This Product Manager Feared Customers

This Product Manager Feared Customers

Susan landed her dream job -- she was a Sr. Product Manager at a fast-growing company. I knew her well. She got to work with brilliant people every day, building an amazing product.

The culture was great and the team was focused on building something lasting. She was happy.

After several months at the new company, Susan was on a customer call. The customer began complaining that the application did not have a feature that was critical for his team and he was furious about it. He yelled. A lot. Susan took it personally.

After a few more unpleasant interactions with other customers, she began to think twice about interacting with certain customers. Susan started dodging customer interviews in general and avoiding product demos altogether. She got queasy when she even thought about dealing with an annoyed customer. All she could think about were those negative experiences.

In her mind, customers wanted to talk to her because they had a complaint. She believed that the best way to get her job done was to stay away them completely. She kept her head down and focused on adding more features to the backlog.

She lost touch and ultimately moved over to product marketing. In hindsight, it was obvious that Susan was headed for a challenging future as a product manager. Do you know why? She got spooked and started hiding from customers.

You may not think this is a big deal. But if you are not careful, avoiding your customers can spell the end to your product management career as well.

If you want to be a great product manager, you must never avoid customers. The good ones and the rough ones. Here is how to conquer your fear and get back in the game:

Change your perception
See customer problems as opportunities to improve. For example, if several customers do not understand a new feature, perhaps the user interface needs some tweaks or the help articles need improvement. Your customers will give you valuable insight into what is missing if you do not immediately dismiss what they are saying.

Lay aside your own agenda
Drop your preconceived notions about the customer. Open your mind to the possibility that something good might come from the conversation. At the least, you will learn something new about the challenges your customer is facing. When you take time to listen, you will gain new insights, making your customers more real and less threatening.

Offer an outlet for ideas
I cannot think of a better way to respond to customers than building the features they request. That is why we added an ideas portal to our product roadmap software -- to capture great ideas from anyone at anytime.

We encourage Aha! customers to contribute new ideas and vote on others, and we notify them if their idea picks up steam. And we do our best to ask for guidance when we do not understand what is being requested.

I am not saying that you have to build every feature that customers dream up. And there is no way that you can spend all of your time speaking with them. But when you encourage customers to share ideas, you will be pleasantly surprised at the dialogue and relationship that develops.

If you are a product manager who is walking away from customers, you are missing out on a critical piece of the job. Customers are the lifeblood of the business and deserve your attention. Lose touch and you will likely lose your job, like Susan did.

At Aha! we make it a point to get close to our customers, in fact every employee must do a customer demo when they start at the company. I still talk to customers every week, because I do not want to lose that close connection.

In the role of product manager, you must be as comfortable interacting with customers as you are with your colleagues.

Great product managers take on every aspect of the role with equal amounts of enthusiasm and drive - and no fear.

Do not miss the chance to make real connections with the people who place their trust in your company. Not only does your career depend on it, you will find that interacting with customers is one of the greatest parts of the job.

How can you help a product manager who is avoiding customers?

Also, if you would like to read my future posts then please click 'Follow' at the top of this article and feel free to connect via Twitter

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ABOUT BRIAN AND AHA!

Brian seeks business and wilderness adventure. He has been the founder or early employee of six cloud-based software companies and is the CEO of Aha! -- the world's #1 product roadmap software. His last two companies were acquired by Aruba Networks [ARUN] and Citrix [CTXS].

Signup for a free trial of Aha! and see why 20,000+ users on the world's leading product and engineering teams trust Aha! to build brilliant product strategy and visual roadmaps.

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Rekha Narayan

Program Management. Transforming Organizations. Leading Teams and Programs.

9 年

Hmm - a customer yelling at you is possibly better than losing the customer. The product manager needs to see what's ahead and use the feedback to gain ground. Before they walk away.

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Semir J.

Founder at Webkadabra

9 年

Interesting, then in that case their title should be product and customer manager. There is a clear and obvious interdependence between the two.

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AJ Corcoran

GTM Strategy for Startups

9 年

How do you incorporate user feedback into your product strategy? Take our quick, anonymous survey and we'll send you the final report for free! https://www.surveymonkey.com/s/QYCQL29

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Jeff Smith

Product Manager | Databases | Blogger | Software Development | Cloud | Social | Community Management | Product Marketing

9 年

If a customer is giving negative feedback to a product manager, imagine what they are saying to fellow and prospective customers. Better to get in front of that, and I've found you can almost turn any negative into a net positive for both you(or the product) and the customer.

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Rebecca (Mayston) McLeod

Travel Enthusiast | Business Growth Driver | New Business Development | Commercial Property | Story Telling - Oman & NZ - Desert Queen Gone Green | Inspiring you to step out of the box and into an adventure

9 年

customers are an integral part of any business and getting close to them is essential, I do think businesses need to consider how approachable they are to maximise this relationship

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