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It's been a couple of weeks since I last published this newsletter. The reason? I've been on holiday, so I've been thinking more about the benefits of drinking Prosecco in a hot tub than the craft of product management.And that brings me back to something I r…
In the modern workplace, busyness has often been regarded as a symbol of status. But just because your calendar looks like Tetris, it doesn't mean you're more important than anyone else. A schedule full of back-to-back meetings and overlapping status updates …
In 1954, a saxophone-playing engineer changed the face of popular music forever with an electric guitar he couldn't even play. Here are 5 lessons every product manager can learn from Leo Fender and the birth of the Stratocaster.You don't have to dogfood your …
As a product manager, you're bombarded with choices to make.From prioritising the initiatives on your roadmap to picking the right colour for a button, decisions are the lifeblood of the role.But if you think it's your job to make all the decisions, you'll so…
Just because the reality of your product management experience is a million miles away from what Marty Cagan lays out in Inspired, it doesn't mean you're doing it wrong.Like Jason Knight says:
There are few things that can get a product manager riled up as much as telling them they need to put dates and milestones on their roadmap. A couple of days ago, I posted this tweet which re-ignited the whole roadmap / delivery plan argument in the replies:
As a product manager, you can read all the books and blog posts you want, but if you’re not regularly getting new stuff into your users' hands, then you’re never really moving forwards. Product management is something you learn by doing. the product manager w…
If you hang out on Product Management Twitter, you can't have missed the PM pool girls TikTok that exploded this week. Here it is, though, just in case:
As product managers, we spend a lot of time talking about the right way to do product management. We read books and blog posts that give us an idealised view of software development, and we're quick to pour scorn on the tools and frameworks that don't fit. Bu…
As a product manager, you need to be able to measure the success of your product.But how do you decide what to measure?Typically, the answer is "it depends". Measuring outcomes is notoriously difficult, as the replies in this conversation on Twitter show:
Just because you've shipped a feature, it doesn't mean you can give yourself a pat on the back just yet. Yes, releasing product is an important milestone on your way to delivering value for your customers. But it's still only a milestone. You can't really con…
Earlier this week I published this tweet 👇
It's been a couple of weeks since I published my last newsletter.Why?It was the Easter holidays and I had some time off to chill out with my wife and kids.And that got me thinking about how much time and energy we spend working.In his seminal book, Inspired, …
There were a lot of product management vs project management conversations happening on Product Twitter this week.Firstly, Jeff Gothelf landed in my feed with this 👇
When Steve Jobs launched the iPhone, he envisioned a tool to help everyone be productive. But what we’ve ended up with is the opposite. The average smartphone user receives 46 notifications a day. Technology designed to bring us closer together is in danger o…
I tweeted earlier this week that one of the hardest things about being a product manager is the constant context switching. One minute you're thinking about your long-term product strategy with frameworks like the GLEe Model, the next you're trying to figure …
It wasn't something I'd been actively looking for, but sometimes an opportunity is too good to pass up. What it has done, though, is get me thinking (a lot) about what success looks like when you start with a new company. I recently published a Twitter thread…
Since he became one of Twitter's first subscription accounts, startup consultant and former Stripe PM Shreyas Doshi has amassed thousands of super followers, each paying $9.99 a month to hear his wisdom. It's worth it, and then some. A product heavyweight wit…
In January 1977, seminal British punk fanzine Sniffin’ Glue published its now-legendary guide to forming a band. Stripping back rock ‘n’ roll to its bare bones, it was a rallying cry for a generation bored of the bloated stadium rock of their older siblings.