Product Management and Strategic Marketing
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Can product management be standardized?

7/16/2012

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As one of the organizers of product camp Boston last month, I was pleased to see so many attendees. We had nearly 40 sessions ranging from marketing to product management to running a start up. 




With so many takes and aspects of product management, it got me thinking: Can product management ever be standardized? 

Those of you familiar with PMI probably heard of the PMP certification. This is an industry wide initiative that certifies project managers and is widely accepted. The PMP is constantly evolving and is updated by the project management community. 

However, when it comes to product management and how it is implemented, no standard applies. Each company has its own definition of what product management is, making it hard to standardize this profession. Several for-profit organizations offer training and certifications for their Body of Knowledge (BOK) and methodologies, yet there is no accepted standard across all industries. 

The question is whether there can be a one size fits all standard. Can a company in Hi-Tech run product management the same way a Bio-Tech company does or a financial institution? Furthermore, are companies willing to revisit how they run product management and invest in training and certifying their product managers?

To achieve a recognized standard there needs to be a clear (and hopefully non-profit) leader in the market that, through working closely with existing for-profit organizations, will come up with one certification that all groups support.  

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Why Product Management Should Be Its Own Department

5/14/2012

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In my 15+ years in technology I have had the privilege of working as a product manager who reported to various department heads. In some cases I reported to engineering, in other cases to marketing, and more recently to the head of product management. 

Why isn’t product management its own department in every company? What are the risks and challenges when product management reports to engineering or sales & marketing?

When product management is part of engineering, ideas and products are driven by technology. The product manager ends up getting involved in designing the solution rather than identifying the market needs. Engineers expect the product manager to be the solution architect, and as a result, the product manager’s job ends up being compromised. Engineers are the product experts; the product manager should be the market expert.

When product management is part of sales & marketing he/she ends up generating marketing plans, sales presentations or becoming the demo person. While all these tasks are important, they are not product management. Sales tools, sales presentations and demos should be handled by sales. Marketing documents and collateral should be handled by MarCom and/or product marketing.

All this confusion stems from the fact that the role of product management is not well defined. In companies that are market driven, product management is a department of its own. Product managers do the market research, identify the market needs, create the business plan and work closely with engineering to define a new product. They work with marketing to get the messaging and positioning correct and with sales to address their unique needs. Companies who place product management under other departments end up having a hybrid person that is neither a product manager nor anything else. Companies should strive to have a person doing a great job wearing one hat rather than a mediocre role wearing multiple hats. More is less. 
So when evaluating your next position ask  yourself, do I want to join a company that doesn’t understand the importance of the role of a product manager? 
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Product Management and Personality Type

2/13/2012

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I recently read a book titled “Do What You Are” (by Tieger and Barron-Tieger) recommended by Tess George of Speakwell training, and it made me think: what kind of personality makes a good product manager?

Myers-Briggs define people by four dimensions of personality:
· How we interact with the world and where we direct our energy 
(E) Extroversion ------Introversion (I)
· The kind of information we naturally notice                                        
(S) Sensing----------------Intuition (N)
· How we make decisions                                                                         (T) Thinking------------------Feeling (F)
· Structured/Making decisions or Spontaneous/taking in information          
(J) Judging---------------Perceiving (P)

I have observed that most product managers are either ENTJ or ENTP and here is why:
As a product manager being an extrovert is a must—you need to be able to interact with customers, peers, and management, and that means putting yourself out there.
Intuition means trusting inspiration, leading new ideas & concepts and being imaginative. Intuitive types are oriented toward the future—another key attribute.
Thinkers are logical, tend to be critical and are motivated by achievements. They make decisions based on analysis and consider it more important to be truthful than tactful.
The other dimensions are where this gets a little fuzzy.

Are you better off making decisions upfront based on info you have (J) or should you leave some options open to change (P)?
Are you product oriented (J) or process oriented (P)?
Do you set goals and work towards achieving them on time (J) or do you change goals as new information becomes available (P)? 

Circumstances often lead us to behave in certain ways, particularly at work where decisions need to be made.

The bottom line is regardless of your personality type, you are the customer advocate and the product champion. Remember to use your personality to your advantage to connect with customers and colleagues  alike.

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Product See vs. Product Read

1/3/2012

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 How many times have you heard the expression “A picture is worth a thousand words”?

I accompanied many sales people on customer visits and found that when talking with customers, no matter how good your pitch is, there is nothing like seeing and interacting with the actual product.

No fancy brochure, presentation, webinar, technical spec or even a great discount will sell the customer on your product, unless they have had the opportunity to use it and see for themselves how it addresses their needs.

I can already see my fellow colleagues raising an eyebrow and wondering:  does it mean that for every product I am building I need a demo?  In theory that would be ideal, but we all know it is not always practical. There are other ways to get customers to touch and feel the product. Here are some suggestions:
  •  Sign up some of your potential customers as your beta users giving them the opportunity to see the product for themselves. This process achieves two things: your customers get to test drive your product and make useful suggestions, and they can serve as advocates and references for it.
  •  If your product lends itself to a Flash demo, you can show the customer the way your product will look and some features it will have. If they buy into the concept, you are onto something.
  • Create a prototype that highlights the key features your product has.

The more exposure and feedback your product gets early on, the better its chances of making it in the market. If your product has already been released, make sure your sales people demo the real thing. After all, would you buy a car without test driving it?

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Product management and company size

11/27/2011

6 Comments

 
A couple of years ago I led a Product Camp Boston discussion about start ups and product management. That got me thinking, is it more important to have product management in a small company or in a large one?

Some of my entrepreneur friends claim that they are product managers. After all, they identified a need, did market research and built the product. But once VCs are involved, the founder has to manage them, so who manages the product?

At large companies product management exists, but more often than not customer needs are compromised for reasons beyond the product manager’s control.

My claim is that every company needs product management, regardless of its size. All companies need someone who will assess market needs, talk to customers, drive the strategy and define the product. The difference is in the execution.

 Critical points:

·         Voice of the customer – Product managers should be the customers’ advocates. This is often achieved by visiting and interviewing one’s customers. Traveling and meeting face to face may be limited due to lack of funds at a small company, whereas a larger company may not face the same problem.  

·         Vision & strategy – VCs often limit the expansion of the small company if it is not aligned with their view. Large companies often have a vision, but are too slow to execute.

·         Best practices – Small companies tend to do “true” product management, while large companies tend to stick with “this is the way we’ve done it before”.

So whether you are in a small company or a large company, the bottom line is make product management work. If you have limited travel funds, be creative—use online video tools to communicate with your customers. When vision is limited, bring data to support your findings and make a convincing argument. Finally, being a product manager takes effort, good communication skills, and above all, diligence. Remember, having a good product requires not only vision, but also a great product manager to drive it.

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The fine line between appeasing your shareholders vs. your customers

10/7/2011

4 Comments

 
Many of my fellow product management practitioners are often placed in a difficult situation where customers request certain features for their products, but the product manager's hands are tied. It's not that they don't care about the voice of their customers, rather management's vision is different. On one hand, senior management makes promises to Wall St. or the investors, which appeases the company's shareholders, but neglects the opinion of the customers. How does a product manager ensure that s/he does not lose sight of the customers?

1. Look for common threads.

Ask yourself: will the direction my company is taking address my customers’ needs in the long run?

If you have done your homework as a product manager you should know what your customers expect from you. Look for a common thread between the customers' needs and the shareholders' interests. Sometimes they are in fact very similar.

2. What if there is no common thread?

Make sure your product offers something that satisfies your customers in addition to what was promised to your shareholders. There is always room for more customer features. It may be a hard sell to upper management, however it must be noted that the the consumers pay the bills. If you lose your customers' business, it will be detrimental to your shareholders. Have data to support this point; executives will agree with your reasoning if you have the numbers to support it.

3. You are overruled by the executives.

In the case that your customers' requests go unanswered, be prepared to discuss this with the customers. Being frank and honest goes a long way. If executive management is unresponsive, you may want to schedule a meeting between the customer and management so each party can voice its concerns. This step is especially important if it is a major customer who will be affected.

If after taking these measures management has not satisfied the consumer, be ready to concede defeat. Perhaps it is time to find a company that is more attuned to the consumers' needs.

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    Author

    Sarela Bliman-Cohen is a product management executive with over 20 years experience in Technology. 

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