The DNA of Product Management
At large technology companies like Google, product management can be a very stressful vocation. The truth is that you serve at the behest of your colleagues - you can't win without your team, and you certainly won't succeed without their backing. Given this, here's advice I share, and try to live by:
1) Product managers wear three hats
Congrats, as a product manager you get three jobs:
a) Project manager: keep the wheels on the bus, the trains running on time and over-communicating about status, documentation, strategy, vision, etc
b) Product manager: the actual feature and requirements spec'ing, working with your x-functional team to get things built and shipped
c) CEO: the buck stops with you no matter what the org chart says. When your product succeeds lavish praise on the team. If your product is struggling you don't blame sales or marketing - you help them get on track.
Whether you're a greenhorn PM or a senior jedi master, you always wear these hats. It's just that your percentage of time allocated to each of the roles shifts away from A and towards C. Fresh out of school and you might be 35% project manager/60% product manager/5% CEO. It's important that the CEO # is never 0% -- even the newest PM hire should have something they approach this way. It builds accountability and a way of thinking that becomes essential to their development.
2) Seek collaboration, not necessarily consensus
In their leadership of flat x-functional teams some PMs seek consensus, thinking this is the best way to get a team moving in the same direction. I believe this is wrong. Collaboration, communication and inclusion are essential - you'll die on the vine without your team. But it's not consensus you should seek. It's a mandate to lead in a particular direction. The backing to make the call.
You acquire your mandate power via upper mgmt supporting your strategic plan, from your x-functional team leads feeling included and empowered, and from your team members knowing that they can contribute and have ownership over their areas, but at the same time have a strong PM who will make the tough decisions.
3) Give PMs goals, not projects
Product managers turns goals into projects with the help of their teams and entrepreneurship. At YouTube we try to give our PMs broad ownership and then work with them to ensure the projects they initiate fulfill the needs and measurable goals of the area and the company.
4) Overwhelm them as a prioritization exercise
Too much to do. That's the perpetual state of being a PM. But the benefit is you focus on the most meaningful actions and move from highest nail to highest nail. If you're leading a group of PMs the tricky thing is to make sure you're still positioning them for success. Gentle nudges, help in prioritizing, etc. But at the end of the day they need to develop this critical muscle where they learn to delegate and to pull resources towards them. The leveraged PM doesn't say "I can't get it done," they prioritize and help identify the resources necessary for success.
5) "Not on my watch"
Be willing to stand up for what you believe, especially when you're representing your users. Hard decisions make great products. Your job is not to carve the safe route. Your job is to increase the probability that you'll be delighting millions of users in a sustainable fashion. Don't let others design your product for you.
6) You are a caretaker of something bigger
Your job is to take a product (and company) from one defined phase to the next. Then you will pass it on for another phase. The leader for the next phase might be you again or it could be someone else. Either way you should be handing off something which is sustainable. If your product was a winner solely because you carried the weight of the world on your shoulders then you're not doing your job. Build leverage, build an organization around you, find people who will be even better than you.
What are some product management tips that you've come across?
Software Product Manager || Operations Specialist || AI, Space, Immersive and Emerging Technologies || Fintech.
2 年Great article on what it takes to be a great Product Manager. Written 10yrs back but resonates with the very core of being an effective Product manager building great problem solving products,
Product Manager at OrthoFX. Built products at CareStack, and Co-founded Creditoflux
8 年I found this read extremely useful. I am new to product management role and am fresh out of college with some entrepreneurship experience.Points 2 and 4 where the highlights. I believe the hardest decision for a PM that is new is to make the decision of creative features to usability balance.
Believer | Father | Husband | ?? Senior Software Engineer at Frontier Technology | Tech Enthusiast | Lifter of moderately heavy weights ???♂?
8 年Great insights! Are there certain personality traits or characteristics that can be found in great Product Managers?
I help manufacturers achieve more with less by leveraging smart manufacturing solutions - MES, ERP, and Advanced Analytics
10 年One of the things that are probably being implied in the posts is also accountability. State metrics for different stages of product development and bringing it to the market upfront and closely follow them throughout the life cycle. And also share the results with the team.
Product Management | Consumer Science - Empowering teams to make smart product decisions
11 年Hunter Walk I like your point, "The truth is that you serve at the behest of your colleagues - you can't win without your team, and you certainly won't succeed without their backing." A successful product requires that the entire product team - development, marketing, sales, and customer support - execute on the product strategy. Part of what product managers do is to empower the team with the strategy and market information. It's too narrow to describe the product manager "hat" as "the actual feature and requirements spec'ing, working with your x-functional team to get things built and shipped". Product management is not just about defining features and requirements and getting them built and shipped, but also about learning the market and creating a shared understanding of the problems to solve, the unfair advantage and overarching value proposition for the product, and other components of the business model.