01
Methodology depth

Many perspectives to produce the signals that strengthen product roadmaps.

Lens 01

Unify cross-functional input

Cross-functional departments know customer and prospect needs and competitive threats that may be blind spots for product leaders.

Lens 02

Customer and non-customer feedback

Get feedback from customers and non-customers to find enhancements that minimize churn risk, attract new logos, and clarify market messaging.

Lens 03 · Jobs To Be Done

Find underserved needs

Quantify the opportunities to help your customers with the jobs they need help with the most while weeding out the jobs they already have tackled.

Lens 04 · Kano

Understand emotional responses

Segment features according to customer feelings and expectations to understand the criticality and excitement about meeting that need.

Lens 05 · Van Westendorp

Understand willingness to pay

Identify what customers are willing to pay for a feature that addresses an identified challenge so that you can set an appropriate price.

Lens 06

Fuse cross-portfolio requirements

Review preliminary requirements to identify potentially duplicative functions that can be built once and used across multiple products.

Lens 01

Cross-functional input

Cross-functional departments know customer and prospect needs and competitive threats that may be blind spots for product leaders. DiscoverySignal captures this intelligence before it gets lost between teams.

Sales Marketing Customer Success Engineering Finance Executive

Typical functional sources

Lens 02 · Existing customers

What they need to stay

Identify must-have features that protect retention, uncover unmet needs before they become churn, and prioritize the enhancements that drive expansion revenue.

Non-customers

What they need to switch

Understand what's keeping prospects from buying, which gaps in your product are decisive, and how to position new features to attract logos you're currently losing.

Lens 03 · Jobs-to-be-done

Find underserved needs

JTBD methodology quantifies the opportunities to help your customers with the jobs they need help with the most — while weeding out the jobs they've already solved with workarounds.

01 How important is this job?
02 How satisfied are they currently?
The gap is the opportunity
Lens 04 · Kano

Emotional responses

MUST-HAVE

Threshold

Absence causes dissatisfaction. Presence is expected. These are table-stakes features.

PERFORMANCE

Linear

More is better. Satisfaction scales linearly with execution quality.

DELIGHTER

Excitement

Unexpected. Absence is neutral. Presence creates delight and differentiation.

INDIFFERENT

Neutral

Build it or don't — customers don't notice. Deprioritize in favor of delighters.

Lens 05 · Van Westendorp

Willingness to pay

The Van Westendorp Price Sensitivity Meter identifies the acceptable price corridor for a feature or product. Four questions. Clean intersections. A defensible number your board will trust.

Q1 At what price would this be so cheap you'd question its quality?
Q2 At what price would it be a bargain — great value for money?
Q3 At what price would it be getting expensive but you'd still consider it?
Q4 At what price would it be so expensive you'd never consider buying it?
Lens 06

Requirements fusion

Before the final deliverables are assembled, we review all preliminary requirements across your product portfolio to identify features that can be built once and deployed everywhere — eliminating redundant build effort and accelerating roadmap execution.

Typical fusion candidates
Shared reporting and export modules
Notification and alerting infrastructure
Role-based access control layers
Integration APIs with common EHR platforms
Audit logging and compliance trails