Closing the Gap: Why Product Silos Stifle Digital Strategy
Isolated product teams often fail to move the needle because their day-to-day output remains detached from broader enterprise goals. New research from Info-Tech Research Group suggests that the solution lies in grouping individual products into operationally aligned families to bridge the divide between local delivery and organizational strategy.
Many organizations are abandoning massive, monolithic technology projects in favor of smaller, continuous releases. While this shift aims for agility, it frequently exposes a structural flaw: legacy delivery models that leave product teams operating in isolation. According to Hans Eckman, a research fellow at Info-Tech, this lack of coordination diminishes overall impact, as individual backlogs often drift away from the company's core priorities.
The firm’s latest blueprint, Deliver Digital Products at Scale, argues that product families serve as the necessary connective tissue. By organizing products into these themed groups, leaders can translate high-level constraints and objectives down to the individual product level. This structure forces a tighter integration of roadmaps, governance, and funding models, ensuring that developers and product managers are not just shipping features, but delivering measurable business value.
To move toward this model, the research outlines a six-phase transition. This journey begins with creating a comprehensive product inventory and culminates in building a communication plan that secures stakeholder buy-in. Success, however, requires more than just a new organizational chart; it demands that product managers be empowered to view their work through an enterprise lens, ensuring that every sprint remains locked onto strategic targets rather than siloed convenience.
Comments (0)
No comments yet. Be the first!