Product management is at an interesting point. More and more companies embrace it as a way to supercharge the business, gratify customers and align the org, yet few product teams are able to deliver on these big expectations. I get asked by managers quite frequently how to get PMs to deliver more, have more impact, be more accountable. The answer, more often than not, starts with management itself — its perception of what product management is, how it operates, and how it should be built in the org. This post describes 5 of the most important ways to address this gap.
A good place to start is the definition of product management. Even here, there’s a lot of confusion.
This is how I like to explain it.
What makes a product right? Two things:
Delivering and capturing value is obviously the job of the entire org. Finding the product that will best allow this is the responsibility of product managers. They don’t have to do it alone. In fact, it’s better if they pull in other people to help them. They don’t even necessarily have to have the title product manager — founders, CxOs, tech leads, and designers sometimes part-time-own product management (even if they don’t call it by this name). However, once you have product managers onboard you should hand them the difficult task of steering the product into the desirable but hard to get to high-value/high-value spot and keeping it there. That should be their full-time job.
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In this workshop I will walk you through the principles and tools of lean product management — how modern-day PMs drive business results and optimize for high impact. Early-bird tickets are available now.
In my early days in product management there were no product owners, just product managers. The term was introduced a few years later with Scrum, the most popular Agile development methodology. Product owner (PO) is an important role within scrum, working closely with the development team as the representative of the customers/users and of other stakeholders, and, among other things, managing a prioritized product backlog that feeds the team with work items.
This sounds like a good fit for a PM, but of course it’s only a subset of what modern PMs do (more on this in the next section). In fact some believe that product managers shouldn’t even specify the solution, and instead frame the problem or opportunity and help the team discover how to best address them. This version of product management sits at odds with the more classically defined product owner.
I’m not sure that the authors of scrum intended to create a real-world role called product owner, but that’s just what happened. Today companies are hiring full-time product owners by the boatload, mainly for two reasons:
If it’s not already clear, I’m not a fan of the current product-owner-as-a-full-time-job model. I don’t believe there’s a neat way to split product management work along strategic and tactical responsibilities and I don’t feel that’s a great work experience for the product owner. The solution lies in reducing the tactical load on POs, through delegation to team members and reduction in process overhead, enabling them to perform the other important functions of the PM.
Google, Facebook, Amazon and other leading tech companies expect and encourage their PMs to act as intrapreneurs. They believe this is key to staying innovative and nimble. In this vein I coach product managers to employ both the mindset and the toolset of the entrepreneur even when working in larger companies. These include:
I think it’s worth spending a few sentences on this last point because it’s major.
According to Steve Blank, one of the originators of Lean Startup, the objective of a startup is not to build the best product, nor to drive the most short term sales, it’s to find a scalable and repeatable business model. I think there’s a lot established orgs can learn from this. The business model helps tie the two main parts of the org — the business teams (sales, marketing, business-dev etc.) and the delivery teams (engineering, design, QA, devops, etc.) into one organic entity — a sort of yin-yang of value delivery and capture.
Modern-day PMs therefore no longer attempt to bridge between the teams or act as gatekeepers. They seek to break the walls entirely and get everyone to work together, with a focus on the business model as a whole. This manifests in cross-functional-work, shared objectives, and user/business-focused metrics, among other things.
When hiring PMs there’s a usual laundry list of things everyone is looking for, however some qualities that are just important, tend to be overlooked:
… and others get too much attention:
Product managers are a special breed of animal — neither engineering nor business nor design. They thrive when they report to senior PMs who understand their unique set of challenges, can coach them, and give them the freedom they need to do their jobs. Reporting to non-PMs, while possible and not uncommon, can hamper career growth and performance.
My general recommendation to CEOs is to create a product org reporting to a chief product officer (CPO). If there’s no CPO its best to have the PM org report to a multidisciplinary manager that has responsibility over both product and business, typically the CEO or head of a business unit.
It’s not a good idea to have product managers report to a pure-engineering manager or a pure-marketing/sales manager. As well-meaning as those individuals may be, in both cases goals will not be well aligned. Instead of focusing on finding the right product the PMs may be asked to help close deals (aka business PMs) or help make engineers fully productive and happy (technical PM, or now, product owner). I’ve been there and I can tell you it’s not fun for the PM and not helpful for the org.
Product management has evolved a lot in the last 15–20 years. The methodologies and tools I teach PMs today are very different from the ones I practiced in the early 2000s. How you build a product management team has changed as well. Finding the right people, placing them in a dedicated PM-orgs, and letting them act as value-focused intrapreneurs instead of as (solely) product owners, will take you a very long way.
Itamar Gilad (itamargilad.com) is a product consultant and speaker helping companies build high-value products. Over the past 15 years he held senior product management roles at Google, Microsoft and a number of startups.
In this hands-on workshop I will walk you through the principles and tools of lean product management — how modern-day PMs drive business results and optimize for high impact. Early-bird tickets are available now.
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