Today In many organisations, there is a growing conversation about how to build digital products that people actually want to use. But at the same time, companies still need to plan properly, manage budgets, and deliver work on time. This creates a challenge of how you stay organised and structured, while also being flexible enough to learn, experiment, and improve your product.
As someone who works in both project management and business analysis, I’ve seen time and time again that the best results come when organisations combine the strengths of both worlds. When you do it well, you don’t just finish a project — you build something that continues to grow and deliver value long after launch.
Project Delivery Gives Direction while Product Thinking Gives Purpose. Traditional project delivery gives teams what they need to stay on track: clear plans, timelines, budgets, and responsibilities. Without this structure, it’s easy for work to drift in the wrong direction but structure alone does not guarantee success.
Product-led thinking also encourages teams to focus on people, the users, and the real problems they are trying to solve. It pushes teams to ask important questions like “Does this feature really help our users?”, “How do we know this will work?”, “What can we learn before we build too much?”. When you mix structure with a strong focus on users, the result is a product that is both robust and delivers impact.
Experimentation Thrives Within Structure
Some people think that experimenting means chaos, but that’s not true. Infact, having a good project structure creates a safe environment where teams can try new ideas without losing direction. Within that structure, teams can test, learn, and iterate.
This balance allows organisations to move quickly but with confidence, learn early instead of finding mistakes too late, improve continuously, even after launch. It’s not about choosing between order or creativity; you can have both and what you get in return is innovation and accountability.
The Power of MVP Thinking in Project Environments
Many organisations try to build everything at once. This usually delays value, increases risk, and often worsens user adoption. A better approach will be to start with the most important part of the product — the part that delivers the biggest value to users. This is often called an MVP (Minimum Viable Product), but in simple terms, it just means start with something small, release it early, learn from real users, and then improve. This approach helps to avoid building features people don’t need, understand what users actually want and therefore make changes before it’s too late.
Build momentum quickly
As a Business Analyst and Project Manager, I often guide teams to release in stages. Each release is a chance to learn and get better. Over time, these small steps add up to a strong, successful product.. You don’t need to be a data expert to make good decisions. Sometimes, simple information, like user feedback, usage patterns, or customer comments, can tell you a lot. Good products grow by listening. Good projects succeed by adjusting. When you combine both, you remove guesswork and build with clarity. Data helps in choosing the most important tasks, avoid wasting time and money, understand what’s working and what’s not and improve the product after launch. It keeps teams focused on what truly matters.
Great Products Are Built by Great Collaboration
Product-led work is a team sport. It requires different people with different strengths, designers, developers, analysts, managers, marketers, and even customer support teams. Good collaboration means everyone understands the goal, speaks openly, shares feedback, and moves in the same direction. It cuts out confusion and creates a shared sense of purpose.
When teams work together this way, they deliver faster and build better.
The Future Belongs to Hybrid Professionals
Today’s organisations need people who can manage projects AND think like product leaders. Professionals who can plan with discipline, but also respond to change with confidence. This is where roles like Business Analyst and Project Manager become incredibly powerful. We help teams stay organised, understand users deeply, and ensure that the work we deliver actually makes a difference. This hybrid skill set is becoming essential in companies all over the world.
In conclusion, balance Is the key to Long-Term Success. Successful organisations don’t choose between project delivery and product thinking — they blend them. Project delivery helps get things done while product thinking helps get the right things done. When both are combined, it creates digital products that are well-planned, user-focused, and ready to grow. And that’s what helps organisations stay competitive in a rapidly changing world.
Ese Onogoro is a Business Analyst & Project Manager based in the UK.








