What is ProductOps?

What is ProductOps?

This post first appeared in my newsletter. Please sign up for current, weekly posts.

I have a simple definition of ProductOps.

ProductOps solves problems for product teams that single teams and individuals cannot solve.

In this sense, ProductOps is an internal platform product. It is about collective leverage.?Like any product, it requires product management and strategy. It also involves a lot of systems thinking, service design, operation’s chops, learning design, and experience shepherding change experiments.

Above all, like any product, it has CUSTOMERS.?A big red flag is when the primary ProductOps customer?is not?cross-functional product teams. Why? If you’re not focusing on helping teams be the best they can be (to help your customers), who are you focusing on helping? If you become the process police, who is that helping? ProductOps is not PMO rebranded.

Examples

What do these problems look like? It varies between companies (which makes defining ProductOps hard). Some recent examples from companies I have spoken with:

Telemetry

The teams agree that a consistent naming convention for tracked events would be valuable. But the reality is that no one?needs?consistently named events to do their day-to-day work. Yes, it makes occasional questions hard to answer, but it isn’t the end of the world. It only becomes a?big?issue once you attempt to understand how customers use the whole product.?

Challenge: Help people instrument events with a consistent naming convention WITHOUT infringing on autonomy, limiting what gets instrumented, requiring tracking spreadsheets, working outside normal tools, slowing teams down, adding process hoops, etc.

Strategy

The teams agree that they want context from the c-suite when forming their strategies and an opportunity to provide structured feedback (and even pushback) before the strategy is finalized. The c-suite agrees as well. But you know how calendars are. And you know how busy the CPO is and how tough it is to run these meetings well. No team can make this happen, yet a company can muddle through if forced.

Challenge: Enable the bidirectional sharing of strategic context and empower teams to provide meaningful feedback and critique WITHOUT pitch theater, premature convergence, dull strategies, killing creativity, non-interactive meetings, no agendas, no pre-reads, etc.

Schedule Customer Calls

The teams all want to talk to customers. They agree that it would be harmful to overload specific customers with interview requests. They also agree that drawing from the same pool of vocal customers would be bad for product decisions. But, when push comes to shove, the easiest thing to do is look at some analytics, find a customer, and email them.?

Challenge: Help teams do the best customer research possible WITHOUT overburdening individual customers, limiting research options, reducing the amount of research, long waiting times, long delays for confirmation, manual scheduling, and non-representative customers.

In a startup, none of these problems would require any additional help. But as a company scales, the scope of the operational challenge grows, and it becomes harder for one team (or person) to fix the problem even if they want to.

Note: When reviewing this piece, it struck me that each of the functions above could fall under another group (e.g., telemetry to DX). But I somehow was not surprised that in context they fell to ProductOps.

Without…

This definition also surfaces a critical point.?Like any product, your goal is to make people’s lives easier, not harder!?You’ll notice the “without” caveat with each point above. Yes, sometimes individual teams need to make a small sacrifice for the benefit of the team of teams. That’s OK, and with the right messaging and visibility, you’ll hopefully get buy-in.?

But many ProductOps teams fail to consider all the risks and damaging 2nd/3rd order effects. They launch big-bang change efforts?without?discovery, experimentation, looking out for negative impacts, and pivoting based on feedback. They forget their customers and their needs. Things implode.

This is why people with operations experience in different domains sometimes go wrong when they try ProductOps. What works in manufacturing, finance, or X, may not work in product. The paradigm is different. The motion is different.

ProductOps is a strategic function. Your product involves helping humans do their job in a messy socio-technical system. There are plenty of ways to mess things up. And plenty of ways to get reactive about short-term fires and lose the forest through the trees.

So to return to the definition:

ProductOps solves problems for product teams that single teams and individuals cannot solve (and does so thoughtfully, keeping the long-term health and goals of the teams and organization as a top priority).

ProductOps varies a great deal between organizations because those problems vary. And that is what makes it fun and rewarding.

This post first appeared in my newsletter. Please sign up for current, weekly posts.

Mohammad Amin BiAram

Business Analyst | Digital Transformation Enthusiast | Management Consulting | Sharif University of Technology

1 年

I think this role can play a vital role in product maturity. Specially in deployment and implementation phase. Thanks for sharing dear John. Helpful as usual.

Anna Berntsson

Head of Program Management p? Nordnet Bank AB

1 年

This is SPOT ON and totally in line with the Tech and Product ops function that I am building up with Tracey Broderick and David Eriksson at Epidemic Sound ?? We see ourselves as "force multipliers" and often pitch our function by saying that we are the "PMs for scaling the Tech and product organization effectively and sustainably" ...which basically is a huge +1 to your article ?? and underlines our view and the importance of understanding how you: 1. Bring continuous value to your customers (X-functional teams and leaders) 2. Utilize a wide range of product management and coaching skills to prioritize and change manage the right problems 3. Protect a balance of alignment and autonomy. Actually making the two fuel each other rather than being opposites. Anyone who +1000 on John Cutler's approach and want to join forces to continue to level up Epidemic Sound Tech and Product org and Soundtrack the world? ???? We will start to look for an addition to our team so we should talk!

Yoav Achiam

Growth Product manager | Entrepreneur | Web, Extensions & Mobile Applications | Innovator

1 年

Thanks for sharing. At my current company I feel that productOps is mainly analysts helping me analyze. It was explained to me in a different way initially, when the group was formed. It was explained in a manner closer to what you suggest, but at the end I think the force of the daily grind got to it and it stayed as analysts helping PMs analyze.

Nick Deshpande, rmc, CISSP, CCSP

Cybersecurity | Product Leadership | Platform Engineering

1 年

So vital, yet so hard to implement correctly. Think of your product people as users.

Mike Bakker

Organisatie Transformatie | Strategie Realisatie | Programma Versnelling

1 年

Roba Al-Assi check this out ??

要查看或添加评论,请登录

社区洞察

其他会员也浏览了