Product management is an exciting and challenging field. Product management in a marketplace, though, is a completely different world with its own unique ups and downs. While there are best practices around what to do during the scale-up or 1 to 100 phases, I am here to talk about what aspects of the product we should pay attention to during the zero-to-one product management at marketplaces.
Throughout my 10+ year career in marketplaces, I was involved in building three businesses. In my previous role at Uber, I worked as a product manager responsible for launching Uber Fleet products globally. While at Dunzo, a delivery app, I led the product launch and expansion team for a ride-sharing product, Dunzo Bike Taxi, in India. I’m currently leading the Platform and Data Engineering Product team at Carwow, an online marketplace for buying and selling cars in London, UK. I’d like to talk about how a product manager can add value during the launch and the zero-to-one phase and share some advice based on my experience.
In short, a marketplace is an intermediary that connects demand (end consumers) and supply (sellers or vendors). Recently, technology has accelerated this type of model - think Uber connecting commuters with taxis or Doordash connecting consumers with restaurants. The marketplace, in turn, keeps a percentage of the transaction and calls it a commission or service charge.
While it may seem like the role of a product manager does not really change with the phase of growth of an organization, a marketplace might demand an entirely different mindset. More akin to a wartime CEO and peacetime CEO, there could be a Launch Product Manager and Growth Product Manager at a marketplace.
The success of a newly launched marketplace is determined by two things (three if you are not venture-funded):
Liquidity - The beauty of marketplaces is how they solve the immediacy of a particular demand. In the Uber example - you want to book a cab immediately rather than days in advance. However, this means keeping demand and supply in sync due to the transient nature of both. Building tools to quickly onboard suppliers and make it easy for customers to sign up is something that products can add plenty of value to.
Network effects - If more people use and like the product, the higher the chance they will recommend it to their friends. This in turn creates more demand for sellers or suppliers, thereby increasing the revenue they earn. This can be done through referrals or via user promotions. Both are areas that require product teams to drive.
Unit Economics (if sustainability is a focus during launch) - If unit economics is a priority, having tools to configure pricing, user promotions, seller incentives, etc., becomes more important during the launch phase. However, typically, these are areas that venture-funded companies focus on later in the journey after finding the product market fit.
In short, you need a strong product team to tackle all three parts of the marketplace.
However, a lot can go wrong with how product managers handle a launch. Assuming you are the PM, or a small group of PMs, involved in launching a new marketplace, or a new category or geography within an existing marketplace, here are things that you should be doing.
Stay connected to the business strategy. The product roadmap should be based on the direction the business wants to take. For example, if the business strategy is to acquire enterprise suppliers instead of small or independent contractors, the product should reflect that.
Keep everyone in the loop. It is vital to let stakeholders know what’s coming. Often, product changes need to be complemented by changes to other processes that the product team might not be even aware of. For example, customer service FAQs.
Get involved with your customers and partners. Keeping a close relationship with a few power users and partners will shorten the feedback cycle and help iterate and improve the product faster.
Encourage dogfooding. It is imperative that at least the leadership team are power users of the marketplace. In the case of a B2B or low-frequency marketplace, it is important to keep testing the user flow through a test account that everyone can access. There are a lot of valuable insights and feedback that can be derived from dog-fooding, especially in the early stages.
Overall, being a product manager during launch is like walking a tightrope over Niagara Falls. It is pretty rewarding when done right, however deadly if you focus on the wrong things. I hope you found these tips valuable and please let me know if you agree or disagree with them.