Step 1: Start with product vision that teams can actually execute
A product vision is not a slogan. It is a decision-making filter.
What an executable vision includes
An effective vision must:
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Name the target customer
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State the core problem
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Clarify the desired impact
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Imply measurable progress
Avoid vague language like:
Those statements do not guide Sprint Planning.
Practical Formula
Use this structure:
For [specific customer], we will solve [specific problem] so they can achieve [clear outcome].
Example:
For mid-sized SaaS teams struggling with unpredictable delivery, we will provide AI-assisted backlog refinement tools so they can reduce planning time and increase Sprint predictability.
That statement can drive backlog decisions immediately.
Why This Matters
A clear vision:
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Aligns stakeholders
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Reduces backlog noise
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Improves refinement quality
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Accelerates decision-making
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Prevents “random feature” drift
Teams move faster when they stop debating direction.
Exercise
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Write one sentence using the structure above.
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Add three measurable outcomes you want within 90 days.
Example measurable outcomes:
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Reduce planning time by 30%
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Increase Sprint goal completion rate from 60% to 85%
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Cut escaped defects by 25%
Keep outcomes observable and numeric.
When you finish, review your backlog.
If at least 70% of your items do not directly support one of the three outcomes, your vision is not driving execution.
That is your diagnostic.
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