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Prioritization Criteria

Overview

Prioritization is a fundamental aspect of our work at every level, from individual tasks to larger strategic decisions. As a Product Owner in the BC Government, you play a pivotal role in guiding these choices.

The questions that follow serve as practical tools to assist you in making informed decisions for the Common Components Program. In the context of the Common Components Program, three key areas of prioritization require your attention.

  1. Knowing When to Seek Strategic Direction

  2. Selecting the Next Problem to Solve

  3. Choosing the Next Feature to Develop

Knowing When to Seek Strategic Direction

Usage

Utilize these questions to determine when it's appropriate to seek strategic direction. They aid in understanding the scale of work, resource allocation, priority validation, and the need for collaboration with other teams.

Criteria

  • Does our team have the autonomy to proceed, or does it require senior management input?

  • Is this a sizeable quarterly undertaking?

  • Do we need to reallocate resources to achieve this?

  • Should we validate the priority through collaboration with other teams?

  • Do we require assistance or input from other teams?

  • Do we perceive an excessive workload and need guidance on what to defer?

Selecting the Next Problem to Solve

Usage

Consider these questions when comparing the value of discovery work. They help assess the problem's significance, alignment with government priorities, potential benefits, and impact on users and teams.

This is for the size and effort level where a new team would be formed, or where an existing team would get more people added to it in order to conduct the discovery work into an area that extends past their current product vision.

Criteria

  • Does this problem matter to a substantial number of people?

  • Is there a genuine need for this solution?

  • Does it align with high-priority initiatives in the BC Government?

  • Will it benefit other BC Government teams?

  • Does it eliminate unnecessary duplication?

  • Can it streamline interactions between service consumers?

  • Does it offer tangible financial advantages?

  • Is the supporting team agile enough to implement it effectively?

  • Will it enhance trust, confidence, reliability, and service stability?

Choosing the Next Feature to Develop

Usage

These questions help measure the value of the outcomes of features. Considering its impact on users, trust-building, usability, flexibility, and overall value alignment.

This is for the size and effort level where an existing team is resourced adequately to complete the work which align to their current product vision.

Criteria

  • Will this feature expand the product's user base?

  • Does it enhance user trust in the product?

  • Will it attract more users due to its inclusion?

  • Does it simplify a previously complex task?

  • Does it avoid imposing specific design choices, allowing for flexibility?

  • For instance, can users easily customize their own style libraries?

  • Does it elevate the team's reputation through code quality and documentation?

  • Does it deliver measurable value tied to a user problem?

Summary

These questions are not a rigid checklist but rather tools to help you critically assess your roadmap, backlog, and individual stories. They also serve as guidance for technical decisions, handling technical debt, and identifying when senior management's strategic direction is beneficial.