Product Metrics & Analytics
This product metrics board is designed to help you map out key goals, metrics and specific analytics data to inform decision-making.
Each framework is designed to help you clarify a key aspect of any data-informed product process.
Furthermore, each framework is designed to help you align & help you communicate important concepts to your organisation.
We suggest "working backwards", to borrow a term from Amazon, and start with your overall key metric / goals.
This template was created by Prod MBA.
Get started with this template right now.
Project Proposal Template
Works best for:
Project Management, Documentation, Project Planning
For any type of project, the Project Proposal template can be a crucial step toward clarifying the context, goals, and scope of a project to get stakeholder buy-in. A project proposal outlines what you want to accomplish, your goals, and how you plan to achieve them. Generally, a project proposal gives the reader some context on the project, explains why it is important, and lists the actions that you will take to complete it. Project proposals have myriad uses. Often, businesses use project proposals to get external buy-in from a donor or outside stakeholder. But many companies draw up project proposals for internal buy-in too.
The Product Hunt
Works best for:
Product Management, Planning
The Product Hunt template provides a platform for collecting and prioritizing product ideas. By allowing teams to submit, review, and vote on ideas, this template fosters a culture of innovation and collaboration. With features for categorizing ideas, tracking progress, and celebrating successes, it promotes transparency and engagement across teams. This template serves as a central hub for capturing and nurturing innovative ideas, driving continuous improvement and product innovation.
Process Map Template
Works best for:
Agile Methodology, Product Management, Mapping
Process mapping allows you to assess, document, and strategize around any plan or approach your team has put in place. It’s a useful tool for eliminating or preventing blockers. Organized by stages, a process map enables your team to divide up a process or system and record deliverables and action items at each stage of the process. By breaking down the objectives, activities and deliverables at any stage of a project, you can gain insight into whether you are on track or effectively working through a problem.
UML Diagram Template
Works best for:
Diagrams, Software Development
Originally used as a modeling language in software engineering, UML has become a popular approach to application structures and documenting software. UML stands for Unified Modeling Language, and you can use it to model business processes and workflows. Like flowcharts, UML diagrams can provide your organization with a standardized method of mapping out step-by-step processes. They allow your team to easily view the relationships between systems and tasks. UML diagrams are an effective tool that can help you bring new employees up to speed, create documentation, organize your workplace and team, and streamline your projects.
B2B – Product Journey Map & User Network
Works best for:
Planning, Product Management
The B2B Product Journey Map & User Network template helps product teams visualize and understand the complex journey of B2B customers. By mapping user interactions, pain points, and touchpoints across the buyer's journey, this template provides insights into user behavior and preferences. With sections for analyzing user needs, identifying opportunities, and optimizing user experiences, it enables teams to design tailored solutions and drive customer satisfaction. This template serves as a strategic tool for enhancing B2B product offerings and maximizing customer value.
HEART Framework Template
Works best for:
Desk Research, Project Management, User Experience
Happiness, Engagement, Adoption, Retention, and Task Success. Those are the pillars of user experience — which is why they serve as the key metrics in the HEART framework. Developed by the research team at Google, this framework gives larger companies an accurate way to measure user experience at scale, which you can then reference throughout the product development lifecycle. While the HEART framework uses five metrics, you might not need all five for every project — choose the ones that will be most useful for your company and project.