name: working-backwards-pr-faq description: Define new products and features by starting with the customer experience instead of technical constraints. Use this when starting a zero-to-one product, deciding which feature to prioritize next, or seeking executive alignment on a complex proposal.
The "Working Backwards" process centers on the PR/FAQ: a mock Press Release and a list of Frequently Asked Questions. It forces clarity of thought by requiring you to describe a finished product and its benefits before a single line of code is written.
The Working Backwards Framework
1. The Press Release (PR)
The PR is a one-page document written for the customer. It describes the product as if it were launching today. It must be factual and data-rich, avoiding marketing hyperbole.
The Three "Money Paragraphs":
- The Summary: A short description of the product and what the core benefit is.
- The Problem: A crisp definition of the specific customer problem this product solves. Quantify the problem with data or customer insights.
- The Solution: A description of how the product elegantly solves that problem.
Essential PR Elements:
- Hypothetical Launch Date: Choose a date that signals the expected complexity (e.g., next month vs. next year).
- The "Target Customer": Avoid broad categories. Be specific about who this is for (e.g., "high-volume professional sellers in urban areas" instead of "all merchants").
- Customer Quote: A hypothetical quote from a customer explaining how the product changed their life or business.
2. The Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)
The FAQ is a multi-page document that addresses the "behind the scenes" details. It is divided into two sections:
- External (Customer) FAQ: Questions a customer would actually ask. "How much does it cost?" "How do I switch from my current provider?" "What happens if my internet goes out?"
- Internal (Stakeholder) FAQ: Difficult questions from leadership or engineering. "Why shouldn't we just use a third-party API?" "What is the fatal flaw in this logic?" "What are the specific engineering risks?"
3. The Concentric Circle Review
Do not write a PR/FAQ in a vacuum. Use a "product funnel" approach:
- Author Draft: Write and self-edit. If the idea looks bad on paper, discard it immediately.
- Small Group Review: Share with immediate peers for feedback.
- Leadership Review: Present to senior stakeholders to test the logic and "disagree and commit."
- Iterate: Most successful products go through multiple versions of the PR/FAQ before being approved for development.
Examples
Example 1: A New Delivery Tracking Feature
- Context: Improving customer satisfaction with shipping.
- Input: "We want to improve tracking."
- Working Backwards Application:
- PR Headline: "Amazon Announces Real-Time Map Tracking for All Deliveries."
- Problem Statement: Customers currently only know their package is "out for delivery," forcing them to stay home all day to avoid theft.
- Solution: A live GPS map showing exactly how many stops away the driver is.
- Output: A document that forces the team to solve the privacy and GPS-latency engineering hurdles before committing resources.
Example 2: A Specialized B2B Search Tool
- Context: Choosing between "Search for Everyone" vs. "Search for Engineers."
- Input: "Our search is mediocre."
- Working Backwards Application:
- Customer Definition: Instead of "all users," the PR focuses on "Technical Leads looking for deprecated API documentation."
- PR Focus: A specialized filter for version-specific syntax.
- Output: Realization in the FAQ that the "all users" approach would obfuscate the most valuable data for the highest-paying customers.
Common Pitfalls
- Working Backwards from Revenue: Never start with "How do we hit our $10M goal?" Start with "What does the customer need that would result in $10M of value?"
- The "Product Tunnel": Assuming every PR/FAQ must be built. The goal of the process is to kill bad ideas early. A successful PR/FAQ process should result in many discarded documents.
- Marketing Hyperbole: Using words like "revolutionary" or "game-changing." Stick to factual descriptions: "The service reduces load times from 5 seconds to 200 milliseconds."
- Ignoring the Fatal Flaw: Using the FAQ to hide risks instead of exposing them. A good FAQ proactively addresses why the project might fail.
- Starting with Constraints: Focusing on "We only have three engineers" during the PR phase. Write the ideal customer experience first, then solve the resource constraints in the Internal FAQ.