A Splice of Life Science Marketing
Why most product teams cannot tell a dead project from an early one, and the three tests that separate a clean kill from a case worth tabling. SHOWNOTES You have rebuilt the business case three times, the customer calls went fine, and it still feels like you are polishing a tombstone. The problem is rarely a missing kill decision or a missing budget, it is that a dead project and an early one look identical from the outside. Who this is for: Product managers, R and D leads and gate committee members deciding whether to kill, fund or table a business case in life science tools and diagnostics. Jasmine Gruia-Gray gives Matt Wilkinson a three-test diagnostic for telling a genuinely dead case from one that is merely early: is the data gap objective or epistemic, what does your most resistant buyer say, and is this a product problem or a timing problem. She then defends the framework against three sharp objections, including the honest admission that tabling a case can quietly become a way to never decide. The episode closes with the two moves a nervous product manager can make on Monday and the one question that exposes a narrative dressed up as data. Key idea: Most teams do not have a kill problem or a funding problem; they cannot tell a dead project from an early one, and three tests separate them. What you will learn: * How to tell an objective data gap, which belongs in an assumption log, from an epistemic one, which means nobody has asked the right question yet * Why running the case against your most resistant buyer surfaces adoption costs a favourable panel will never show you, using concordance data as the worked example * How to separate a product problem from a timing problem, and when tabling with a dated re-entry trigger beats killing * Why the synthetic buyer panel replaces the broken step of rebuilding the model rather than adding a fourth checkpoint * Where the framework is exposed: a tabled case with no external owner tends to fade rather than die * The two Monday moves and the one-sentence evidence test that tells you whether you have a business case or a story Keywords: stage gate process, business case, product management, kill or table decision, synthetic buyer panel, voice of customer, life science tools, diagnostics commercialisation, R and D pipeline, market timing, PersonaAI, go-to-market Watch, subscribe and go deeper: Read the full piece, When to Walk Away: Kill the Business Case or Just Table It, at strivenn.com under Thinking. If you want help running this diagnostic on your own pipeline, including the synthetic buyer panel, Strivenn offers a free thirty minute PersonaAI consultation with concrete next steps either way. Subscribe to A Splice of Life Science Marketing and find the details at strivenn.com.
30 episodes
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