32 lines
1.9 KiB
Markdown
32 lines
1.9 KiB
Markdown
---
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post_title: Utilizing WooCommerce extension feature requests
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menu_title: Utilizing feature requests
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---
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It is important to keep track of all feature requests, and have some sort of system of record where anyone can see what kind of feedback the product is receiving over time.
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We recommend a daily or bi-daily check-in, where you:
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* triage new feature requests,
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* celebrate positive reviews and;
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* act upon negative reviews.
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Carefully maintaining feature request boards (or similar system) is key, as the average board contains a lot of duplicate/spam content, requests about features that have been implemented and requests about features that will likely never be implemented. Poorly maintained boards make merchants feel unheard/neglected.
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This results in more negative reviews on the premise that the product teams were not reading/listening to their feedback.
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We've seen good results with the following procedures:
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Starting with the most affected products, go through all open requests, reply to most/all of them and categorize them as:
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* "Open", for requests that we still want more feedback,
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* "Planned", for requests that we plan to implement,
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* "Completed", for requests that have already been implemented and;
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* "Closed", for requests that we do not plan to implement, as they are not a good fit for the product, for duplicate/spam requests and for requests that were actually support questions.
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Replying to all "Open" requests is the goal, but if that's not attainable currently, make sure to reply to 100% of the requests that are closed.
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For new open requests that arrive as a feature request, discuss/triage them, reply promptly, and assign a status to avoid having the board become unmanaged, and ensure merchants feel (and are) heard.
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In addition to the effect a tidy board has on merchants, it also helps product teams better understand which requests are most wanted and most impactful and then plan work accordingly.
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