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In many organizations,
“Discovery” is limited – often just a set of four simple questions along the
lines of:
- Does
our prospect have a Budget?
- Does
this person have the Authority to make the purchase?
- Has the
Need been defined?
- Is
there is a Timeline?
That's what many people
believe is discovery, but in fact that's just simple qualification (“BANT”).
Discovery is going much deeper – and in this example, what you don’t know will
hurt you…!
Imagine a large iceberg in
the open ocean – and your job is to move it from its current location to a
nearby harbor to provide water for the inhabitants, with a minimum of energy
expended while also minimizing loss of the iceberg’s water.
Simple qualification would
examine the iceberg at the surface and conclude, “Well, it’s not that big, so
it should be easy and rapid to move.” A tugboat and crew are
summoned…
Later that day there has been
little movement of the iceberg. The tugboat is at the bottom of the
ocean, after colliding with a sharp, submerged portion of our iceberg, and
several of the crew members have been injured in the exercise – and the iceberg
has been steadily melting, reducing the amount of water available for our thirsty
population. (Note the frightening resemblance to implementation attempted
similarly without sufficient Discovery).
In this case, doing
sufficient Discovery requires recognizing that the iceberg has the bulk of its
mass underwater – and asking the critical questions to understand the nature of
that iceberg – how big it really is, its composition, its shape on the
surface and under water, any sharp portions, current and future weather, other
shipping, etc.
So: if we're looking to
propose a solution, we must explore far beyond the visible tip of our
customer’s iceberg. We need to gain a much clearer understanding of what
is hiding in the depths – lest our project ends up sunk…!
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