7 Types of Product Every Product Manager Will Encounter
Carlos Gonzalez de Villaumbrosia
CEO at Product School - Global leader in product training
What types of products will every Product Manager encounter throughout their career??This question might seem impossible to answer, and to an extent it is. However, there are some product traits that appear across industries.?This is the basis for Product Thinking: that common methodologies and tools are transferable to various situations. In the past decade or so, product experts have gathered enough information to determine what we talk about when we talk about Product Management. Now it's time to clarify what we mean when we talk about?Product.
What are the criteria? I aim to be practical. It wouldn't make sense to organize products by sector, or to divide them by “complexity.” Instead, my guiding principle is the?usability?behind the groupings.
Let’s begin our Product safari.
Mass Consumer Apps
Tinder. Deliveroo. Airbnb. Uber. What do they have in common?
Their appeal is to everyone everywhere. Who does not need to order food or other items once in a while? Who is not seeking the cheapest, nicest holidays available? Who doesn't occasionally get lost and need a quick ride in the city? All of these digital applications offer services that are universal in their reach.
B2C PMs are the most visible face of the tech economy, which makes them the standard example for books, blogs, and events. This has led to some mistaken assumptions. First, that lessons extracted from these companies can be employed with success everywhere else.?This means pricing, design, marketing…
The second big mistake people make is to extrapolate this sector’s relationship with its customers (integrated with their daily lives) to the rest of tech applications.
This vision of the B2C market is based on broad generalizations. B2C Product Managers are not necessarily better trained in marketing or less technical than B2B ones. Two specific traits include, rather:
SaaS or B2B Solutions
A cliche resource in this article would be to say "B2B marketers are the opposite to B2C”. But this is not always the case. Some of the most popular SaaS solutions hold the same popularity as mass-market applications. Think Slack or Gmail, for instance. So many of us felt lost earlier this week with the great Slack outage of 2/22/2022! These thoughts ran through our minds: "How do I contact my teammates? What did we do before Slack!?"
We rely so heavily on these B2B products during our working hours that they become almost like beloved colleagues (or enemies).
B2B apps, including Software as a Service applications, are there to service the needs of?other?companies. They are the products for Product Managers. The market, while smaller, can bring larger profits (just think of Amazon Web Services!). This makes the area really competitive and requires smarter marketing than what is usually attributed to ‘boring’ work apps.
Among the qualities linked to working with B2B products, we can find:
Additive Features
For many Product Managers, their first gig involves?working on already-existing products that, due to their size, are divided between ‘features.’ For instance, Google’s G Suite includes a diverse selection of functions that are taken care of by different PMs. Thus, many times these professionals are not really in charge of a product from beginning to end, as other PMs are. They are even farther from that common cliche of PMs being “CEOs of their product.”
However, the focus on features does not limit the scope of the PMs’ activities. Many times, a singular element within an entire product unexpectedly becomes the main USP. Think of how Google’s revolutionary “backlink” system began as an internal tool and later provided the bedrock for the growth of one of the world’s largest companies.
There are certain skills which are fundamental for these sort of PMs:
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Transformation of Existing Products
Digital solutions are amazing. But there was a whole economy before they appeared on the scene, you know? Since the late 1990s, analog firms have been attempting to transition to the virtual world. Some were destroyed in the transition: think Blockbuster. Some actually became ten times larger: think Netflix.
Many Product Managers who stay in the field long enough will face the challenge of updating or transforming these types of “traditional” products. We are talking newspapers, universities, postal services…any business that has been disrupted by emerging technologies and faces two choices: to adapt better than its competitors, or perish.
Product Managers working on these types of products will require two key abilities:
Marketplace Platforms
This includes Amazon and beyond, including all the other online retailers out there and market-oriented services.?Your function here is to limit transaction costs as much as possible. You do not want to become another intermediary that makes things difficult for sellers and buyers to get to their stuff.
In many ways, these PMs follow the dictum “build it, and they will come.” Your most important asset is not people themselves, but their?interactions. Remember that you will not necessarily need to become the shop for everything; a huge player has already taken over that space. Rather,?the biggest opportunities to monetize this intermediary position lie in specialized markets. Think smart!
What sort of skills are better aligned with these kinds of products?
Internet of Things (IoT), Physical and Machine Learning Products
Internet of Things (IoT) is easy to understand but difficult to commercially put into practice. Basically, it means making everyday physical objects “smart.” Not simply by transforming them into data-generating appliances, but?actually improving their functions through their connection to the wider network. The classic example is the fridge that orders groceries on your behalf based on an intensive data analysis of your previous shopping.
If you add Machine Learning into the mix, there is vast potential behind this idea. For instance, the B2C bias in much digital work forgets the major improvements behind installing smart machines in factories. This way,?companies managing data can understand with almost perfect precision how long certain machines can conduct a certain task and why. But our most ambitious thinkers are already seeking to apply these insights into fields as diverse as crime prevention or infrastructure building.
Only PMs with these traits will be able to thrive with these products:
Startup Products
There are so many stereotypes associated with working at startups. The vanity of founders, the geekiness of developers, the absurd quantities of money… Most of them are only applicable to a minority. Startups are simply seeds, the beginning of what could be a really interesting addition to the tech business sphere. As such, they hold?special rules for PMs dealing with startup products.
Unless you belong to a privileged few within the community, it is very likely that you will be dealing with limited resources. This will mean more hours and more work; so pick your colleagues wisely!?The most important thing is to make that journey from your Product Vision to an actual service?that can be marketed and provide a solution to a certain market.
PMs who thrive at dealing with startup products tend to have these skills:
What do you think of these categories? Which type are you most excited to work with? For me, I think I'll stick with the startup :)
Technical Product Manager| Financial IT Services - Digital Business & Cloud Transformation |SAFe POPM & Cloud Practitioner(GCP & AWS)
2 年Nice content thanks for the post
Product Management at Optym | Data Science Graduate
2 年Great content ! Thank you for the insights for budding product managers like me .
FOUNDING AMBASSADOR at Support Saturdays
2 年Thanks!