Product @ Ringier | Former CPO Doodle | Product at Contentful - PayPal
You’ll say no more than yes, frustrate smart people, feel lonely. Until you learn: it’s about being respected in this role not being liked and respect shows up later—earned through steady calls + courage, not smiles and likes.
You’ll say no more than yes, frustrate smart people, feel lonely. Until you learn: it’s about being respected in this role not being liked and respect shows up later—earned through steady calls + courage, not smiles and likes.
15 years ago at PayPal I wrote 70-page PRDs for everything we wanted engineers to build. Sometimes they even got built.
As a PM, I often learned about releases almost when our customers did—sometimes later.
15 years ago at PayPal I wrote 70-page PRDs for everything we wanted engineers to build. Sometimes they even got built.
As a PM, I often learned about releases almost when our customers did—sometimes later.
1.Redesign the product mid-sprint.
2.Suggest a “tiny fix”
3.Drop surprise deadlines out of nowhere.
4.Say the magic words: “This won’t take long.”
5.Share unvalidated "ideas" aka feature requests.
1.Redesign the product mid-sprint.
2.Suggest a “tiny fix”
3.Drop surprise deadlines out of nowhere.
4.Say the magic words: “This won’t take long.”
5.Share unvalidated "ideas" aka feature requests.
Bugs, escalations, outages, “quick wins,” endless alignment calls.
Strategy? That’s what’s left after dinner.
If you don’t defend time, it vanishes.
I learned the hard way.
Protect a few hours → it changes your career.
Bugs, escalations, outages, “quick wins,” endless alignment calls.
Strategy? That’s what’s left after dinner.
If you don’t defend time, it vanishes.
I learned the hard way.
Protect a few hours → it changes your career.
More: tinyurl.com/Ghostproduct
More: tinyurl.com/Ghostproduct
50% of the team agree and commit.
20% of the team disagree but commit.
And I’m completely okay if:
20% of the team disagree.
10% just don’t care.
50% of the team agree and commit.
20% of the team disagree but commit.
And I’m completely okay if:
20% of the team disagree.
10% just don’t care.
1. Redesign the product mid-sprint.
2. Suggest a "tiny fix."
3. Drop surprise deadlines.
4. Say, "This won’t take long."
5. Make everything "critical."
1. Redesign the product mid-sprint.
2. Suggest a "tiny fix."
3. Drop surprise deadlines.
4. Say, "This won’t take long."
5. Make everything "critical."
Welcome to product management. Where great is never enough, and we are constantly “motivated” to improve.
Welcome to product management. Where great is never enough, and we are constantly “motivated” to improve.
The Engineering team works agile.
The Marketing team works agile.
The CX team works agile.
The other teams work agile.
But when everyone works siloed it’s just agile theater, where companies pretend to be cutting-edge while in reality they are super slow.
The Engineering team works agile.
The Marketing team works agile.
The CX team works agile.
The other teams work agile.
But when everyone works siloed it’s just agile theater, where companies pretend to be cutting-edge while in reality they are super slow.
1. Every project is broken up into five phases: Disco, Alpaca, Beatings, Live, Regret
2. Every project has a Delivery Manager (DM) and a Product Manager (PM) who fuel the project through their mutual hatred and constant bickering
1. Every project is broken up into five phases: Disco, Alpaca, Beatings, Live, Regret
2. Every project has a Delivery Manager (DM) and a Product Manager (PM) who fuel the project through their mutual hatred and constant bickering
If you are a product leader who has become frustrated with your strategy's progress. THIS IS WHY! ⬇️
If you are a product leader who has become frustrated with your strategy's progress. THIS IS WHY! ⬇️