5 Tips for Launching New App Features
June 19, 2019

Adam Zimman
LaunchDarkly

The following are 5 tips for launching new app features:

1. Plan the release

While you’re still in the planning phase for a new feature, it’s a good idea to also think about how you will release it. This is something often done within the design process.

Things you should incorporate into this include:

■ Who will see this feature first? (Are there internal or external beta groups?)

■ What is success for this feature?

■ Who will see the feature once it’s in a steady state? (Is this for VIP customers or everyone?)

■ Is there important timing tied to this release, such as an event or special time of the calendar year?

Tools that will help you with this include product delivery and tracking tools.

2. Build awareness

Awareness around a release is important for both internal and external groups. Within your organization, do teams have the support they need to be successful? Think about what your sales, marketing, customer success, or any other team will need in terms of understanding the feature being released, and how to answer any questions they might face. Externally, awareness should be tied back to how you will measure success.

Tools that will help you accomplish this include go-to-market plans, centralized information repositories, and any other tools that will help your teams (and customers!) stay connected, informed, and collaborative.

3. Measure your release

After the release has happened, how will you know if it was successful? Because you already thought about success metrics in the planning stage, you should be ready to measure whether or not it was successful.

Tools that will help with this include those that surface sales and ops metrics. Also, it’s important to consider these together — look at performance and monitoring metrics, support requests by volume, and qualitative feedback from customers and prospects.

4. Celebrate and recognize

Take time to celebrate your wins. Shipping software is like a muscle, the more frequently you do it, the easier it is to execute. If you ship less frequently, the process begins to atrophy and the action becomes more difficult. Celebration (even for small wins) provides motivation to continue practicing the act of shipping, and results in more stable services and products.

5. Reflect and iterate

Software is never done, and neither is a process for software delivery. After the release has occurred and you’ve paused to enjoy the moment, now it’s time to reflect back on what went well and what didn’t. Reflect on both process and product. Tie process back to culture — consider the tools that you use for process, what enabled you to do more and what was a hindrance? Use this feedback and apply what you learned from measuring success in the planning phase for the next release. Learn how you can adjust and improve upon what you shipped.

Adam Zimman is VP of Product and Platform at LaunchDarkly
Share this

Industry News

January 22, 2025

Postman announced the Postman AI Agent Builder, a suite empowering developers to quickly design, test, and deploy intelligent agents by combining LLMs, APIs, and workflows into a unified solution.

January 22, 2025

The Cloud Native Computing Foundation® (CNCF®), which builds sustainable ecosystems for cloud native software, announced the graduation of CubeFS.

January 21, 2025

BrowserStack and Bitrise announced a strategic partnership to revolutionize mobile app quality assurance.

January 21, 2025

Render raised $80M in Series C funding.

January 16, 2025

Mendix, a Siemens business, announced the general availability of Mendix 10.18.

January 16, 2025

Red Hat announced the general availability of Red Hat OpenShift Virtualization Engine, a new edition of Red Hat OpenShift that provides a dedicated way for organizations to access the proven virtualization functionality already available within Red Hat OpenShift.

January 16, 2025

Contrast Security announced the release of Application Vulnerability Monitoring (AVM), a new capability of Application Detection and Response (ADR).

January 15, 2025

Red Hat announced the general availability of Red Hat Connectivity Link, a hybrid multicloud application connectivity solution that provides a modern approach to connecting disparate applications and infrastructure.

January 15, 2025

Appfire announced 7pace Timetracker for Jira is live in the Atlassian Marketplace.

January 14, 2025

SmartBear announced the availability of SmartBear API Hub featuring HaloAI, an advanced AI-driven capability being introduced across SmartBear's product portfolio, and SmartBear Insight Hub.

January 14, 2025

Azul announced that the integrated risk management practices for its OpenJDK solutions fully support the stability, resilience and integrity requirements in meeting the European Union’s Digital Operational Resilience Act (DORA) provisions.

January 14, 2025

OpsVerse announced a significantly enhanced DevOps copilot, Aiden 2.0.

January 13, 2025

Progress received multiple awards from prestigious organizations for its inclusive workplace, culture and focus on corporate social responsibility (CSR).

January 13, 2025

Red Hat has completed its acquisition of Neural Magic, a provider of software and algorithms that accelerate generative AI (gen AI) inference workloads.

January 13, 2025

Code Intelligence announced the launch of Spark, an AI test agent that autonomously identifies bugs in unknown code without human interaction.