jtbd-framing
Jobs-to-be-Done Framing
A senior product leader's playbook for the Jobs-to-be-Done framework as applied methodology. Job statements, struggling moments, hire and fire criteria, the difference between feature-thinking and job-thinking. Honest about where JTBD adds clarity and where it becomes performative ritual.
JTBD has become one of the more cited and less practiced frameworks in product. Teams cite it in strategy docs, run job-statement workshops, produce wall-sized artifacts, and continue building from feature requests and persona archetypes the next quarter. The methodology gets the credit; the practice gets skipped.
This skill is JTBD as applied product methodology. The framework's actual contribution: surfacing what users are trying to ACCOMPLISH (the job) rather than treating users as preference-aggregators (feature requests) or demographic archetypes (persona theater). When the framing is grounded in struggling moments and hire/fire criteria, it produces decisions; when it stops at the job-statement worksheet, it produces ritual.
This skill is honest about both modes. JTBD genuinely earns its keep in discovery, prioritization, and positioning when applied with rigor. It becomes ceremony when teams treat job statements as deliverables rather than as analytical tools.
The voice is the senior product leader who has used JTBD well and watched plenty of teams use it badly. Concrete, opinionated about what the framework actually contributes, willing to call out where it gets oversold.
When to use this skill: applying JTBD to a discovery cycle, replacing persona-driven prioritization with job-driven prioritization, reframing positioning around what users hire the product to do, or auditing whether existing JTBD work in the org is driving decisions.
What this skill is for
This skill spans JTBD as a framing technique within product work. The PM-skill distinction:
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