
Episode 47: Philosophy, Jobs-to-be-done and customer rationality
Aug 21, 2023
Dive into an intriguing exploration of Jobs-to-be-Done through a philosophical lens. The hosts reconstruct JTBD as a compelling argument about how humans evaluate solutions to achieve their goals. They debate the nuances of rationality versus reasonableness and critique the notion of customer irrationality, presenting behaviors as rational choices based on personal goals. Discussions on technology evaluation, the impact of cost and network effects, and the influence of framing in decision-making add depth to this thought-provoking conversation.
AI Snips
Chapters
Books
Transcript
Episode notes
Door-to-Door JTBD Evangelism At John Deere
- Scott Burleson went door-to-door at John Deere explaining Outcome-Driven Innovation with a slide deck to executives.
- He did this despite being an introvert because he was passionate about Jobs-to-be-done.
Adoption Can Be Predicted By Outcomes
- Jobs-to-be-done frames adoption as predictable: if a solution improves job performance by user-defined outcomes, adoption follows.
- Therefore measuring outcomes (job metrics) lets teams estimate whether new solutions will be adopted.
JTBD Defines Problems, Not Creation Methods
- JTBD focuses on the problem side and defines precisely what a solution is relative to a job.
- It narrows where new solutions make sense and how to evaluate them, but not how to invent them.









