Our DNA
Over the years we have adopted a very simple philosophy regarding product development -- great products are the result of great analytics, great strategy, and even better design. To that end, we have taken great care to staff our organization and create a product development process that consistently delivers excellence in these key functional areas.
Kindly take a moment to learn just how we define excellence in each category and why this differentiates us from other organizations.
analytics
At DevelopQ, our research/
quantitative team is the
backbone of our organization.
Every phase of our product
development process relies
heavily on their input and we
count on them to "get it right".
That means providing more
than just volumes of data or a parade of fancy regression analyses. We expect them to collect the most relevant data, make sense of it, and tell a story that fits. In other words, we expect TRUE insight. This is what we believe to be the difference between good analytics and GREAT analytics.
Join Our Team
Review our Job Listings page for available positions or submit your resume online.
Visit our Careers page.
As students of product
history, we obsess about
understanding why certain
product strategies were
successful and why others
failed. The insights we gain
prove invaluable in helping us
to quickly discern the proper
the course of action and avoid repeating common mistakes. But, what really separates a good strategy from a GREAT strategy? From our perspective, it's a combination of experience, discipline, and inclusivity.
strategy
We believe that the best
product designs emerge
when we have inputs from
multiple perspectives. That
means no one group in our
organization has complete
authority over a product's
proposed feature content,
aesthetic appeal or price point. The challenge is, how do we effectively manage a diverse and, oftentimes, conflicting group of perspectives. Qdesign is our proprietary design methodology that helps us assign priorities to product features based on empirical data and weighted inputs from each subgroup. The result is a product design that maximizes what matters most to consumers and minimizes any tradeoffs. That is the key to GREAT design.