User Stories don’t belong in the Marketing Backlog

Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn
Pinterest
WhatsApp

Marketing Backlogs in the Trenches

Last week I facilitated a 2-day Agile Marketing workshop for one of my clients. As usual, the discussion about the Marketing Backlog and how to move from a big-bang marketing campaign to a more iterative approach via smaller slices of stories was one of the highlights.

As usual, I introduce the concept of User Stories which are the most popular way to represent Product Backlog Items (PBIs) in the Agile world and are also very popular in the Agile Marketing space. We looked at some awful examples of stories, such as “As a marketer, I want to install Drift on my site” or “As a user, I want to see a webinar” and then moved to stories that provide more insights about a real user (e.g. “As a VP Marketing focused on Demand Generation”) and their intent (e.g. “so that I could get more demand generated from people who hate forms and lead magnet registration-walls“)

We then broke out into multiple teams each taking an actual campaign/project they’re planning for 2019 and creating the Marketing Backlog for it.

User Stories belong in Product Backlogs (Not Marketing Backlogs)

One thing we quickly noticed was that the User Story format and perspective were confusing some of the teams. Their stories talked about their product benefits and were very similar to stories you’d expect to see in a Product Backlog rather than a Marketing Backlog.

What’s the problem you ask? Well, the Marketing Backlog ISN’T a Product Backlog. The Product Backlog reflects everything that is known to be needed in the product.

The Marketing Backlog reflects everything that is known to be needed for marketing the product/service.

What’s the problem with User Stories?

Ok, so the Marketing Backlog talks about marketing. What’s wrong with using User Stories to reflect Marketing Backlog Items (MBIs)?

Until recently, I didn’t think there was a problem. But last week’s discussions convinced me that talking about Users isn’t serving us well. It gets Marketers thinking about the product/service benefits and not about the customer/buyer journey and how they want to influence it – which is what we want the marketing stories to be about!

Buyer Stories For The Rescue? 

One tweak we used in the workshop which helped the marketers think about the right things is a switch from User Stories to Buyer Stories. These stories talk about the buyer’s journey and his/her perspective.

The format of Buyer Stories is still very similar “As a buyer, I want to perform some activity so that some buyer journey goal”. Buyer reflects a specific persona going through the buyer/customer journey. the activity typically relates to research, consideration, comparing vendors, learning, pitching internally, checking social proof, and the like.

The goal is a tricky one. Is it to solve the business problem and if so is it similar to the goal of the product/service we’re marketing? Is it to streamline my “job” as a buyer and minimize the risk I’m choosing the wrong product/service or taking too long to decide? I’m looking forward to experimenting with this a bit more in the trenches and seeing what makes sense.

Map the Journey with Story Mapping

Story Mapping, created and popularized by Jeff Patton, is one of my favorite techniques for working with agile backlogs. (Yael, my colleague, wrote about it in our blog a while ago). Story Mapping is a perfect fit when you’re trying to break a big marketing campaign/play into smaller slices. You look at the different stages of your buyer’s journey and then break down the big campaign/play into small pieces that fit into the different stages of the journey.

From Buyer to Buyers (a.k.a Account-based Marketing) with Impact Mapping

Many marketers in the B2B or enterprise space are dealing with multiple buyers with different needs and jobs they’re trying to do. A technique that can help map what kind of impact they’re trying to have on the different players (or what kind of impact these players are trying to achieve) is Impact Mapping, created by Gojko Adzic. This technique can then help marketers identify the marketing deliverables that these players would need to achieve the desired impact on the purchase. This is another great way to refine a marketing backlog and emphasize that we’re interested in the impact on the purchase/buying journey rather than the impact that the product/service will itself have on the business.

Sometimes a Buyer Story IS a User Story

There can be an overlap when there are product capabilities that are needed in order to effectively market the product. Think “freemium version” or some other product/service capabilities that are requested by marketers. But note these should be the result of identifying gaps/bottlenecks/weak spots in the way the funnel operates, not based on features asked for by customers or prospects.

YMMV – Inspect and Adapt what to put in your Marketing Backlog

This blog provides an example of how Agile Marketing isn’t exactly like Agile Development. If you are a marketer looking at Agile or you’re coming from the Product/Technology world and you’re helping marketers understand Agile and Scrum that’s something that is important to remember.

Yes, we’re still talking about empiricism, Sprints, Increments, timeboxes, and Scrum Teams. But some areas like the definition of the “Product” are different.

Luckily though, User Stories aren’t mandatory in Agile. They’re a complementary practice. Use them if they make sense. Use something else if it’s better. Mainly – experiment with something and remember to inspect how it’s going and adapt if needed.

Subscribe for Email Updates:

Categories:

Tags:

Nexus and Kanban
Legacy Enterprise
SAFe
Agile
Kanban
Agile Delivery
TDD
Agile Basics
Scrum.org
Scrum and XP
Accelerate Value Delivery At Scale
Agile Mindset
Agile Israel Events
Continuous Deployment
speed @ scale
RSA
Program Increment
Kanban Basics
Retrospectives
Agile Testing Practices
System Archetypes
System Team
Confluence
Legacy Code
Managing Projects
Tips
Certified SAFe
Agile Games
Lean Software Development
Enterprise DevOps
Agile Project Management
Agile Techniques
AI Artificial Intelligence
BDD
ART Success
The Agile Coach
Advanced Roadmaps
Certification
Large Scale Scrum
SAFe Release Planning
Scrum With Kanban
LPM
LeSS
Presentation
Value Streams
DevOps
Agile Release Management
Professional Scrum with Kanban
Agile Development
Product Ownership
Scrum Values
Business Agility
ATDD
Kanban 101
Iterative Incremental Development
Elastic Leadership
Nexus and SAFe
Agile Contracts Best Practices
Change Management
Pomodoro Technique
The Kanban Method
Reading List
Lean Agile Leadership
Introduction to Test Driven Development
Continuous Planning
Rovo
Risk Management in Kanban
Story Slicing
Artificial Intelligence
Effective Agile Retrospectives
SAFe DevOps
Portfolio for Jira
Product Management
Sprint Retrospectives
Implementation of Lean and Agile
Games and Exercises
Agile in the Enterprise
Test Driven Development
A Kanban System for Software Engineering
Software Development Estimation
Lean Startup
Risk-aware Product Development
Agile Israel
Agile Product Ownership
Built-In Quality
ALM Tools
Agile and DevOps Journey
System Integration Environments
AgileSparks
LAB
Release Train Engineer
What Is Kanban
ScrumMaster Tales
AI
Nexus vs SAFe
Scaled Agile Framework
agileisrael
Jira admin
Professional Scrum Master
Agile Community
Agile Exercises
Amdocs
QA
Keith Sawyer
Agile Program
Lean Agile Organization
Agile Project
Tools
Lean and Agile Techniques
Lean Agile Management
Kaizen
Coaching Agile Teams
Manage Budget Creation
Systems Thinking
Agile Assembly Architecture
Sprint Iteration
Lean-Agile Software Development
Kanban Kickstart Example
Releases Using Lean
Agile Games and Exercises
Agile Release Planning
Webinar
IT Operations
NIT
Process Improvement
POPM
Lean Risk Management
Jira Cloud
EOS®
Agile Product Development
Agile Marketing
transformation
Continuous Improvement
Acceptance Test-Driven Development
Scrum Master
ROI
Atlaassian
Perfection Game
Continuous Integration
ARTs
Nexus
Jira Plans
predictability
Lean and Agile Principles and Practices
Atlassian
PI Objectives
Hybrid Work
SA
Lean Agile
Scrum Primer
Scrum Guide
Self-organization
GanttBan
Daily Scrum
Frameworks
Covid19
Professional Scrum Product Owner
Code
Quality Assurance
speed at scale
Video
Managing Risk on Agile Projects
Lean-Agile Budgeting
Team Flow
Operational Value Stream
User stories
Scrum
Engineering Practices
Slides
chatgpt
Rapid RTC
Spotify
ATDD vs. BDD
Principles of Lean-Agile Leadership
Limiting Work in Progress
Lean Budgeting
Software Development
PI Planning
Achieve Business Agility
Implementing SAFe
lean agile change management
Agile Outsourcing
Continuous Delivery
Nexus Integration Team
Agile Risk Management
Entrepreneurial Operating System®
Scrum Master Role
RTE
RTE Role
Planning
Agile for Embedded Systems
Agility
Introduction to ATDD
Sprint Planning
Applying Agile Methodology
SPC
Lean Agile Basics
Agile India
An Appreciative Retrospective
Development Value Streams
Risk Management on Agile Projects
Kaizen Workshop
Kanban Game
WIP
AgileSparks
Logo
Enable registration in settings - general

Contact Us

Request for additional information and prices

AgileSparks Newsletter

Subscribe to our newsletter, and stay updated on the latest Agile news and events

This website uses Cookies to provide a better experience
Shopping cart