chief-growth-officer/roadmap/product-roadmap-2-en.md
2026-06-01 16:20:11 -04:00

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Product Roadmap: Chief Growth Officer

Roadmap Philosophy

The best path is not to build the full “AI Chief Growth Officer” immediately. The full vision is powerful, but the first product must be narrow, trusted, and commercially provable.

The product should evolve in three layers:

  1. Product Opportunity Radar — find high-quality product and messaging opportunities from market signals.
  2. Decision Intelligence System — help brands decide what to build, change, test, or communicate.
  3. Growth Orchestration Platform — coordinate product, content, advertising, user operation, and service workflows.

The first 12 months should focus almost entirely on proving one thing:

Can we reliably help beauty and personal-care brands discover actionable product opportunities earlier and more accurately than they can on their own?

If yes, the larger “Chief Growth Officer” platform can grow naturally from that wedge.


Phase 0: ICP and Problem Validation

Timeline

06 weeks

Goal

Validate the narrowest, highest-value customer segment and confirm the first paid use case before building a broad SaaS product.

Target ICP

The initial ICP should be:

Chinese beauty, skincare, personal-care, or haircare brands with annual GMV between RMB 30 million and RMB 300 million, selling mainly through Tmall, Douyin, Xiaohongshu, JD, or private channels.

Prioritize brands that meet at least three of the following conditions:

  • Frequent product launches or SKU iteration.
  • Heavy reliance on ingredients, efficacy, texture, or functional claims.
  • Founder or product lead is directly involved in product decisions.
  • Strong competitor pressure.
  • Existing pain around identifying new product opportunities.
  • Existing customer feedback scattered across multiple platforms.

Key Customer Questions to Validate

  • How do they currently find product opportunities?
  • Who owns product innovation decisions?
  • What data do they trust?
  • How often do they review competitor reviews, social content, and customer service conversations?
  • What decisions would they pay to improve?
  • Would they pay for opportunity cards, weekly briefings, or dashboard access?
  • What would make them trust an AI-generated recommendation?

Deliverables

  • 2030 customer interviews.
  • 58 pilot design partners.
  • A validated list of 35 highest-value use cases.
  • A clear definition of the first paid product package.

Success Metrics

  • At least 5 brands agree to paid or semi-paid pilots.
  • At least 70% of interviewed brands confirm product opportunity discovery as a real pain.
  • At least 3 brands provide historical product launch or customer feedback data for testing.

Phase 1: Concierge MVP — Product Opportunity Radar

Timeline

Month 13

Product Name

Product Opportunity Radar

The “Chief Growth Officer” name should remain the parent vision. The first sellable product should have a sharper name.

Core Promise

We help beauty brands discover new product, texture, ingredient, efficacy, and messaging opportunities from competitor feedback, consumer pain points, and market signals.

Product Form

Do not start with a full SaaS dashboard.

Start with a hybrid model:

  • AI-powered data analysis.
  • Expert-reviewed opportunity cards.
  • Weekly opportunity briefing.
  • Lightweight web workspace.
  • Push notifications for urgent competitor signals.

Core Data Sources

Start with a limited but reliable set:

  • Competitor product reviews.
  • E-commerce Q&A.
  • Xiaohongshu posts and comments where legally and technically available.
  • Douyin product and content signals where available.
  • Public social mentions.
  • Brand-provided customer service conversations for professional pilots.

Core Features

1. Competitor Review Intelligence

Track 2050 competitor SKUs per customer.

Identify:

  • Rising negative feedback.
  • Repeated complaints.
  • Texture issues.
  • Efficacy doubts.
  • Packaging problems.
  • Ingredient concerns.
  • Price/value complaints.
  • Usage confusion.

2. Pain Point Ranking

Create a ranked list of consumer pain points by:

  • Frequency.
  • Growth rate.
  • Severity.
  • Relevance to the brands positioning.
  • Competitive whitespace.

3. Product Opportunity Cards

Each card should include:

  • Opportunity name.
  • Consumer pain point.
  • Evidence from real feedback.
  • Signal strength.
  • Competitor weakness.
  • Brand fit.
  • Suggested product direction.
  • Suggested claim or messaging angle.
  • Recommended next action.
  • Confidence level.
  • Risk level.

4. Weekly Founder Briefing

A short weekly report answering:

  • What changed this week?
  • Which competitor is showing weakness?
  • Which consumer pain is rising?
  • Which opportunity deserves attention?
  • What should the brand do next?

5. Strategic Filter

Allow the brand to configure:

  • Category.
  • Price band.
  • Brand positioning.
  • Ingredient philosophy.
  • Target consumer.
  • Product portfolio.
  • Strategic priority.

This prevents generic AI advice.

What Not to Build Yet

Do not build:

  • Full AI agent orchestration.
  • Five-engine platform.
  • Automated ad optimization.
  • Full dashboard-heavy BI system.
  • Broad category coverage.
  • Fully automated decision-making.

Success Metrics

  • 58 paying pilot customers.
  • At least 1 actionable opportunity accepted by each pilot customer within 30 days.
  • Weekly briefing open rate above 70%.
  • At least 3 customers use the output in internal product, content, or launch discussions.
  • At least 2 customers request continued paid service after the pilot.

Phase 2: Paid Beta — From Insight to Decision

Timeline

Month 36

Goal

Turn the MVP from “interesting market intelligence” into a repeatable product decision system.

Product Upgrade

The product should now help customers move from insight to action.

New Capabilities

1. Opportunity Scoring Model

Score each opportunity across:

  • Market demand.
  • Competitive gap.
  • Brand fit.
  • Execution difficulty.
  • Content potential.
  • Margin potential.
  • Timing urgency.

2. Product Decision Workspace

Customers can save, compare, reject, or prioritize opportunity cards.

Each opportunity should have a decision status:

  • New.
  • Under review.
  • Testing.
  • Adopted.
  • Rejected.
  • Archived.

3. Evidence Layer

Every AI recommendation must show the evidence behind it.

Evidence should include:

  • Representative customer quotes.
  • Competitor SKU examples.
  • Trend direction.
  • Platform source.
  • Time window.
  • Confidence level.

4. Messaging and Content Bridge

For each product opportunity, generate:

  • Core selling point.
  • Xiaohongshu content angle.
  • Douyin short video angle.
  • Product detail page copy direction.
  • Comparison angle against competitors.
  • FAQ or objection-handling copy.

This is not yet a full content engine. It is a bridge from product insight to market communication.

5. Monthly Strategy Review

For professional customers, include a monthly AI-assisted strategy session.

The purpose is to review:

  • Top opportunities.
  • Product risks.
  • Competitor movement.
  • Customer complaints.
  • Recommended decisions.

Packaging

Starter

For small brands or early users.

Includes:

  • Competitor monitoring.
  • Pain point ranking.
  • Weekly opportunity briefing.
  • Limited opportunity cards.

Suggested price:

RMB 19,80029,800 per year.

Professional

For serious brands.

Includes:

  • More competitor SKUs.
  • Private data upload.
  • Product decision workspace.
  • Monthly strategy review.
  • More detailed evidence layer.

Suggested price:

RMB 59,80099,800 per year.

Strategic Co-Creation

For brands that want deeper analysis.

Includes:

  • Custom taxonomy.
  • More private data.
  • Expert review.
  • Monthly strategic workshops.
  • Custom opportunity reports.

Suggested price:

RMB 150,000300,000 per year.

Success Metrics

  • 20 paying customers.
  • 50%+ of customers use the product weekly.
  • 30%+ of opportunity cards are saved, discussed, or acted on.
  • 5+ customers adopt at least one recommendation into product, content, or launch planning.
  • Renewal intent above 60%.

Phase 3: V1 SaaS — Product Innovation Engine

Timeline

Month 612

Goal

Turn the validated service-heavy MVP into a scalable SaaS product while preserving trust and decision quality.

Product Positioning

An AI product innovation engine for beauty and personal-care brands.

Core Modules

1. Strategic Configuration Center

Brands configure:

  • Category.
  • Positioning.
  • Price band.
  • Core competitors.
  • Product lines.
  • Hero ingredients.
  • Key claims.
  • Target consumers.
  • Strategic priorities.

2. Market Signal Radar

Monitors:

  • Competitor review changes.
  • Complaint spikes.
  • Ingredient trends.
  • Texture and usage feedback.
  • Social content themes.
  • Emerging pain points.

3. Opportunity Card System

Standardized opportunity cards become the core object of the product.

Every card should be trackable, searchable, comparable, and exportable.

4. Decision Workspace

Teams can:

  • Assign opportunities.
  • Add comments.
  • Vote or score.
  • Mark decision status.
  • Export internal briefs.
  • Track whether the opportunity was adopted.

5. AI Analyst

Natural language interface for questions like:

  • “Where is Competitor A weakest recently?”
  • “What complaints are rising in sunscreen?”
  • “What product opportunity fits our sensitive-skin positioning?”
  • “Which opportunity is most suitable for our next launch?”

6. Exportable Brief Generator

Generate:

  • New product concept brief.
  • Product improvement brief.
  • Content strategy brief.
  • Competitor response brief.
  • Founder weekly summary.

Important Product Principle

The dashboard is not the product.

The core product is the decision object: the opportunity card.

Everything should revolve around helping customers discover, evaluate, discuss, and act on opportunities.

Success Metrics

  • 5080 paying customers.
  • Net revenue retention above 100%.
  • 60%+ monthly active account rate.
  • 40%+ of customers export or share at least one brief per month.
  • At least 20 documented cases where the product influenced a real business decision.

Phase 4: Professional Intelligence Layer

Timeline

Month 1218

Goal

Strengthen defensibility by adding private data, feedback loops, and industry-specific intelligence.

New Capabilities

1. Private Data Integration

Allow customers to upload or connect:

  • Customer service conversations.
  • Refund and return reasons.
  • Post-purchase reviews.
  • Product satisfaction surveys.
  • CRM tags.
  • Sales by SKU.
  • Regional sales and return data.

2. Own-Brand Diagnosis

Compare own-brand issues against competitor issues.

Answer:

  • What do our users complain about?
  • What do competitor users complain about?
  • Where are we weaker?
  • Where are we stronger?
  • What should we fix first?

3. Loss Reason Analysis

Analyze customer service conversations where users asked questions but did not purchase.

Identify:

  • Price objections.
  • Ingredient doubts.
  • Efficacy concerns.
  • Trust gaps.
  • Usage confusion.
  • Competitive comparison losses.

4. Product Feedback Loop

Track whether an opportunity was:

  • Adopted.
  • Tested.
  • Rejected.
  • Turned into a product.
  • Used in content.
  • Linked to performance improvement.

This creates the real moat.

The strongest proprietary asset is not raw data. It is the relationship between:

Market signal → brand decision → execution → business result.

Success Metrics

  • 100+ paying customers.
  • 30+ customers connect or upload private data.
  • 20+ customers use the system for monthly product review.
  • Clear evidence that private-data customers retain better than public-data-only customers.
  • First case studies showing improved product decisions or reduced failed launches.

Phase 5: First Adjacent Engine — Content Activation

Timeline

Month 1824

Goal

Expand only after product opportunity intelligence has proven retention and decision impact.

The first adjacent engine should be Content Activation, not advertising, user operations, or full-chain operations.

Why Content Comes Next

Product insights naturally become content angles.

If the system discovers that consumers are complaining about “sticky sunscreen,” it can generate:

  • Comparison content.
  • Ingredient explanation.
  • Founder explanation script.
  • Product detail page copy.
  • Xiaohongshu seeding brief.
  • Douyin short video script.

This is the most natural expansion path.

New Capabilities

1. Content Angle Generator

Convert opportunity cards into:

  • Xiaohongshu post angles.
  • Douyin video scripts.
  • Live-stream selling points.
  • Product page copy.
  • Influencer brief.
  • Comparison claims.

2. Claim Risk Check

Help brands identify risky, exaggerated, or unsupported claims.

3. Content Testing Feedback

Track which generated angles were used and how they performed.

4. Product-to-Content Workflow

Each opportunity card can become:

  • Product concept.
  • Selling point.
  • Content campaign.
  • Influencer brief.
  • Launch message.

What Still Not to Build

Still avoid full ad automation unless there is strong customer pull.

Advertising optimization is a separate market with stronger incumbents, higher complexity, and clearer performance accountability.

Success Metrics

  • 30%+ of Product Innovation customers activate Content Activation.
  • 50%+ of activated customers export content briefs monthly.
  • Customers report reduced time from product insight to content brief.
  • Early evidence that content based on real pain points performs better than generic AI-generated content.

Phase 6: Multi-Engine Growth System

Timeline

Month 2436

Goal

Evolve from product innovation and content activation into a broader AI growth operating system.

Conditions Before Entering This Phase

Do not build the full five-engine platform unless these are true:

  • Product Innovation Engine has strong retention.
  • Content Activation has meaningful attach rate.
  • Customers are using the system for real decisions, not just reading reports.
  • Private data integration is working.
  • The company has enough implementation capacity.
  • There is clear demand for the next engine.

Possible Engine Expansion Order

1. Product Innovation Engine

Already built.

2. Content Activation Engine

Most natural second engine.

3. User Feedback and Retention Engine

Use post-purchase, community, and CRM feedback to identify repeat-purchase drivers and dissatisfaction points.

4. Advertising Learning Engine

Not full ad automation at first.

Start with:

  • Winning message analysis.
  • Creative angle diagnosis.
  • Ad comment mining.
  • Landing page objection analysis.

5. Full-Chain Operations Engine

Only later.

This should focus on:

  • Return reason analysis.
  • Customer service issue clustering.
  • Delivery or regional anomaly detection.
  • Product quality feedback loops.

Orchestration Layer

The agent orchestrator should emerge only after multiple engines are used by the same customers.

Its role should be:

  • Turn product opportunities into content briefs.
  • Turn content performance into product insight.
  • Turn customer complaints into product improvement tasks.
  • Turn ad objections into landing page or product messaging improvements.
  • Turn return reasons into product or service fixes.

Success Metrics

  • 25%+ of customers use at least two engines.
  • Multi-engine customers retain materially better than single-engine customers.
  • Multi-engine customers generate higher ARPA.
  • System creates cross-engine recommendations that customers actually adopt.

Long-Term Vision: Chief Growth Officer Platform

Timeline

36 months and beyond

Vision

Become the AI growth decision infrastructure for consumer brands.

The platform should eventually support:

  • Product innovation.
  • Content strategy.
  • Advertising learning.
  • User operation.
  • Customer service intelligence.
  • Product feedback loops.
  • Industry benchmarking.
  • Supply chain and ingredient intelligence.

Long-Term Moat

The defensibility should come from:

  1. Beauty-specific product opportunity taxonomy.
  2. Competitor and pain-point knowledge base.
  3. Private brand feedback loops.
  4. Historical relationship between signals, decisions, and outcomes.
  5. Cross-brand anonymized industry intelligence.
  6. Multi-engine workflow integration.

Potential Second Revenue Curve

Once enough anonymized data exists, the company can sell industry intelligence to:

  • Ingredient suppliers.
  • OEM/ODM manufacturers.
  • Investment firms.
  • Large consumer groups.
  • Retail channels.

But this should not be prioritized before the core brand product has strong retention.


Recommended Roadmap Summary

06 Weeks

Validate ICP, pain, willingness to pay, and first use case.

Month 13

Build concierge MVP: Product Opportunity Radar.

Month 36

Launch paid beta with opportunity scoring, evidence layer, and decision workspace.

Month 612

Launch V1 SaaS: Product Innovation Engine.

Month 1218

Add private data, own-brand diagnosis, and decision feedback loops.

Month 1824

Launch Content Activation as the first adjacent engine.

Month 2436

Expand into multi-engine growth system only if retention and attach-rate data support it.

36+ Months

Build the full Chief Growth Officer platform and industry intelligence layer.


The Key Strategic Choice

The company should not try to win by saying:

We are an AI Chief Growth Officer that does everything.

It should first win by proving:

We help beauty brands discover better product opportunities from real consumer and competitor signals.

Once that wedge becomes trusted, the broader Chief Growth Officer vision becomes credible.