Posts

Showing posts from March, 2026
Image

Avoiding the "Feature Factory" Trap

  Avoiding the "Feature Factory" Trap Many PMs fall into the trap of measuring success by " features shipped ." This is a vanity metric . The Shift : Move from " Output " (how much we built) to " Outcome " (what we changed for the user). Outcome-Driven Roadmaps : Define a clear goal, such as "Reduce checkout friction by 20%," rather than "Add Apple Pay ." Measure Success: Did that feature actually move the needle on your specific KPI ? If not, iterate or kill it. Don't celebrate the launch; celebrate the impact .
Image

Mastering the Stakeholder Relationship

  Mastering the Stakeholder Relationship A PM is a conductor, not a dictator. You are managing expectations across Engineering , Design , Sales , and Leadership . Communication is Key: Different stakeholders need different data. Engineers care about technical debt and feasibility ; Sales cares about features that help close deals; Leadership cares about ROI . The Shared Roadmap : Maintain a " living " roadmap that is transparent. When timelines shift, communicate the "why" early. Trust is built through transparency , especially when things go wrong.
Image

Product-Led Growth (PLG) Basics

  PLG is a strategy where the product itself acts as the primary driver of acquisition, conversion, and retention. Core Principle: Deliver value before you ask for the credit card. Key Metrics: Focus on Time-to-Value (TTV) . How quickly can a user experience that "aha!" moment after signing up? Design for Self-Serve : If a user needs a sales call to start using your product, you are in a Sales-Led model , not a PLG model . Remove friction, simplify the onboarding flow, and let the product speak for itself.
Image

Customer Empathy: Beyond the Metrics

  Customer Empathy: Beyond the Metrics Metrics tell you what is happening, but user interviews tell you why . Never rely on dashboards alone to drive your product strategy . The Trap: Treating users as data points . The Fix: Spend at least two hours a week talking to actual users . Ask open-ended questions like, "Walk me through the last time you used our product to solve [X]." Active Listening : Listen for the "struggle"—where do they pause? Where do they express frustration? Building empathy transforms you from a feature-factory worker into a problem solver .
Image

The Art of Saying "No"

  The Art of Saying "No" Product management is often described as the art of prioritization. While it’s tempting to say "yes" to every stakeholder request, a product manager’s true value lies in protecting the product vision. Why it matters: Every feature adds complexity, maintenance cost, and cognitive load for the user. The Framework: Use the RICE (Reach, Impact, Confidence, Effort) score to remain objective. The Strategy: When you say no, explain why . Frame it around the current product goal or capacity. Instead of "no," try, "Not right now, because we are currently focused on solving [X] for [Y] users." Pro-tip: Keep a "Parking Lot" document for good ideas that don't fit the immediate roadmap. It acknowledges the idea without derailing current progress.

0to1cr