Product Management Onboarding Map
For Product Managers during their onboarding, this map will help collect and piece together all the necessary parts to create an impactful roadmap.
For Product Managers during their onboarding, this map will help collect and piece together all the necessary parts to create an impactful roadmap.
This template is meant to provide structure for any existing information, it does not go in depth on how to uncover the individual elements. Best to share this early and invite others to provide input as well.
Get started with this template right now.
Sprint Planning Template
Works best for:
Agile, Sprint Planning
The Sprint Planning Template is a useful tool for agile teams to organize and conduct sprint planning sessions. It enhances team collaboration and communication by providing a clear visual layout of sprint goals, tasks, and timelines. The interactive design ensures team alignment toward sprint objectives, leading to effective teamwork. The template is a central hub for planning, discussion, and decision-making, creating a collaborative and productive environment.
Cross Functional (Swimlane) Chart
Works best for:
Flowcharts, Mapping, Diagrams
The Cross Functional (Swimlane) Chart template offers a visual tool for mapping out processes or workflows with multiple stakeholders or functional areas. It provides swimlanes for organizing tasks and responsibilities by department or role. This template enables teams to visualize process flows, identify handoffs, and improve coordination and collaboration across functions. By promoting transparency and accountability, the Cross Functional (Swimlane) Chart empowers organizations to streamline workflows and drive cross-functional alignment effectively.
Design Research Template
Works best for:
UX Design, Design Thinking, Desk Research
A design research map is a grid framework showing the relationship between two key intersections in research methodologies: mindset and approach. Design research maps encourage your team or clients to develop new business strategies using generative design thinking. Originally designed by academic Liz Sanders, the framework is meant to resolve confusion or overlap between research and design methods. Whether your team is in problem-solving or problem space definition mode, using a research design template can help you consider the collective value of many unrelated practices.
UML Class Messaging System Template
Works best for:
UML
The UML Class Messaging System Template streamlines the process of designing and analyzing messaging systems. It allows users to visually map out the structure of a system by detailing classes, their attributes, operations, and the relationships among objects. This template is particularly useful for illustrating the functionality of a messaging system, including the management of text messages, conversation threads, user contacts, notifications, and channels. It offers a clear visual representation of how all these elements interact within the system, making it an invaluable resource for developers, designers, and stakeholders aiming to enhance communication and reduce errors in the development phase.
Flowchart Template
Works best for:
Flowcharts, Mapping, Diagrams
Trying to explain a process or workflow to your team — or just wrap your head around it yourself? Sometimes the best way is to see it, and that’s when you create a flowchart. Using common shapes (generally just ovals, rectangles, diamonds, and arrows), a flowchart shows you the direction a process or workflow goes and the order of steps. Beyond giving you a clear understanding, you’ll also be able to see potential flaws and bottlenecks, which helps you refine and improve your process and create a better product more efficiently.
Product Canvas Template
Works best for:
Desk Research, UX Design
Product canvases are a concise yet content-rich tool that conveys what your product is and how it is strategically positioned. Combining Agile and UX, a project canvas complements user stories with personas, storyboards, scenarios, design sketches, and other UX artefacts. Product canvases are useful because they help product managers define a prototype. Creating a product canvas is an important first step in deciding who potential users may be, the problem to be solved, basic product functionality, advanced functionalities worth exploring, competitive advantage, and customers’ potential gain from the product.