

And so there's the difference between what they say they want and what they want.

And so the method itself is not based on traditional research or market research asking

people what it is.

It's actually based on criminal and intelligence interrogation about telling me the story about

how you decided today's the day I bought a house or today's the day I bought a, you know,

I went back to school.

It's not random.

And if it's not random, then we need to actually find it.

And that, to me, is one of the bigger differences.

Most people build their sales process on probability.

And like, if I get so many leads in, I'll convert so many to here and so many, but the

ultimate thing is how many people are really ready for your product.

They have to actually be ready for it.

And that's what jobs to be done is really about is understanding where they are, what's

causing it, and how do they make the tradeoffs.

So let's follow that thread of interviewing and talking to your potential customers and

customers to understand the jobs to be done.

What is the actual process you recommend?

The first thing we do is we frame a question.

And the way I think about it is most people.

So the one thing to know about me is I've been building things for over 30 years.

I've worked on 3,500 different products and services across many, many industries.

But I have had three close head brain injuries before I was seven years old and I can't

read and I can't write.

And so one of the things for me is that I could not understand the research that I

would get from marketing around.

Basically, they'd say, Hey, I need something that's easy, fast and fun and cheap.

And I'd be like, okay, what does any of that mean?

What is fast?

How fast is fast and what's not fast?

And you start to undo all those things.

And so the first thing we do is we start to frame like, let's just talk about what causes

people to say today's the day they want to go on vacation or today's the day they wanted

new set of windows and you start to frame around that.

And then you go find people who recently purchased and say, what in the world happened

that says today's the day I need new windows?

And you start to realize that there's pushes and there's polls and there's anxieties and

there's habits.

And so the first thing we do is we try to extract the story from the customer.

Right.

And it doesn't have to be my product.

It could be somebody else's product.

It doesn't, if I haven't built it yet, right?

It's lately like, what are people going to fire when they hire me?

And so when we get the stories, though, then we start the stories are going to get us

the pushes, the polls, the anxieties and the habits, the trade offs and what we call

the hired fire criteria.

And then what we do is we, instead of trying to look for themes across all of them, we

actually do something instead of segmenting them, we cluster them, we find the pathways

because what you start to realize is it's not one reason why people do it.

It's sets of reasons and those sets actually work together.

So the pushes work with the polls.

So when they have these pushes, they want these polls and when they don't have these

pushes, they don't want those polls.

And so when you start to see the patterns and you start to pull it out, you start to

realize that most, most companies or most products are hired to do three, four, five

different jobs and they're in conflict with each other.

One person wants to go faster and one person wants to go be more thorough.

And so all of a sudden being more thorough means it's slower.

So if I say we're thorough, the people who want to fast, they like, I don't want

this because it's too slow.

So how do you frame those things out and understand where the conflicts are behind

it and think about different products from it?

I mean, that's what Intercom did, right?

Intercom realized that people hired it for four very, very different reasons.

And then instead of building four different products, they literally took their

product and turned off the features that were not relevant to the pathway that people

wanted to take.

So for a choir, they didn't need a whole bunch of these other features.

And so they actually framed it around basically, how do we help people convert?

And that, that job actually competed with HubSpot.

There's another one where it was about helping with support.

And that one competed with Zendesk.

And so they actually read, they changed the pricing model to basically match

who the competition was and to match the progress that people were trying to make

because Zendesk was too much and too hard.

And, and HubSpot felt like it was, it was an overkill for where people were.

We basically figured out how to actually position ourselves as a good next step

between HubSpot and nothing or between nothing and HubSpot.

And that's how they've grown to be overvalued over $2 billion.

I have a follow up question.

But did you say that you can't read and write?

Yeah, I can't read and write.

So, so I can.

So the thing is, is I cannot read the words that I write and I cannot read.

Like, so if somebody reads it to me, I can actually play it back.

So I'll listen to audio.

But the fact is, is the way I was taught to read is to so that when I look at a

paragraph, I see the spaces between the words first.

And then I usually see the, the left hand edge of the word.

So the last three letters.

And so my mom taught me to look at the five largest words on the page by circling

the longest words on the page.

And then I would study those and translate those and then figure out kind

of what those five words would have in common.

Because for me, the, the part that's broken in my brain is that I can't look

up things fast enough.

So by the time I try to look at a word, figure out what it is, get the definition.

I've literally forgotten every word before it.

Damn.

How are you writing?

It's a gift.

I'm telling you, it's a gift that this is what it's a gift.

I'd never wish upon my children, but to be honest, it's given me abilities to

see patterns in so many different ways, because I can remember the first five

words in the first paragraph and the last five words in the last paragraph.

So I turned through a book three or four times and I have as good a

comprehension as everybody else.

This is insane.

How are you?

How are you, how are you writing books?

Uh, it's really simple.

I have a company called scribe media.

And what we do is we, first thing we do is we look for what are the

struggling moments the book is going to address?

What's struggling moments that people have?

We then look at what are the competitive books wrapped around it.

I then basically outline what progress looks like.

We then take each chapter and define it as a system and what we have to do in

each chapter to help them make the progress along the way.

And then they, we just talk and we talk, we have 10, two hour sessions.

They get recorded and then somebody basically takes.

So if you listen to read any of my books, it sounds like me talking because it is.

Wow.

And so I can get a book out in three and a half, four months.

That's incredible.

And so now I, so I'm a teacher.

I'm a adjunct lecturer at the Kellogg school at Northwestern.

And then I, I guess lecture on the East coast and kind of different business schools.

And then I help tech stars and white combinator.

So I'm really moving myself into kind of being into, I feel it's tied

to pass on.

I've had some amazing mentors who helped me.

And again, I was told to be a baggage handler or a construction worker when I

graduated high school and my mom thought I could do more.

And so I met these people who poured their knowledge into me to enable me to do

all this stuff.

So now I'm trying to pay it forward as much as I can.

So that's one of the reasons why I do as many podcasts as I can.

So again, I appreciate you having me.

Yeah.

And this is a, this is a great opportunity to pass it on.

And so I'm very happy for doing that.

I had no idea about any of this about you.

So thank you for sharing that.

It's been fun.

Like I, like I pinched myself.

The other part is I don't know how I got here.

One of the things that I've been doing is I've been studying people for the

last 10 years around why they switched from one company to another to literally

understand the jobs of jobs, because employees actually hire companies more

than companies hire employees.

And so you start to realize the struggling moment is why don't we have

enough people and otherwise like I want to leave, but I don't know how to leave.

And so I've been, I'm in the midst of writing a book around that right now with

Michael Horn and Ethan Bernstein.

Is there an insight from that work that you can share about why people leave jobs

or join jobs?

So the number one thing that I would say is almost everybody, when you ask them

about how they got their lat, their net, the job they're in, the number one phrase

you get is, oh, it was so lucky.

I was so lucky.

Just happened to fall in my lap.

And then when you actually unpack the story that luck had nothing to do with it.

Right.

It's, it's, they were prepped, they were ready.

There was pushes, there were pulls, there was anxiety, they were able to, and

you start to realize like, and, and the funny part is that if I had talked to

somebody who's been, you know, through three or four kinds of switches, they

all can say, yep, I've had that job.

Yep, I've had that job.

Yep, I've had that.

And so there's frames around basically understanding what progress are you really

trying to make now?

Is it, do I need balance?

Am I not challenged enough?

And you start to frame it.

And when you frame it, you start to realize I'm willing to actually take less

money to be around smarter people because I want to be a founder later.

And so you start to realize that all of these things where, where we think we have

to pay more money, over 50% of the people who got new jobs, didn't get more money.

It's a lie.

Yeah, it's about, it's about progress.

It's about what do they want to learn?

What skills do they want to get?

But at some point it's about money, but it's not always about money.

And the other interesting part is when you talk about money, we've talked about

this notion of unpacking.

We'll say, well, why do you need more money?

It's like, well, I have a lot larger obligations or I want more money because

I want more respect.

And so what you realize is in the hiring and firing criteria, they talk about money,

but money actually has a bigger effect than just money.

It's about respect or it's about, you know, responsibility or it's about, you

know, their metric of progress.

There's a whole bunch of things, but it's like, it's not just money.

That's the interesting part.

Yeah, I've definitely done that myself.

There's a status component to your job.

Yep.

I want the title, right?

Happens all the time.

I want to come back to the discussion we were just having around interviewing

people to understand the jobs to be done.

And a bunch of people on LinkedIn were trying to understand just like

tactically what they need to get right in order to get accurate jobs.

So I guess if they're just like a couple of tactics, you'd recommend for

how to interview people.

Let me give you three tips.

One is what the first tip I tell you is go read, never split the difference

by Chris Voss.

Like I started to write a book around basically techniques that I learned

back in the 80s and 90s around this.

And his book is amazing around it.

Like how to mirror like the whole notion of getting to know, like I play

things back incorrectly because they're going to say no.

And I'm going to say, all right, fix it.

And then they'll talk more.

The moment they, somebody says yes, there's nothing more to say.

And so there's a bunch of techniques you have to learn to basically get them talking.

The second is you, I only talked to people who have already tried to make the

progress, right?

So, so for example, you know, people talk about like, well, you can't apply this

to something that's new.

Like we don't, it doesn't exist.

So I worked with a company that, that was a, I'll say a fairly large social

media company and, and at some point in time, they found people kind of

transacting on their platform, but they didn't know anything about it.

And they hadn't built anything.

And what they ended up doing is we ended up going and studying eBay and Etsy.

And what caused me to say today's the day I'm going to set up an eBay store or

sell something on Craigslist.

And out of that, we found all the jobs of what people, both sellers were doing

and buyers were doing.

And, and, and now it's, I think it's almost a $3 billion marketplace that

didn't exist.

And they, they, they learned about it all from the competitors.

Sounds like Facebook marketplace, maybe.

And no comment.

I didn't say that.

How many interviews do you recommend people do to get to a confident?

That's a, that's a great controversial question.

The, the interesting part is from a causal mechanism perspective and from us,

from a set theory, meaning the sets of pushes, pulls, anxieties and habits,

it starts to repeat around seven or eight.

And I usually do 10, no more than 12.

And I would rather do two rounds of 12 interviews than do 24 interviews.

I had some really interesting mentors.

One of them was Dr.

Deming, who's the father of lean and quality systems and like that.

And so he would always push me to basically how to do things faster and

smaller.

And so that's where a lot of it came in.

You just realize that people will say, oh, we have to do something statistically

significant.

Well, you do, if you're doing it randomly, but if you actually understand the,

the, the range of your market and you know that 50% of it is above 30 years old

and 50% is below 30 years old, I could actually sample in a way that makes me

get a good representation without having to actually do 50 interviews.

And so that's, we use something called designed experiments to help with that.

I love the concrete numbers.

And so along those lines, when you're actually like asking questions of people,

do you have any best practices and ways of phrasing a question to get a response

you can trust?

In a lot of cases, you have to look at it from multiple perspectives.

And so this is where, so the other, the other tip I have is to not have a

discussion guide.

It drives people crazy because everybody wants to ask the same set of questions.

But the problem happens is when you ask the same set of questions, you actually

don't follow the ones that actually have the most meaningful information in it.

Right.

And so what happens is, is what I say is I use the framework of pushes,

pulls anxieties and habits and say, what caused them to do this?

And everything else is just a conversation of trying to understand their story.

And so part of this is, is being able to ask the questions around why, but you

can't ask why, why, why, why, why.

It's like, tell me more about that.

Give me an example.

You know, and in a lot of cases when, when, when they run out of, I usually get

them to where I call it the edge of language where they have no more language.

And what I do is I literally then bracket it.

So was it more about this or more about that?

And I know it's neither one of those and it forces them to talk more.

Right.

It's always trying to get them to know, because the moment I get to, so when I

play it back, so you did this and this and this and this is like, no, that wasn't it.

And the people who are working with like, you know, that's not the right answer.

I'm like, I know, but they're going to elaborate on why it's not that those

things. And so it's, it's literally being able to reveal kind of that, the causal

mechanisms of why people do what they do.

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When I think about jobs to be done, I've never like fully implemented any sort

of structured framework, but I find that it's been really useful in my newsletter

work and my podcast work.

Just thinking about what is the job my newsletter is doing for people.

For me, it's helping people get better at the craft of building and growing

products.

And I just think of it, there's these buckets of jobs to be done.

And then there's this like formal, let's just do it for real.

I guess one, do you find that to be true?

There's like the very simple and there's the more official.

So what I would say is I find a lot of founders, especially really successful

founders, like I would say Jason Freed's one of those where he intuitively

understood this, like he actually thinks this way, but didn't have language

wrapped around it.

Right?

So I think that it's a very useful framework.

I think that the danger you run into is that when you look at the customer

through the product, so if I look at the customer through the Snickers bar,

then I think of Milky Way as a competitor.

But if I look at the, if I look at the customer and say, why did they pick

that thing?

Then I realized that a protein shake and an apple and a sandwich are the

competitors, not Milky Way.

Got it.

So say someone wanted to start going in this direction of jobs to be done.

What is the simplest, I don't know, first version lightweight approach to

starting to think this way?

So there's two things.

If I have a product, you know, go find 10 people who recently bought your product.

But what I want you to do is go talk to them, not about the product, but about

why they bought the product.

What was going on?

What were they hoping for?

What were they worried about?

What did they have to give up?

How did they convince somebody else?

Just to just listen to the story.

Start with just getting the story because there's three levels of information

we have to get or three sources of energy that I talk about.

So think about is there's got to be energy in the system for us to do something.

And there's what I call functional energy, which is usually time, space, effort,

knowledge, right?

There's emotional energy, which is how I feel.

I want to feel better.

I feel frustrated.

I feel overlooked.

There's, there's, there's emotional aspects to it.

And then there's social aspects.

How I want others to perceive me or how others perceive me.

Oh, my boss is going to fire me because I, he doesn't think I'm doing this fast

enough and I feel inadequate.

So part of his understanding, kind of the emotional, social and functional

components that are part of that energy source.

Got it.

The second part is, is if it's an established product and it's been there

a while, I'd actually go and talk to people who churned.

Because in churn, what's interesting is when somebody leaves your product,

they're still making progress.

We think it's bad for us, which it probably is, but in their mind, it's

like, yeah, this was too hard and complicated or, you know what?

It didn't do enough for us.

It allows you to actually understand the struggling moment they had because

again, they were using your product and something happened and, and some

context change and now they struggle with it and now they got to go find

something else.

Nobody wants to change.

So that makes this actually the easiest thing to look at is, tell me why people

change.

We just seem to literally not want to go deep enough and we use the lazy word

of random and probability as pseudo for knowledge and it's not knowledge.

It's literally just if context is the same, if outcomes is the same, then I can

do it, but like if I listen to football stats, you know, third down, right?

In, in preseason is very different than third down in playoffs.

Right.

And so giving me a stat about how their third down conversion is,

across the whole season makes no sense to me because the context is different.

You brought up this point that people often say they really hate something and

it comes across that they're ready to switch and we'll use something that

you've built that's better, but they don't because of that friction you mentioned.

What do you look for that might tell you that they're really actually going to

use it for real and it's that serious?

The very first thing I would say is I never trust anybody telling me things

that they're going to do because they can't assure it and they usually never

happens. It's just it's, it's, it's, it's my experience that says that.

And so the thing is I need to talk to people who did something and tried and

though they might have failed, what made them try?

So the phrase I have is bitching ain't switching just because people bitch about

something doesn't mean they're going to do anything about it.

Right.

This is where like a base camp, we learned the fact that everybody said, oh, if

you had Gantt charts, you know, I'm going to leave you if you don't put Gantt

charts in our resource allocation.

And as much as they all say they want it, they're not leaving because of it.

And if you follow, this is the other part, if you follow your best users, they'll

take you up to this world that then actually destroys the lower end of the

world of why people are there.

And so if base camp would have added all those things, one of the reasons why

people join base camp is because it's so dang simple.

And if I start to add all these things that make it more complicated, it doesn't

work.

And so in those conversations, is there something you find that just this

is a sign they're actually really serious?

Or do you just like, I'm not going to listen to anything they're saying in

this case until we actually build it and they are using it.

So for example, in the first five minutes of an interview, they're going to tell

you, I bought a new car because I got a deal on it.

And it was, you know, it was a car I've been dreaming about forever.

And it was like, they have all these things.

And then when you start to get to it's like, no, the old car had 280,000

miles on it, get three large bills in the last four months.

The fact is it's making a sound and you've got a long trip coming up.

Like that's why you're getting a car.

You're not getting the car because of the deal.

And so this is where you, so there's these, I called the layers of language.

And the very first layer is called the Pablum layer where people just like,

how was your day?

I was good, right?

But nobody knows what that means.

And if you ask one farther question, well, what was good about it?

They're like, oh, and then you get to the next layer.

The next layer is usually the fantasy nightmare layer.

Oh, it was so good because of this or, oh my God, it was so bad because they

exaggerate to one degree or a next.

And then what you want to do is actually then pull it back to you.

Like what actually happened is where you've got to be more of an investigator

and an interrogator.

And the way I would describe it is it's criminal and intelligence interrogation

that feels like therapy because most people don't actually know why they

bought because they only think about the time they wrote the check, swipe the card.

But the reality is like I did an interview with somebody who bought a coat rack,

right, a hundred and thirty seven dollar coat rack.

It took them 18 months to buy it.

And in their mind, they bought it and they bought it.

They say they bought it in a week.

But the reality is, is like the debate about getting it and why they couldn't get

it was happening for over 18 months.

So this is where you can't believe what they say.

You have to, you have to do your investigation to get there.

And what does that phrase use again for that vector of progress?

The intention is the context that they're in and the outcome.

So here's the thing is that most people talk about you want to get to this

outcome and people value this outcome, but value is not just the outcome.

Value also has where you start.

So if I start here and I end here, I'm going to value it this much.

But if I start down here, right, I've got to get there.

Start down here and I go up here, I value it that much more.

And so part of it is, is value is actually part of where they're starting from

and where they want to go.

And most people say, if I just get them up here, they're really going to love it.

But some people say, like, I just want to get here.

And so you're overshooting it.

And they want to, they actually want to price discount because you're giving them

more than they want.

So I'm going to go in a different direction.

The most liked comment on LinkedIn, asking people what questions to ask you

was by Shriram Krishnan, who's actually on this podcast in the past.

Yeah, yeah, yeah, I remember he's seeing it.

I remember hearing it.

And I was, by the way, I think it's one of the reasons why I reached out

because I'm like, okay, I need, we need to clarify this a little.

Okay, great.

So you saw the grant.

He's not, not what you'd say a fan of Jops to be done.

And so, so here's the question you wanted to ask, is there a case of a startup

or modern technology company or any company that was using Jops to be done

to launch a product from zero to one that has had broad adoption?

That's this challenge inside the company or broad adoption that the product

that we've developed had broad adoption, the latter.

Yeah.

The product has done really well.

I already told you an example.

I can't say it, but you can, right?

It's, it's the thing is, is so, for example, auto books is another one that did this,

right?

They start to realize that the fact is, is like, you need to study the struggling

moments and it helps you determine what not to build, right?

Too many times we just keep adding more and more things to the product.

And so it, in larger organizations, it's very difficult because at some

point the dominant market research is, is about hypothesis testing.

Right?

I'm going to go build a hypothesis and go basically then go build a research

project to prove or disprove that hypothesis.

But the reality is, is Jops we've done research is hypothesis building research.

I don't know.

That's part of the point is like, we really don't know.

We think we know, but Dr.

Taguchi would always tell me there is way more unknown than there is known and

never forget it.

And so again, what causes people to buy windows is, is not what we think it is.

And so you start to realize that, I think Drucker said it best.

He goes, what, what businesses think they're selling is not what customers are

buying.

And to be honest, he said that 1953 and it's still true today.

Like I just did interviews today where they're like, oh, people are buying for

this reason.

And we did, we did, uh, what, 11, 12 interviews.

And you started to realize like, nope, that's not why they're buying.

And they're like shock.

Awesome.

Okay.

So you didn't say it, but maybe Facebook marketplace.

So if you went like, auto books would be one, you're trying from zero to one,

from nothing brand new product is, is kind of the question there.

Yep.

So, so at tech stars, we basically make sure that everybody does, they come in,

they usually don't have a product to start with.

And at least in the Chicago, uh, and, and San Francisco offices, we do, we basically

have do jobs in the very, very beginning of that.

And we have companies like Nutrasense and Havoc Shield.

And there's a whole bunch of them that are out there that are, that are growing

and, and, and going down that pathway.

And so to me, it's, it's, it's very, very useful, especially in the zero to one

space, but the notion is you have to realize the way that I frame it is what

will people stop using when your product comes out?

And that's who you want to go interview.

So for the marketplace thing, it was like, Hey, I wanted to stop using Craigslist.

I wanted to stop using eBay.

I wanted to stop using Etsy.

If that's the case, what are they doing?

And how do I do it better than that?

So I can understand there are really no new jobs.

Right.

It's just the fact is they, we get better at them.

And so the higher firecriteria and get better, but the context and outcome, most

jobs, I could look back 10 years and the job existed.

And I can look ahead 20 years and the jobs can exist.

It's just the, the nature of how the technology delivers on it is what gets better.

Awesome.

And it sounds like intercom and base camp also are very early jobs to be done adopters.

Very early.

Yep.

So I think with Sri Ram, something that I read between the lines as he worked at

Twitter for many years, and I think Twitter attempted the jobs to be done

framework and I don't know if it went well.

And I think it just caused a lot of people to think this is a terrible

framework.

So this is where I think there's, there's different flavors of it.

And what I would say is that, that one, one flavor is really what I call very

supply side driven where it takes the underlying technology and then looks at

it and says, all right, what else can we do?

Where can we be better?

Where are, where are things that are important, but we're not satisfying on

them and being able to prioritize.

And so there's a very systematic approach that's hundreds of steps and very,

very prescriptive in nature.

The method that I have and that I've been using mostly because I've been in the

startup world and, and doing new to the world type stuff is it's very,

very qualitative, organic and, and it's a combination of a process, practice

and, and skills.

So every company actually has its own innovation process based on who they

have, who they're serving, the underlying technology.

And so to have, in my opinion, to have a very predictive one process that

fits across everybody, I think there are, there are principles, but I don't

think there's one process.

And so that's where I think, I think that's what they used at Twitter.

The other thing is, is that I think, you know, Jack was, Jack was actually a

big fan and he worked with Clay on a couple of things, but I don't think

they worked on the method part of it.

They worked on the thinking part of it.

And so it was more about, so one of the most dangerous things you can do is

sit in a room and, and, and hypothesize what the jobs are, because I will

guarantee you you're 100% wrong.

And so this was, this is what happens by the way, being, this is the

gift of dyslexia is I'm not an A student.

And so most A students don't start until they know the answer.

Most, most D students start because they don't know the answer.

And so you start to realize we're very, very different.

Why are very differently to do that?

And so I always say that the A students have a, have a, have a disadvantage

against the D students in entrepreneurship, because we just go

start and we learn right that in there, we don't have to hypothesize everything

first, because we actually don't know how to do that.

So your advice there is essentially people often get jobs to be done wrong

because they just sit around and think about the jobs to be done and aren't

actually doing the work to interview and understand.

They think more about the outcomes and they think about what's the best

outcomes we can get for people.

And what you start to realize is that there are trade-offs people make.

And ultimately there's some irrational piece, some irrational component

that makes everything twist around.

Like the irrational component is like, why in the world do people eat

Snickers when they're hungry?

It's a candy bar.

Well, it turns out when you bite it, it's masticates into a ball and it sits

in your stomach and it absorbs the acid that's causing you to say, Hey,

I got to eat something.

And so part of it is the role of the peanuts and the role of the nougat is

actually to masticate it together.

The caramel should be sticking it together versus in a milky way.

The melting temperature of the caramel is so light that you take a bite.

It's liquid.

You drink it down.

You swallow it like it's a drink.

It has nothing to do with food.

And so you start to realize that it's connecting the experiences to the context

and outcome.

It's connecting the supply side with the demand side, but it starts with the

demand side first struggling moments and opportunities all exist before there's a

product making me hungry.

I bought, I brought it.

I bought a couple, but I didn't, I didn't use them, but I bought a couple.

And you start to, I mean, you go deep into it.

You start to realize that this is the crazy part.

Everybody thinks they compete, but like if you literally go back to a moment

when you picked up a Snickers bar, like you were not thinking about a milky way.

You weren't thinking of like half the candy aisle.

You were thinking of like, I want a sandwich or do I want a Snickers?

Like half the reason why they pick Snickers is it's 300 calories.

I can eat it in three bites.

It's done.

It's not messy and I can keep working.

It's main lining food.

I don't know if I've ever had a milky way to be honest.

So that's right.

I don't need that company.

That's the funny part is you go to the tech, the tech, all the big tech hubs

in San Francisco and, you know, the Snickers are all empty and the milky

ways are all full.

Yeah, I get that.

You mentioned that there's two different approaches or many of different

approaches to the jobs to be done framework.

And this is a question someone actually asked that there's maybe a framework

by someone named Tony Olwick, and then there's your approach.

And then maybe Clay Christensen maybe has an approach.

So can you just help clarify?

So Clay and I collaborated on it.

So I was lucky enough to have Clay as a mentor for 27 years.

I met with him once a quarter for 27 years.

And at some point I shared with them kind of the hack of how we kind of like how

I was thinking about this and what I was doing.

And at some point he said, we need to turn it into a theory.

To me, it was more like my work around because I couldn't read and write.

Let me go talk to some people.

I figured out.

And ultimately we turned it into a method.

So like if you look at competing against luck, it was written with Taddy Hall

and Karen Dillon and Dave Duncan.

But I was I helped on that book for 16 months.

Some of the clients in there are my clients.

I think Intercom is in that one.

So Clay and I are aligned in that.

Clay was more about turning it to a theory.

And I would say I'm more about having it be a method.

So his is like a thinking framework and a philosophy and a strategic kind of frame

where mine is very tactical about how do we get it?

And then what do we do with it?

Oh, it comes from a very different perspective.

And again, I think it's very valuable, but it comes from the notion of like functions.

And it's more like what can our product do?

What jobs can our product do as opposed to the way I look at it is,

you know, basically only people have jobs, products don't have jobs, people have jobs,

organizations don't have jobs, people in organizations have jobs because that's the irrational part.

And so fundamentally, there's that two different views of how do we look at it?

But but ultimately, I would say Clay's approach and my approach are derived from the same data set

where Alwix is derived from a different data set and a different set of experiences.

Super interesting.

I had no idea about this and your sense is in the case of Twitter, for example,

maybe is closer to Clay's just like think about it approach.

I think that's right.

I think that's right.

And and and again, I think I think Alwix is very valuable, especially in some companies

where there's lots of risk, there's regulation, there's lots of lots of moving parts,

very complicated systems.

But at the same time, it's so many steps.

You have to have a very disciplined organization to follow it.

If someone wanted to start actually following through on this,

which book would you recommend they start with to help them understand how to apply your approach?

I would have them read demand side sales.

And it's it basically is starting from the theory of why do people buy

and how do we actually understand how to flip the lens from trying to sell people

things to help them buy.

And ultimately, it has the entire method around it kind of frame for product and for founders.

Awesome.

Is Jeff to be done ever not the right framework for people to figure out what to build?

So so couple couple places.

One is when there's no choice or there's no real choice.

So so what's interesting is think about it.

Why do you know more about your car insurance than your health insurance?

Right.

And most of it is because your health insurance is given to you by your employer

and you only utilize it when you're sick.

But the car insurance, you have to pay for it.

So you have to sit down and decide what are the different trade offs you're going to make

where when you do it for the employer, it's good, better, best.

And it literally is like, where am I my life?

Have I been sick?

You know, there's a basic thing, but there's no real choice there.

And so you start to realize where there's no real choice or where people want to make the choice obvious.

It doesn't work.

You have to be able to accept how people see you as opposed to how you want to be seen.

So when companies will come to us and say, all right, I want you to find these jobs for us like,

nope, I can't do it because it doesn't work.

I could tell you what the demand side is asking for.

And then we can see how your product fits to it and what you have to modify to it.

But if I try to make the jobs help you build the case to make the jobs what you think they are, it doesn't work.

In those cases, there's different framework.

Your recommender is just like you don't really have a lot of options.

In a lot of cases, to me, there's I do some ethnography, I'd literally figure out kind of where

there's frictional points in the system.

I might do some prototyping around kind of different alternatives.

But typically it's more about what I would call the little hire or how do they use,

for example, the health insurance as opposed to why do they buy the health insurance?

The other example I could use is chewing gum.

If I talk to people about buying a packet chewing gum, most people can't remember

at all when they bought a packet chewing gum, even if it was in the last week.

Like, I think so.

But if I ask them when they chewed gum, they can tell me about when they chewed gum.

And ultimately that will then imply when they buy gum.

If you go to something that's just too, like it doesn't register, it's so deep of a habit that

they don't really know what they're doing.

You're never going to be able to get that information out of them.

It's again, the habitual stuff is very hard to see the job.

It's the only when people change, you can reveal the entire iceberg.

But if I've been using Tide for 20 years and I ask you, why do you hire Tide?

You just make it up.

You have no idea why I use Tide.

But if you switch from Tide to Gain or Gain to Tide, you can tell me that story very detail.

There's a reader who asked a really interesting question.

Maria Delano, is her name?

She's wondering, with a framework this well known,

you're bound to get people misinterpreting it and repeating inaccurate information about

the framework.

And she's curious what misconceptions most frustrate you that you just hear again and again

about jobs to be done.

The first thing I want to say is I actually, in doing it, I've explicitly made it very accessible.

Because the moment you make it too copy written, too patented, to whatever, people just move by it.

So part of it was being able to make it in the public domain so people could have conversation

and try it and do different things with it.

What I would say is there's enough people that have used it and worked with it and have had

great success with it that at some point in time, most of the people who are trying it

and not using it, well, it's obvious.

And so it'd be like, how do you double down into it?

I think one of the biggest misconceptions around jobs to be done is this notion that

it's pain and gain as opposed to context and outcome.

And that it's, I think one of the other ones is it's purely about the outcome and not just

about the context and outcome together.

And again, I think the biggest mistakes I've seen made is because they do it in a conference

room and they don't go talk to people.

They don't actually find the contradictions.

They don't find the irrational parts.

What's really interesting is when you hear somebody's story and it seems irrational,

like, well, that's an anomaly.

That doesn't happen.

But what you realize is that the context makes the irrational rational.

So the moment you hear a story and you go, I can't believe that nine times out of 10,

it's because you don't have the rest of the story.

And so part of it is being able to understand the rest of that context that would drive somebody

to say, like, why would somebody cut their arm off?

Well, if they're in this situation and this and this and this, like,

there's nobody who would say they want to cut their arm off.

But in certain situations, you'll do it.

And so that's what we're trying to do is find where is, where do, where will people

change behavior?

Most people are studying the momentum of where people are and where, like,

what's the momentum of their direction?

But the reality is, like, what we're trying to do is study what causes people to change their direction.

And that's where innovation happens.

Innovation happens when people change.

What convinced you to spend your time and life working on jobs to be done and helping people

implement this framework and what keeps pulling you back?

That's a great question.

So I think I started out as I just love to build things.

My mom would take me.

Basically, we have something around here called Big Trash Day is where they throw out the dishwasher

and they throw out the, you know, the old mini bike and all these different things.

And my mom would basically say, anything that we could fit in the trunk, we could bring home.

And so I've been building things my whole life because I've been just always fascinated

with how things work.

So that's the first thing.

The second part is I love to help people.

One of the things I realized is, like, I can't build products for myself.

And I've done seven startups, but I realized that I have to build for others.

And so to me, building for others was where I started in product.

And then I realized that I'm a method builder and that I really help people innovate.

And so I exist to help make the abstract concrete.

And so that phrase has helped lead me to becoming now a teacher and a professor and writing books

is something I never wanted to do because I hated books.

Clay convinced me that I had to learn how to speak and I had to write books.

So here's a really good one is that this is in 1990.

So one of the things that happened was when my kid, my youngest kid moved out and basically moved

out of the house, I had my notebooks from almost 30 years of every project and everything

I worked on, any company.

And this is from one of my mentors, Dr. Taguchi.

He said this in 1990 when I was living in Cologne, Germany, he said, write a book.

Right.

And so I opened this like 30 years later.

I'm like, oh, dang it.

I got to write a book because he told me to.

So it's just one of those things where I realized, like, I really like helping people.

I like creating methods.

I'm very curious.

Sometimes annoyingly curious.

But that's kind of the triad of things that I love to do.

Amazing.

Bob, is there anything else you wanted to share or touch on or make sure we cover before we get

to our very exciting lightning round?

There's three big things to think about.

One is struggling moments is the key.

And if you can't see, it's struggling moments that people take action on.

And what I would say is they're everywhere.

They are freaking everywhere in our lives.

And there's only certain contexts when all of a sudden we realize we have to do something

about it.

So study struggling moments because at some point, that's where we need the innovation

the most.

The second thing is think about the progress people are trying to make.

What is their standard, not your standard?

What is that context?

What is that outcome?

And the last thing is the way I'd phrase it is choose what to suck at.

Figure out the trade-offs that you need to make and make sure that your trade-offs map

the trade-offs of the customer.

Because nine times out of 10, most products that fail is because they made a trade-off

that the customer didn't agree with.

Awesome.

Well, with that, we've reached our very exciting lightning round.

I've got six questions for you.

Are you ready?

Yeah, I'm ready.

Always ready for these.

Perfect.

What are two or three books that you've recommended most to other people?

Shape Up by Ryan Singer.

It's phenomenal.

The other book I would say is End of Average by Todd Rose.

I listen to it every single year.

I get something out of every single year.

I've been listening to it for probably eight or 10 years.

I literally called Todd.

I've become friends with Todd.

We interact on a regular basis.

He's it's an amazing book.

What is a favorite recent movie or TV show?

I love Big Bang.

I watch it every like people would say that I'm Sheldon.

I think I'm more Leonard, but I can see there's days that I've come across as Sheldon.

I don't mean to be Sheldon, but I like Oppenheimer.

I think any of the science type, I'm not really a science fiction person,

but it's more about kind of I'll say historic documentaries as I love them all

because they help me understand the science.

What is a favorite interview question you like to ask when you're interviewing people?

What are the top three things you struggle with in your business today that if you could solve

would fundamentally change the business?

Love it.

What is a favorite product that you recently discovered that you just really like?

I recently purchased a massage chair and it's one of those things where I've been

getting massages for a while and as I get older and I'm working out more,

I've lost almost 100 pounds and so to the point where I'm working out more and I'm

God, nobody told me, well, I'm going to be cold all the time.

I'm sore all the time and I'm hungry all the time.

And so it's like, okay, I need a way in which to do so.

I would get a massage every two weeks or so and now I can get a massage in 20 minutes

on demand and it's pretty freaking amazing.

Man, my wife has wanted one of these and this might be good.

Oh, I will tell you, it's a life changer.

It's one of those things where I could do, we'll do interviews and I can go do an interview

and a debrief, pop in and do it and I'm fresh as I can be.

It's better than an app.

Is there a brand you want to throw out that you found to be your favorite?

Kioto is the one that I have.

I got it from Costco.

It's fabulous.

Okay, we will be looking into that.

What is something relatively minor you've changed and how a company has implemented

jobs to be done that has had a big impact on their ability to do it well?

There's two.

One is intercom.

The way that intercom really took off and why it did so well is it actually,

it was Des Trainer and Owen McCabe who were the two founders.

They came to one of my workshops in the beginning,

but they studied it and they tried to do it and then we talked about it.

But then they brought Matt Hodges and Paul Adams and Sean Townsend and the executive team

and they did the interviews and when they did the interviews, they understood what to do

and it literally all went downhill from there.

And they knew how to ask the questions and how to do the interviews.

It was kind of amazing.

Paul Adams and Matt Hodges' first day at intercom was in my office in Detroit.

So that to me is one of the keys.

The other is to find a place in a very large organization where a group is struggling.

They can't deliver product.

They can't move fast enough.

They keep getting the wrong insights.

They say it's going to be this big and Lily focusing on a very small area

and giving them a little space to demonstrate the use of it.

And then it will spread with a case study or two.

And so most companies, if they start small case studies and sharing it with people,

both when it works and not works or starting with the top.

Two more questions.

One is someone asked me to ask you at the dining room table story.

Does that ring any sort of bell?

Yeah. So one of the things I did is I built houses.

So before I built houses, I was running a venture capital private equity firm.

We had about 100 million.

I was doing 25 transactions and just traveling too much.

I had four children.

And so my wife and I kind of had the conversation that I wound it down.

And I said, what am I going to do?

I'm going to, I wanted to try to find a business I could work in and be part of

and be own part of.

So I joined a building company here in Detroit.

And we ended up building a thousand homes here in Detroit.

I had 14 sites.

And one of the things we did is we built for downsizers like your parents.

And one of the things they constantly told us was, look,

we're downsizing.

We're not having that.

We're not having the holidays.

We're done with that.

Like, like I don't want a dining room table so we can't even have people over.

If we're going to do it, we're going to go somewhere else.

Like, like I don't want the dining room table.

And so we made a, it's a two bedroom, two and a half bath, first floor laundry,

gourmet kitchen, kind of amazing condo.

But what we realized is people, if they didn't know where the dining room table

was going to go, they weren't going to move.

And so it wasn't, and it turns out that the dining table was the emotional bank

account for their entire life.

And so if they, if, if you weren't going to take it or your sister wasn't going

to take it or your brother wasn't going to take it, the reality is they weren't

going to give it to Goodwill.

It was not going to go in the basement, but it might go into the storage unit.

But for the most part, people would literally stay where they are until

they knew where the dining table is going to go.

So I did the opposite of what they told me to do, which is I built a place to put

the dining room table.

You could never eat at it.

It was never big enough to actually pull the chairs out of it, but it was still

a symbolic of what it was and they would use it for puzzles and that kind of,

but I sacrificed the second bedroom suite to basically add that and it increased sales 22%.

So this is a case where you learn, again, that, that irrational contradiction that

says, they said this, but you did that, that doesn't make any sense.

That's what jobs helps you with those kinds of really important, small, but subtle and

important insights.

Last question, you showed me this very cool camera setup you have and one of the views

was your heroes on the wall.

Yeah, yeah, yeah.

Can you show that and share who those folks are?

Yeah, so this is, this is, so I don't like at the end of the night, I have this philosophy

that I have the energy in your body and your brain.

Literally, you need to use every ounce of it every day because you wake up the next

day with a full bank account.

And you can't really save it.

So every night I paint and so these are paintings of my mentors and they're above me,

but Dr. Deming Clay, Dr. Taguchi and Dr. Willie Moore, I wrote about them in a book called

The Learning to Build and the five skills that they taught me to enable me to kind of

work on so many different things in different areas.

And so Deming, I met when I was 18, he took me to Japan.

I worked for Ford and Ford and I was responsible on the front lines to help reduce product

development cycle time at Ford from 72 months to 36 months.

So that's where I learned a lot of tools and methods and things like that from Toyota.

And then I learned Dr. Taguchi's method, which is amazing around designed experiments.

Dr. Willie Moore was my first boss at Ford and she was a PhD in particle physics and

she taught me empathetic perspective of how to see things and frame things and really

amazing, amazing individual.

And then the last one was Clay Christensen, which is I just walked in his office

and he had a sign outside his office basically saying anomalies wanted.

And I walked in and I said, look, I'm an anomaly.

I don't really know if you want anomalies, but I am.

And we sat down and started talking.

And ultimately I asked him, what's your research and how can I help?

And he had been there maybe about a year.

And it was one of those things where he got kind of like somber and like,

it was almost like I had a tear and I was like, what's going on?

He goes, I've been here a year and everybody's asked me for things, but nobody's ever asked

to help me and you're the first person.

And so that was the beginning of the relationship.

And I had four hours a quarter for 27 years with Clay with no agenda, which is kind of amazing.

That's incredible.

What a beautiful way to wrap up our chat, Bob.

My job to be done for this interview is to help people understand jobs to be done.

I think we accomplished our goal as much as we can in one hour.

Two final questions.

Where can folks find you online if they want to reach out and maybe ask you a question?

Yeah, LinkedIn is probably the best place.

And I post most of the stuff there.

And then I have several different companies, but one is called the Rewired Group.

And I've had that for about 14 years.

And that's where that's a design consultancy agency around helping people build and launch

products.

And we do everything from Fortune 100 to not-for-profits to startups in different ways.

And then I have something called Laser Ventures where we actually work for equity.

And we also put money into investments as well.

And that's called Laser Ventures with Andrew Glazer.

We have a podcast called The Circuit Breaker, which is more or less all these different concepts

in 20-minute format of me and my partner just kind of riffing around what is the empathetic

perspective or what are the forces of progress or just small little things that basically

help people kind of learn along the way.

And it's just long enough for a commute or a walk or something like that.

Last question.

How can listeners be useful to you?

To be honest, I was so excited for this podcast.

Like, I was excited, one, because I'm a fan, but two is to see your post and then get all

those responses.

I think I said, like, boy, I think we need more than an hour.

This is this amazing.

And so to be honest, posting questions, asking questions, letting the community kind of interact.

And what was so interesting is it was people who had questions, but then there were people

like Dez and Jason who reached out and said, oh, this will be awesome.

You'll love this.

All those kind of things.

So to me, just keep being a community.

And what I would say is as this is posted, just put more questions up there.

And the hard part for me is actually answering questions in a written form.

And so my request would be is that if we can figure out a format so I can answer them

more in a conversation where we like almost like a list of things where there might be

a follow-up of some sort.

But if your listeners could literally help me by being more articulate, that would be great.

Okay, let's figure out if we can do some weight of doing that.

That would be amazing.

That would be great.

Bob, again, thank you so much for being here.

Thanks.

Thanks for having me.

Bye, everyone.

Thank you so much for listening.

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Also, please consider giving us a rating or leaving a review,

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You can find all past episodes or learn more about the show

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See you in the next episode.

Machine-generated transcript that may contain inaccuracies.

Brought to you by Sidebar—Catalyze your career with a Personal Board of Directors | Merge—A single API to add hundreds of integrations into your app | Eppo—Run reliable, impactful experiments

Bob Moesta is the co-creator of the Jobs To Be Done (JTBD) framework, a close collaborator of Clay Christensen, and CEO and founder of The Re-Wired Group. He has helped launch more than 3,500 new products, services, and businesses and built and sold several startups himself. He is also a fellow at the Clayton Christensen Institute and a guest lecturer at the Harvard Business School, MIT Sloan School of Entrepreneurship, and Northwestern University’s Kellogg School of Management. In this episode, we discuss:

• What Snickers and Milky Way can teach us about JTBD

• The various flavors of the JTBD framework

• Best practices for implementing the framework

• Advice on conducting interviews for B2B vs. B2C customers

• Common mistakes people make when implementing JTBD

• When not to use it

Find the full transcript at: https://www.lennyspodcast.com/the-ultimate-guide-to-jtbd-bob-moesta-co-creator-of-the-framework/#transcript

Where to find Bob Moesta:

• Twitter/X: https://twitter.com/bmoesta

• LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/bobmoesta/

• Website: http://www.therewiredgroup.com/

Where to find Lenny:

• Newsletter: https://www.lennysnewsletter.com

• Twitter/X: https://twitter.com/lennysan

• LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/lennyrachitsky/

In this episode, we cover:

(00:00) Bob’s background

(04:04) A simple explanation of the Jobs To Be Done framework

(07:29) Struggling moments and demand

(09:51) Understanding the context behind pain points

(11:14) Reducing friction in the sales process

(14:46) How Autobooks improved their buying process and 4x’ed conversion

(16:52) The six phases of the buying process

(18:30) The JTBD interview process

(21:55) How Bob’s TBI affected his reading/writing and how he is able to write books

(22:02) Why people switch companies

(27:18) Tips for JTBD interviewing

(30:07) Why you should not have a discussion guide

(32:48) The danger of looking at the customer through the product

(33:53) First steps in applying the JTBD framework

(36:25) Signs people are ready for a change

(37:43) Bob’s “layers of language”

(40:15) Examples of companies with a broad adoption of JTBD

(43:59) The different flavors of JTBD and common mistakes to avoid when implementing it

(48:19) Bob’s work with Clay Christensen on JTBD theory

(51:05) When not to use JTBD

(53:40) Common misconceptions about the framework

(55:55) What compelled Bob to spend so much of his life on JTBD

(58:07) Three big takeaways

(59:07) Lightning round

Referenced:

• Jason Fried on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/jason-fried/

• Des Traynor on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/destraynor

• Southern New Hampshire University: https://degrees.snhu.edu/

• Paul LeBlanc on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/paul-j-leblanc-6a17749/

Demand-Side Sales 101: Stop Selling and Help Your Customers Make Progress: https://www.amazon.com/Demand-Side-Sales-101-Customers-Progress/dp/1544509987

• Autobooks: https://www.autobooks.co/

• Intercom: https://www.intercom.com/

• Zendesk: https://www.zendesk.com/

• HubSpot: https://www.hubspot.com/

• The Kellogg School of Management at Northwestern University: https://www.kellogg.northwestern.edu/

• Y Combinator: https://www.ycombinator.com/

• Michael Horn on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/michaelbhorn/

• Ethan Bernstein on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/ethanbernstein/

Never Split the Difference: Negotiating as If Your Life Depended on It: https://www.amazon.com/Never-Split-Difference-Negotiating-Depended/dp/0062407805

• William Edwards Deming on Wikipedia: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/W._Edwards_Deming

• Basecamp: https://basecamp.com/

• Sriram and Aarthi on Lenny’s Podcast: https://www.lennyspodcast.com/hot-takes-and-techno-optimism-from-techs-top-power-couple-sriram-and-aarthi/

• Genichi Taguchi: https://www.qualitygurus.com/genichi-taguchi/

• Tony Ulwick on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/tonyulwick/

• The Clayton Christensen Institute on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/clayton-christensen-institute/

Shape Up: https://basecamp.com/shapeup

The End of Average: Unlocking Our Potential by Embracing What Makes Us Different: https://www.amazon.com/End-Average-Unlocking-Potential-Embracing/dp/0062358375

The Big Bang Theory on TBS: https://www.tbs.com/shows/the-big-bang-theory/watch-now

Oppenheimer: https://www.oppenheimermovie.com/

• Kyota massage chairs at Costco: https://www.costco.com/massage-chairs-cushions.html?brand=Kyota&refine=%7C%7CBrand_attr-Kyota

• Paul Adams on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/pauladams/

• Matt Hodges on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/mattnhodges/

• Andrew Glaser on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/glaserandrew/

Production and marketing by https://penname.co/. For inquiries about sponsoring the podcast, email podcast@lennyrachitsky.com.

Lenny may be an investor in the companies discussed.



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