The activities, tools and stakeholders involved in developing products comprise the Product Development Lifecycle (PDLC). Our customers have found the Xodiac PDLC a useful tool to explain how they deliver products and where they currently have gaps, whether in activities, tools, responsibilities or skills.
Let’s explain the key activities of the Xodiac PDLC, why each activity is necessary and how they all work together to create a dynamic learning environment.
Effective product development hinges on a well-organized sequence of activities that collectively form the PDLC. These activities are not stages; they are a strategic approach to crafting products that meet user expectations, from which businesses benefit. Their iterative nature enables continuous refinement and improvement of the final product.
The core processes are:
It all starts with product design, in which the product's vision is con...
Over the last few weeks, we’ve talked about five specific benefits that Business Agility can bring to your organization. Among them are:
While Business Agility brings many benefits, implementing it effectively is a challenge. When adopting Business Agility, businesses are bound to encounter both internal and external challenges.
These challenges must be addressed if you wish to get the most benefits from implementing business agility into your organization. Below we discuss five of these challenges. We have also discussed these on our Definitely, Maybe Agile podcast. Let us take a look at these obstacles, and how to work through them.
For this fifth article in our series on how business agility can improve your bottom line, we look at how business agility aids building resilient systems. Here business agility practices help by aiding us in looking at risk management for the entire system. Not only ensuring the systems we build respond even when under stress, but helping us build safety into the system.
Business owners tend to underestimate the cost of recruiting and retaining the talent needed to grow. In 2022, it was reported that companies spend an average of over $4,683 and about an eighth of the financial year for recruitment and training per new hire. Recruitment costs can add up, especially if your business has a high turnover rate.
Losing top talent is clearly a cost that businesses have to consider. Perhaps the most immediate impact that losing employees has on an organization is lowering team morale. Employees enjoy having a friend or confidant in the workplace and seeing their colleague leave will weaken their connection to the organization. We saw this in mid-2021 as the “Great Resignation” had millions of employees leaving their jobs in droves.
Previously, we’ve talked about how business agility can increase your company’s bottom line by:
lowering costs through improving delivery processes, being more deliberate when choosing projects, as well as reducing churn
increasing revenue through releasing high-quality products, creating feedback loops, and capitalizing opportunities
Today we'll talk about a third benefit: how business agility can increase your company’s bottom line by improving alignment with its customers.
The next topic in our series on Business Agility for your bottom line is how the adoption of business agility practices can help increase your revenue. When it comes to building a profitable organization, a key goal is to increase revenue. Business agility helps an organization’s revenue growth in many ways, here are three:
Put out high-quality products into the market
Accelerate feedback loops to learn from customers
Identify opportunities to capitalize on
Introducing business agility to an organization can have a lot of benefits to a company's bottom line. It can increase revenue, profitability, and employee retention rates. Among these improvements, one change that can often heavily and rapidly affect a company’s bottom line is reducing the cost of delivery.
Business Agility enables a company to reduce cost of delivery through:
improving its delivery processes
becoming more deliberate with its projects
having a willingness to stop