Give direction to an engineering-led startup without a chief product officer
So you’ve finally found your calling as a nerd and joined a small early-stage company with lots of awesome software engineers building cool stuff, super fast. You’re calendar is clear of corporate time wasting. You don’t have to be near any humans unless you want to be. Things are looking up .
There’s just this one little tiny minuscule itsy-bitsy thought nagging at you. Where are we going?
You’re building cool sh*t, you know that. Is that all you need?
I am ecstatic to work for an engineering-led company building cool cloud security sh*t. As a bonus, our customers happen to love the product we’ve built! But when I joined Plerion a few months back, it was clear there was something missing in our conversations, in our approach, in understanding why we were all here.
I wanted to get busy doing my job writing interesting blog posts
Step 1: Get the context
If we’re all doing good work, work our customers appreciate and work we are proud of, how can there possibly be a problem? Sounds like we need to Breaking Bad this situation and cook up some real answers.
After doing a bit of digging across our 37 different document management platforms (actually just 3 but it felt like 37), I found some prior art. I searched for terms like “mission”, “vision”, “values” and “strategy”.
We had something. You probably do too.
Okay now we are talking. There are a lot of words in that mission but I kind of get it. Maybe the number of words is why I’d never heard it before. No mere moretal could recite a mission that long.
What’s your mission? What’s your vision? Find any prior art. Sometimes it will be in the founder’s head. Sometimes it will be written but hidden away in a long lost Google drive. Maybe the website has what you need. Whatever you find, you’ll need for step 2.
Step 2: Get everyone to agree there’s a problem
Assuming you have all the context about where the company and product might be headed, and it’s still not clear to you:
It’s time to begin figuring out whether the problem is worth solving.
Start by asking questions, lot’s of questions. Go to your engineering leaders, your commercial team, and your founder(s) and ask:
Ideally the answers are snappy like a good proverb, rich in wisdom but brief in words. Hopefully everyone says roughly the same thing. We weren’t so lucky at Plerion.
We didn’t (still don’t) have a Chief Product Officer or a classical product manager driving consensus and writing everything down. What we did (still do) have is experienced founders who understand the market and know the customer.
Our founders meticulously planned the next 3 months but expressed the mission and vision
As we replayed everyone’s answers amongst ourselves it was obvious there was a problem and perhaps we had misdiagnosed the root cause of unrelated issues in the business. If there is a problem like this in your organisation, the questions and answers should do the work of getting agreement there is a problem.
Time to align, in a line so divine, our paths intertwine like a vine.
Step 3: Create a simple structure for pulling things out of people’s brains
There are a million ways to extract something out of people’s heads. Most of them don’t even involve surgery.
We chose to use a Miro board with six areas for areas for posting sticky notes:
You might not want or need all of these. You may choose to call the categories different names or haggle over definitions of ‘mission’ and ‘vision’. What’s most important is that there is a structure for people to do their abstract thinking
Once you have a structure that works for you, give everyone enough async time that they can go do the abstract thinking. We gave our leadership team a week and that worked well. It was enough time for people to do multiple rounds sticky note creation and to ask questions about other people’s stickies. Booking time explicitly in calendars can be a good forcing function for putting tools down to think.
The result should look something like the below. Lots of notes, some obvious, some wild. Many overlapping ideas and probably some themes.
领英推荐
Don’t worry if it’s not exactly what you expect. We had things pitched at different levels, mutually exclusive options, and different interpretations of the requirements. It’s all good. The dirt comes out in the wash of the discussion.
Step 4: Identify the things that resonate and choose amongst them
This is the hard bit.
Once folks have completed their divergent thinking, you’ll need to converge in a room, ideally an actual physical room in meatspace. It could be one workshop or it could be five. The goal of this get-together is to commit to a mission, vision, BHAG and product principles. No one is allowed to leave the island until it’s done.
Parts of the discussion are going to be epic suck. Make that clear up front. These discussions are abstract which is brutal for structured thinkers. They can become circular. Everyone has their own preferences and frame of reference. Just when you think you’ve got agreement, a hand grenade will be lobbed in the middle.
It will okay! The pain is a rite of passage. You’re shaping the direction of your product for years to come. If it was easy, someone would have done it already.
The good news is that the winning ideas are most likely already stuck on your version of the Miro board. The bad news tends to be that there are too many ideas, not too few. You’ll need a way to focus in on the best candidates from each grouping.
Before diving in head first, choose a facilitator. Someone who understands the business enough to be able to pull the group out from rabbit holes but someone who isn’t attached to any particular direction. Set the ground rules for that person:
For each area we used the following 3 step process that sometimes turned into a 5 step process :
Step 5: Document and communicate
Take a moment to admire what you’ve done. It’s something that will guide the company and all of it’s employees for years to come.
You can’t keep this great outcome to yourself. Most of the company didn’t participate in these enthralling discussion that almost killed you. We’ve started to blog internally at Plerion so that’s how our founders chose to communicate with the team. They also spoke at length during the next available all-hands meeting. It was inspiring and people were excited and relieved to have something they could refer to.
The medium you choose is up to you but here are some lessons from past lives:
If you’ve done this right, all that work should come down to just a few words that are easy to remember and understand. What do you think of ours?
Our mission is to simplify cloud security
Our vision is that everyone’s cloud is secure
Our big hairy audacious goal (BHAG) is to protect one billion assets
Our product principles:
Step 6: Institutionalize the direction
This movie is not over yet. It’s not enough to tell people once about the company’s mission and vision. It’s not even enough to print catchy slogans on a posters and hang them up. For this exercise to make an actual impact, it has to become part of how you work and who you are. Stopping at Step 5 will lead you back to Step 1 in under a year.
So how do you institutionalize the direction?
For engineers, product principles will be the thing that makes all of this real. These principles are how you fundamentally reshape your product over a long period.
For some folks this will all be a bit of a struggle to begin with. Going from little direction to a lot, and from ad-hoc decisions to principled decision making
You’ve made it to the end. You have permission to go back building cool sh*t.
Want to see the cool cloud security thing we are building? Find us at plerion.com
Product at Kajabi | Creator Economy | Marketplaces | Fintech | Ex-Linktree, Airtasker, Expedia, Vodafone |
1 年Amazing article I love how practical the step by step processes are and the depth you went into sharing your learnings. Totally agree not every company needs a CPO - especially early stage companies where there are only a handful of products. I concur with your points Daniel Grzelak ! Thanks for sharing
Hacker, Founder, Executive, Investor, Advisor
1 年This is brilliantly articulated - Nice one dude.