BBD · PRODUCT & SERVICE DEVELOPMENT SERVICE 07 / 16
CAPABILITY 07 / 16

Product,
shipped to fit.

For businesses ready to turn an idea — or a stalled roadmap — into something the market actually buys.

Diagnosis-firstUser-ledBuild-to-validateRight-sizedProduction-ready
Capability
Product & Service Development
Position
Between feature factory and analysis paralysis
Entry
Product Diagnostic
Typical Deploy
6–16 weeks to MVP
Fit
Founder's Build · Targeted Build · Launch Retainer
Headquarters
Miami, FL · United States
PRODUCT & SERVICE DEVELOPMENT

A capability brief from Bespoke Business Development — diagnostic-led, senior-run, and built to operate inside the business, not pitch around it.

BESPOKE BUSINESS DEVELOPMENT MIAMI · NEW YORK · LONDON · TOKYO
01
01 · The Shift

No longer a roadmap.
An evidence-led build cycle.

Product teams that win don't ship more — they ship the right things, faster, against evidence. The new bar is short cycles, real users, and the discipline to kill ideas that don't earn their place.

THE OLD ASSUMPTION

Product was a roadmap exercise — quarters of features, sequenced by stakeholder lobbying, validated by demo applause.

Discovery was optional. Build was the work.

THE NEW REALITY

Discovery is the work. Build is the consequence. The teams that ship product the market wants run continuous validation against real users.

Without an evidence-led product motion, every roadmap is a series of expensive bets — and the lesson learned is always the same one, six months too late.

LEVERAGE

Evidence

Decisions made on user behavior, not stakeholder opinion.

LEVERAGE

Speed

Short cycles. MVPs in weeks. Validate before scaling.

LEVERAGE

Right-size

Build the smallest thing that proves the thesis — not the biggest thing the team can imagine.

02
02 · Two Traps

Most product efforts collapse into
one of two failures.

The gap between product that finds a market and product that doesn't isn't engineering talent. It's whether the build was scoped against a hypothesis worth testing.

TRAP 01
FACTORY

Shipping features, moving no metrics.

A team measured on velocity. A backlog measured by length. Activation, retention, and revenue measured… occasionally.

The cost is invisible — until churn climbs and no one can identify which feature actually earned a user back.

TRAP 02
FROZEN

Six months of discovery, nothing in the wild.

Endless workshops, framework-shopping, and prototypes that never reach a real user. Confidence chases its own tail.

The cost is visible — every month — as runway shortens and competitors ship.

What separates product that finds a market from product that doesn't is not engineering talent. It is whether discovery, build, and measurement run as one continuous loop — sized to the smallest thing that proves the thesis.
03
03 · The BBD Approach

Diagnose first.
Build to validate.

BBD treats product the same way every engagement is treated — by isolating the thesis worth testing before any meaningful build investment is committed.

01

Product Diagnostic

Map the user, the problem, the alternatives, and the economics. Find the thesis the build will actually test.

02

Discovery & Design

Interviews, prototypes, and the design work that turns a thesis into something a user can react to.

03

Build to Validate

Engineering scoped to the smallest thing that proves the thesis — not the biggest thing the team can imagine.

04

Measure & Iterate

Activation, retention, and revenue tracked from day one. Iteration scoped to where the data says it matters.

WHAT YOU WON'T GET

A 24-month roadmap. A feature factory. A 'minimum viable product' that's actually a maximum first version. A launch with no measurement attached.

WHAT YOU WILL GET

A validated thesis, a shipped MVP, and a measurement layer that decides what to build next — followed by the iteration cadence that turns one launch into a compounding product.

04
04 · Operational Scope

Three layers
of product work.

Product development extends across discovery, build, and operation. The scope below maps where the work creates measurable leverage.

01 / DISCOVERY

Find the thesis.

Research, prototyping, and the design work that turns a hunch into a hypothesis worth building.

  • User research and JTBD discovery
  • Concept and prototype testing
  • Competitive product analysis
  • Pricing and packaging discovery
02 / BUILD

Ship the thesis.

Engineering, design, and product management — scoped to validate, not to over-build.

  • MVP design and engineering
  • Service design and operational delivery
  • Integration and platform work
  • Production-grade quality at MVP scale
03 / OPERATION

Compound the product.

Analytics, iteration, and the team rhythm that turns a launch into a compounding asset.

  • Activation and retention analytics
  • Iteration and release cadence
  • Customer feedback systems
  • Roadmap operating model
05
05 · The Practice Areas

Six practice areas.
One product motion.

Each practice stands on its own or chains with the others. Most engagements begin with the diagnostic and move outward from there.

01

Product Diagnostic & Strategy

The diagnostic entry point. The thesis worth building — and the metric it has to earn.
Founder's Build · Targeted Build

A fixed-scope diagnostic that produces a prioritized product action plan — and the measurement framework that closes the loop.

User and JTBD researchWho is buying, why, and what would make them switch.
Competitive and alternative analysisIncluding 'do nothing' as a credible alternative.
Economic modelUnit economics, pricing thesis, and target metrics.
Strategic thesisThe single hypothesis the next build will test.
Risk and assumption mappingWhat has to be true — and how to test it cheaply.
Sequenced build planMVP, V1, V2 — sized to evidence, not aspiration.
02

Service Design

For businesses where the 'product' is actually a service.
Founder's Build · Targeted Build

Service design treats delivery, support, and customer experience as the product — and engineers them with the same discipline software teams apply to features.

Service blueprintingEnd-to-end mapping of the delivery experience.
Operating playbooksThe repeatable steps that scale beyond founder-led delivery.
Pricing and packagingService offers structured around real delivery economics.
Quality and consistencyStandards that hold as the team grows.
Customer experience designTouchpoints designed, not improvised.
ProductizationWhere to turn parts of the service into shippable product.
03

MVP & V1 Engineering

Build, scoped to validate.
Founder's Build · Targeted Build

An MVP isn't a stripped-down dream. It's the smallest, sharpest thing that proves the thesis — built well enough to scale if the thesis holds.

Front-end engineeringModern stacks — React, Next.js, Vue, mobile.
Back-end engineeringAPIs, services, and data architecture.
Auth, payments, and core infraThe plumbing that has to be right.
Mobile (iOS / Android)Native or React Native, fit to the audience.
Cloud and DevOpsRight-sized hosting and CI/CD.
Production-grade MVPQuality bar that doesn't have to be rebuilt at scale.
04

UX & Product Design

The user experience and design system inside the product.
Founder's Build · Targeted Build · Launch Retainer

Product design that earns the next click. Onboarding, core loops, and the systems that hold up as the product surface area expands.

Onboarding flowsFirst-run experiences tuned to time-to-value.
Core loopsThe few flows the product is actually used for.
Information designDashboards, reporting, and complex views.
Interaction and motionMicrointeractions that signal quality.
Accessibility (WCAG AA)Designed in, not bolted on.
Product design systemComponents and patterns that scale with the team.
05

Product Analytics & Insight

The measurement layer that decides what to build next.
Targeted Build · Launch Retainer

A product without measurement is theatre. Analytics, instrumentation, and the dashboards that turn user behavior into a decision input.

Event taxonomyA measurement plan, not a tag salad.
InstrumentationServer-side and client-side, end to end.
Activation and retention dashboardsThe two metrics that decide product fate.
Cohort and funnel analysisWhere users land — and where they leak.
Customer feedback systemsNPS, in-product, and qualitative loops.
Experimentation frameworkA/B testing as a discipline, not a stunt.
06

Product Operations & Iteration

The cadence that turns a shipped MVP into a compounding product.
Launch Retainer

Most products fail in months 4–12 — when the launch high fades and the team can't decide what to build next. The retainer runs the iteration cadence and protects against drift.

Discovery / build / measure cadenceA weekly rhythm that holds.
Roadmap operating modelOutcomes — not feature-counts.
Release managementPredictable, low-drama shipping.
Customer feedback synthesisContinuous read on what users actually want.
Experimentation operationsTest queue, instrumentation QA, and learning capture.
Metric reviewsWeekly and monthly product reviews against targets.
TIMELINE

6–16 weeks

From diagnostic to a production-grade MVP in market — sized to the thesis being tested.

DISCIPLINE

One thesis

Each build cycle scoped to a single, defensible hypothesis — not a feature wishlist.

MEASUREMENT

Day 1

Activation, retention, and revenue instrumented from launch — not bolted on later.

LEVERAGE

Build × kill

The discipline to ship the smallest thing that proves the thesis — and to kill ideas that don't earn it.

06
06 · Platforms & Stack

The toolkit
that delivers.

The stack is built around shipping production-grade product fast — and measuring it from day one.

Design
Figma

Product design, prototyping, and design system ops.

Front-end
React · Next.js · Vue

Modern web stacks tuned to the workload.

Mobile
Swift · Kotlin · React Native

Native or hybrid, fit to the audience.

Back-end
Node · Python · Go

APIs and services, sized to the lifecycle.

Database
Postgres · DynamoDB

Right-sized data infrastructure.

Cloud
AWS · GCP · Vercel

Hosting and DevOps as a discipline.

Auth
Auth0 · Clerk

Authentication that scales with the product.

Payments
Stripe

Subscription, usage-based, and marketplace billing.

Analytics
Amplitude · Mixpanel

Product analytics and cohort behavior.

Experimentation
Statsig · LaunchDarkly

Feature flags and A/B testing.

Feedback
Pendo · Userpilot

In-product feedback and onboarding.

AI Layer
OpenAI · Anthropic

LLM-backed product features.

07
07 · Use Cases

What this looks like
in a real business.

Nine patterns that show up across most engagements — grouped by discovery, build, and operation.

DISCOVERY
Validating an idea

Before any meaningful engineering, the thesis is tested through prototypes, interviews, and a sharp economic model — half of ideas die here for the right reasons.

Leverage · Capital saved
DISCOVERY
Re-framing a stalled product

An existing product that's flatlined gets a fresh JTBD read and a new core thesis — and the next release moves the metric.

Leverage · Stagnation broken
DISCOVERY
Pricing and packaging

Discovery extends into pricing — willingness-to-pay tested before features get built around the wrong economic model.

Leverage · Right model
BUILD
MVP launch

A validated thesis turned into a production-grade MVP in 8–12 weeks — scoped tight enough to ship, robust enough to scale.

Leverage · Time-to-market
BUILD
Service productization

Parts of a high-touch service productized into self-serve features — and gross margin lifts without sacrificing experience.

Leverage · Better margin
BUILD
Mobile companion

A web product extends to a focused mobile companion — not a full mobile app, just the surfaces that need to be in-pocket.

Leverage · Right surface
OPERATION
Activation overhaul

Onboarding redesigned around time-to-value — activation rate climbs and downstream retention improves visibly.

Leverage · Activation × LTV
OPERATION
Retention loop

Cohort analysis exposes where users churn — and the next two releases are scoped at exactly that point.

Leverage · Lower churn
OPERATION
Experimentation discipline

A/B testing turned from one-off stunts into a weekly discipline — and the team starts shipping winners instead of debating opinions.

Leverage · Compounding wins
08
08 · Engagement Fit

How product enters
a BBD engagement.

Product development is a layer inside the three engagement models — not a separate dev shop relationship. The right entry depends on where the business is.

ENGAGEMENT 01

The Founder's Build

Product built before the business runs. Discovery, MVP scoping, and build sequencing inside the foundation — so the company launches with a thesis, an MVP, and measurement live.

  • Discovery and JTBD inside the foundation
  • MVP scoped tight enough to ship in weeks
  • Production-grade engineering at MVP scale
  • Analytics and feedback live from day one
ENGAGEMENT 02

The Targeted Build

For businesses already running. A scoped intervention on the part of the product that's stalled — usually a re-thesis, an MVP for a new line, or a critical surface (onboarding, retention).

  • MVP for a new product or line
  • Onboarding and activation rebuilds
  • Retention-loop product work
  • Service productization sprints
ENGAGEMENT 03

The Launch Retainer

Ongoing product motion after the build. Discovery, build, and measure run as one continuous cadence — and the roadmap stays accountable to outcomes.

  • Discovery / build / measure cadence
  • Release management and quality
  • Experimentation operations
  • Roadmap operating model
09
09 · Frequently Asked

Questions we answer
before the consultation.

Plain answers to the questions that come up on most first calls.

Are you a dev shop?

No. BBD runs product the way an in-house product team runs it — discovery, design, engineering, and measurement as one motion. Most dev-shop tradeoffs (scope creep, unowned strategy, post-launch silence) collapse inside the BBD model.

Web or mobile?

Whichever the user actually uses. The diagnostic decides — and many products live primarily on web with a focused mobile companion, not a full native app on day one.

What does 'production-grade MVP' mean?

Built well enough to scale if the thesis holds. Real auth, real payments, real performance budgets, real security — at the smallest scope that tests the thesis. Not throwaway code.

How do we know what to cut from scope?

The thesis. Anything not required to test the thesis gets cut. The diagnostic produces a sharp definition of the thesis — and most scope-cutting decisions become obvious from there.

Do you handle service businesses too?

Yes. Service design, productization, and operating playbooks are first-class practice areas. Many BBD engagements turn high-touch services into hybrid product/service motions.

What's measured at launch?

Activation, retention, and revenue — instrumented from day one. Plus the specific behavioral hypothesis the build was designed to test. Without those, a launch is a press release, not a learning event.

What happens after MVP?

Most clients move into the Launch Retainer for the iteration cadence. Discovery, build, and measure as one weekly motion — with the roadmap accountable to outcomes, not feature-counts.