Chat with us, powered by LiveChat Read the attached article. Research a need and create a one to two page Press Release that covers the items in the article include the FAQ from the Working Backwards Podca - EssayAbode

Read the attached article. Research a need and create a one to two page Press Release that covers the items in the article include the FAQ from the Working Backwards Podca

 

link: https://blog.hubspot.com/marketing/press-release-template-ht

  

Read the attached article. Research a need and create a one to two page Press Release that covers the items in the article include the FAQ from the Working Backwards Podcast. Post it and comment on at least one other student's press release in a meaningful way. Think critically as you are now the manager evaluating this idea and its benefit to the organization.

Amazon Uses a Secret Process for Launching New Ideas.pdf  

How to write a product press release with template.

Be sure to verify that it is a new idea or product by googling the product.

Having trouble with an original idea?

Maybe seeing these from 2020 might be inspirational.

Time Magazine Best Inventions of 2020

https://www.inc.com/justin-bariso/amazon-uses-a-secret-process-for-launching-new-ideas-and-it-can- transform-way-you-work.html

Amazon Uses a Secret Process for Launching New

Ideas–and It Will Transform the Way You Work

It's called "working backwards." Here's why it's brilliant.

By Justin BarisoAuthor, EQ [email protected]

GETTY IMAGES

Over the past 25 years, Amazon has transformed itself. What began as an online

bookseller has become one of the world's largest retailers. Beyond that, Amazon is

the market leader in cloud storage services (AWS), is a major producer of both

television and film (Amazon Studios), and has now entered the health care market.

https://www.inc.com/justin-bariso/amazon-uses-a-secret-process-for-launching-new-ideas-and-it-can- transform-way-you-work.html

Of course, not all of Amazon's ideas pan out. (Anyone out there still have a Fire

Phone?) But even when they don't, the lessons learned prove invaluable–and

sometimes lead to even more extraordinary ideas.

So, how do Jeff Bezos and co. do it? How do they decide on which ideas to focus

their considerable resources, and which they want to leave behind?

Ian McAllister, Director of Amazon Day and former Director of Amazon Smile,

shared an insightful look into Amazon's approach for product development on

Quora a few years ago.

The approach is known as "working backwards."

Let's break down how this process works and see how it can help you and your

business.

Working backwards

According to McAllister, working backwards begins by "[trying] to work backwards

from the customer, rather than starting with an idea for a product and trying to bolt

customers onto it."

For new initiative, the process begins with a formidable task: A product manager

must write an internal press release announcing a finished product.

"Internal press releases are centered around the customer problem, how current

solutions (internal or external) fail, and how the new product will blow away existing

solutions," writes McAllister. "If the benefits listed don't sound very interesting or

exciting to customers, then perhaps they're not (and shouldn't be built)."

In that case, the manager must continue revising the press release until they've

come up with something better. A lot of work for an idea that may never come to

fruition? Yes. But as McAllister explains, "Iterating on a press release is a lot less

expensive than iterating on the product itself (and quicker!)."

https://www.inc.com/justin-bariso/amazon-uses-a-secret-process-for-launching-new-ideas-and-it-can- transform-way-you-work.html

McAllister goes on to share a sample outline for an internal press release:

Heading: Name the product in a way the reader (i.e., your target customers) will

understand.

Subheading: Describe who the market for the product is and what benefit they get.

One sentence only underneath the title.

Summary: Give a summary of the product and the benefit. Assume the reader will not

read anything else so make this paragraph good.

Problem: Describe the problem your product solves.

Solution: Describe how your product elegantly solves the problem.

Quote from You: A quote from a spokesperson in your company.

How to Get Started: Describe how easy it is to get started.

Customer Quote: Provide a quote from a hypothetical customer that describes how

they experienced the benefit.

Closing and Call to Action: Wrap it up and give pointers where the reader should go

next.

In addition to the above template, McAllister advises that you should keep the press

release simple, a page and a half or less, with paragraphs made up of no more than

three to four sentences.

Part of keeping it simple means writing for mainstream customers, a technique

McAllister calls "Oprah-speak." "Imagine you're sitting on Oprah's couch and have

just explained the product to her, and then you listen as she explains it to her

audience," he writes. "That's 'Oprah-speak,' not 'geek-speak.'"

If the product actually makes it into development, the press release can then be

used as a touchstone.

https://www.inc.com/justin-bariso/amazon-uses-a-secret-process-for-launching-new-ideas-and-it-can- transform-way-you-work.html

When building major products, it's easy to get carried away with trying to add new

features or address minor details, a problem known in project management as

"scope creep." To help battle that, McAllister advises product teams ask

themselves: "Are we building what's in the press release?" If not, they need to ask

themselves why.

How working backwards can help you

This approach isn't just smart, it's emotionally intelligent, too.

Sometimes, we're emotionally attached to ideas that just aren't that good in the end.

But the more time and effort we invest into these ideas, the more difficult it is to let

go of them. This can result in a lot of wasted time, energy, and other resources

spent to build a product that was never going to be that good in the end.

By working backwards, you get the chance to work on your idea and flesh it out. But

you're also forced to put it to the test. After writing and rewriting, refining and

reiterating, it will become clear if the idea is really worth pursuing. That clarity often

helps you to let go of mediocre ideas so you can concentrate on great ones.

And when you do decide to move forward, your press release will help you to stay

focused, and also to continue to see things through the eyes of your customer–and

communicate in a way they'll easily understand.

So, the next time you think you've got a great idea, make sure to work backwards–

and transform your work from good to great.

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