Stakeholder Email Variants: Mermaid Diagram Analysis
Overview
Three variants of the stakeholder email, each using different Mermaid diagram types to visualize key messages. All variants follow the feedback structure:
- TL;DR at the top
- Why this matters (problem/solution/benefit)
- 6 key findings with colored squares
- What's next (roadmap)
- Less technical language
- Visual engagement
Variant 1: Impact-Focused with Quadrant Chart
File: STAKEHOLDER_EMAIL_VARIANT_1.md
Mermaid Diagrams Used:
- Quadrant Chart - Shows impact vs implementation complexity
- Timeline - Roadmap visualization
Best For:
- Strategic stakeholders who need to understand priority and impact
- Decision-makers evaluating resource allocation
- Business leaders who think in terms of ROI and strategic value
Why This Works:
- Quadrant chart immediately shows what delivers high impact with low complexity (quick wins)
- Timeline provides clear forward-looking view
- Visual prioritization helps stakeholders understand what to focus on
Strengths:
✅ Clear visual prioritization
✅ Strategic thinking demonstrated
✅ Easy to understand impact distribution
Considerations:
⚠️ Quadrant chart requires some interpretation
⚠️ Less process-focused than other variants
Variant 2: Journey-Focused with Process Flow
File: STAKEHOLDER_EMAIL_VARIANT_2.md
Mermaid Diagrams Used:
- Journey Diagram - Shows the data transformation journey from user perspective
- Flowchart - Simple process visualization
Best For:
- Business users who need to understand the process
- Stakeholders who think in terms of workflows
- Non-technical audiences who benefit from step-by-step visualization
Why This Works:
- Journey diagram shows the human/stakeholder experience
- Flowchart provides simple "how it works" explanation
- Both diagrams are intuitive and require no technical knowledge
Strengths:
✅ Most accessible to non-technical audiences
✅ Clear process visualization
✅ Emphasizes user experience and outcomes
Considerations:
⚠️ Less strategic/impact-focused
⚠️ Journey diagram is simpler than other visualizations
Variant 3: Impact Distribution with Roadmap
File: STAKEHOLDER_EMAIL_VARIANT_3.md
Mermaid Diagrams Used:
- Pie Chart - Shows value distribution across different areas
- Gantt Chart - Detailed timeline with milestones
Best For:
- Analytical stakeholders who like data visualization
- Project managers who need detailed timelines
- Finance/Operations teams who think in terms of value distribution
Why This Works:
- Pie chart immediately shows where value is coming from
- Gantt chart provides detailed, actionable roadmap
- Both are familiar chart types that require no explanation
Strengths:
✅ Familiar chart types (pie, Gantt)
✅ Detailed, actionable roadmap
✅ Clear value distribution visualization
Considerations:
⚠️ Gantt chart can be more detailed than needed for high-level email
⚠️ Pie chart is simpler than quadrant analysis
Recommendation Matrix
| Stakeholder Type | Best Variant | Why |
|---|---|---|
| C-Level Executives | Variant 1 | Strategic focus, impact prioritization |
| Business Users | Variant 2 | Process clarity, user journey focus |
| Project Managers | Variant 3 | Detailed roadmap, value distribution |
| Finance/Operations | Variant 3 | Cost/value visualization, detailed planning |
| Technical Leaders | Variant 1 or 2 | Strategic thinking OR process clarity |
Mermaid Diagram Types Used
1. Quadrant Chart (Variant 1)
- Purpose: Strategic prioritization
- Best Use: Showing impact vs effort/complexity
- Engagement Level: High (requires interpretation, shows strategic thinking)
2. Timeline (Variant 1)
- Purpose: Forward-looking roadmap
- Best Use: High-level milestones and phases
- Engagement Level: Medium (simple, clear, familiar)
3. Journey Diagram (Variant 2)
- Purpose: User experience visualization
- Best Use: Showing stakeholder journey through process
- Engagement Level: High (tells a story, easy to understand)
4. Flowchart (Variant 2)
- Purpose: Process explanation
- Best Use: Simple "how it works" visualization
- Engagement Level: Medium (familiar, clear)
5. Pie Chart (Variant 3)
- Purpose: Value distribution
- Best Use: Showing where value/impact comes from
- Engagement Level: Medium (familiar chart type)
6. Gantt Chart (Variant 3)
- Purpose: Detailed timeline with tasks
- Best Use: Project planning and milestone tracking
- Engagement Level: Medium (detailed, actionable)
Creative Elements Used
All variants include:
- ✅ Colored squares before hex codes (following project standards)
- ✅ Emoji icons for visual interest
- ✅ Clear TL;DR section
- ✅ Business-focused language (less technical)
- ✅ "What's in it for you" messaging
- ✅ Forward-looking roadmap
Which Variant to Choose?
Choose Variant 1 if:
- Your stakeholders are strategic decision-makers
- You want to show prioritization and impact
- You need to demonstrate strategic thinking
Choose Variant 2 if:
- Your audience is non-technical
- You want to emphasize user experience
- Process clarity is more important than strategy
Choose Variant 3 if:
- Your stakeholders are analytical/project-focused
- You need detailed roadmap visibility
- Value distribution is key to your message