How to Use AI to Prioritize Product Improvements
Learn how AI product prioritization works — from behavioral signals to impact scoring — so your team ships the improvements that matter most to users.

How to Use AI to Prioritize Product Improvements
AI product prioritization changes the starting point for product decisions. Instead of asking "what does the team think is important?" you start by asking "what does the data show is hurting users most?" Most product teams have the opposite problem from what they think. The issue is not too little data — it is too much. Session data, support tickets, NPS responses, usage logs, roadmap requests — all of it sits in separate systems, weighted by whoever shouts loudest in the last planning meeting. The result is a roadmap built on gut feel dressed up as data-driven thinking.
This article explains how AI approaches that question, which inputs drive reliable prioritization, and how to put it into practice without overhauling your entire workflow.
What AI Product Prioritization Actually Means
AI product prioritization is the use of machine learning and behavioral analysis to rank features and fixes based on objective signals rather than subjective opinion. The goal is not to replace product judgment — it is to anchor that judgment in patterns that humans cannot process manually at scale.
Traditional prioritization relies on frameworks like RICE, MoSCoW, or weighted scoring. These are useful structures, but they depend entirely on the quality of inputs. If your impact estimates are guesses and your reach numbers are outdated, the framework just adds false precision to bad assumptions.
AI-driven prioritization replaces estimated inputs with measured ones. It answers questions like:
- How many users hit this friction point each week?
- What percentage of them abandon immediately after?
- Is this issue concentrated in a specific user segment or universal?
Related posts

Why We Built AI Product Insights
The story behind Adora's AI Insights, and why I think this is the future of how product teams operate.

Data-driven off a cliff: why dashboards are dead
Dashboards are dead. Not because data doesn't matter. But because the way we've been accessing it was never actually built for the people making product decisions. Here's what went wrong, and what comes next.

SaaS Pricing Pages to Sign Up Journeys
This teardown analyzes SaaS pricing pages and their connected sign up journeys. Learn how leading SaaS companies design pricing, CTAs, and sign up flows that reduce friction and increase conversion.