Transcript for:
Insights on Product Leadership and Strategy

framework I like to use with with product leaders that I'm coaching is to think about a matrix your ideal goal is to lead in a scalable way which means you feel really confident about the direction of your team and your team has the autonomy to move in that direction there's another really effective way of leading which is selective micromanagement which if you don't feel confident in the direction that your team is moving the right answer is not to be hands off and to let them go in that wrong direction the right answer is to micromanage but do it in a very tactical in a very temporary way so that you can help them understand what is the right direction moving forward so that you can then pull back welcome to Lenny's podcast I'm Lenny and my goal here is to help you get better at the craft of building and growing products I interview world-class product leaders and growth experts to learn from their hard-winning experiences building and scaling today's most successful companies today my guest is Ravi Mehta Ravi was Chief product officer at Tinder the product director at Facebook VPR product at TripAdvisor and now he's co-founder and CEO of a company called outpace that he shares a bit about Ravi is one of my favorite writers and sharers of product wisdom and he also helped create and teaches the reforge programs on product leadership and product strategy which is where we spend most of our time we talk about how to get better at crafting products strategy how to develop your skills as a product leader and a bit about the differences between being a PM at a large company versus building your own company like I say in the intro I feel like more people need to know about Robbie and I'm excited to help do that with that I bring you Ravi meta after a short word from our wonderful sponsors this episode is brought to you by merge every product manager knows the pain of slowing product velocity when developers struggle to build and maintain Integrations with other 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oneschema.com Ravi welcome to the podcast yeah thank you for having me I'm excited to be here so I've been a huge fan of your writing for a long time and this may sound a little weird but I just feel like not enough people know about you and I'm just excited to learn from you and also just to share your wisdom with more people oh thank you that means a lot I've been a fan of all of your work as well I've been following the podcast it's been great to see how it's evolved over the years awesome man I really appreciate that uh continues evolving so just to start with a little bit of your background can you just take a minute to share just like an overview of your career Arc and touch on some of the wonderful things you've done and then just talk a little bit about what you're up to these days yeah I've been in the tech industry for a long time so I will I will date myself I started in like the the mid 90s my dad was at American Express and he had just done a big buy of computers one of their first bag installations of computers and he brought home an apple TC computer and back then there wasn't much to do on it other than to learn to code so I started coding really young I was 9 10 years old and really just fell in love with technology and that's persisted with me today I started a game company in high school I did that full-time and part-time in college so I dropped out for a little bit during college went back and finished up my degree and then my first role out of school was Microsoft and so I joined Microsoft had a really interesting time when they were making a pretty significant investment in games and so I joined as one of the first few people on the Xbox Live team really focused on thinking about how does a company that's building its future on the internet think about where gaming is going and that was really different than how other companies in the space like Nintendo or Sony were thinking about gaming it's been about six years there worked on stuff on the platform side on the content side it was a really great experience but I knew I wanted to go earlier stage so I went straight after Microsoft I went to business school dabbled a little bit in management consulting but decided I was really wanted to build things and so I went back into an early stage startup right after business school I started as employee number one at a fintech startup shortly after that I joined Brian Balfour who's the CEO of reforge and his first startup and my most recent few roles have been product leadership roles at TripAdvisor where I was head of the consumer product team product leadership role at Facebook and then I was the chief product officer at Tinder and for the last couple of years I've gone back into the startup side of things and happy to talk about that some more yeah let's talk a little bit about what you're doing now just to kind of put that out there and then we'll keep going that sounds good so I spent about 10 years or so at bigger companies working with large product management teams and large engineering teams I find that work incredibly fulfilling in terms of the ability to impact people at scale but I was also really missing the idea of kind of building something new and really thinking about where things are going and not having to solve for some of the Legacy constraints that large businesses have to solve for so I decided to to leave Tinder and at that point um started to explore what I wanted to do next I spent about 18 months working with reforge as an entrepreneur in residence or an executive in Residence with reforge helping them build and launch the product leadership program and helping them launch the product strategy program and during the process of doing that I had conversations with dozens of people that were at the middle point of their career and found a really interesting common challenge in that there's lots of ways to learn new skills now there's great podcasts and Vlogs there's great cohort based courses like reforge but one of the things I found incredibly helpful in my career that really helped me level up was one-on-one coaching there was nothing that could really replace the opportunity to have a conversation with someone who had the ability to ask the right questions had the ability to help you see around corners do the experiences that they had had and coaching had not gotten any more accessible over the years and so about 18 months ago I decided to start out pace which is a company focused on making Elite expert driven coaching available to everyone and we're using a combination of really focusing on the product using a lot of systems and content to structure the coaching process we're also using AI to make coaches more efficient with the goal of making expertise driven coaching a lot more accessible for folks awesome so a first area I wanted to spend a little time on is you talked about your career Arc your CPO Tinder uh product director at Facebook VP at TripAdvisor and now you started a company and you've started companies in the past a lot of PMS listening to this have a hope that they will start a company someday and they're probably working at a company like a big tech company somewhere or not or they're starting a company right now and they're kind of in the process of starting a company and I'm curious what you found to be the biggest differences between being a product leader at a bigger company versus a startup especially your own startup and especially what are maybe the biggest surprises you felt from moving and making that transition there's been a couple of really interesting mind shifts I've had to go through over the last 18 months as I moved from a product leadership role to a Founder role the first one is really thinking differently about speed I think there's this common I would say it's a misconception that startups are faster than larger companies and what you know I found initially is actually things felt slower when I started my own company because I didn't have as many Engineers to work with I didn't have a team built around things we didn't have momentum around existing users to be able to research and Target and what I realized as I've kind of been through the Journey over the last 18 months is that the speed that startups have is not really about velocity bigger companies can always get more done they can always spend more they can always move with a higher degree of velocity than smaller companies the advantage a smaller company has really is in latency you can have an idea one day you can test it the next day and as a result you can have this really short cycle time between an assumption or a hypothesis and being able to validate that hypothesis and that's just not true at larger companies where there's a lot more momentum the analogy I like to use it's like driving a car right if a car is going really really fast it can't turn as quickly the turning radius is lower and so startups have a really tight turning radius and bigger companies have a really high rate of velocity and so that was one of the things that for me took some adjustment in terms of thinking about how to like boil down what would have been a pretty big ambitious plan at a larger company into something that has much smaller pieces and where you can iterate towards things and get you know data every day or every couple of weeks rather than have sort of a bigger project that might take you know a quarter long to execute just so folks understand what you mean by that this interesting difference between speed and latency so what what exactly is the difference latency is basically how fast you can make decisions and change and change courses that is how you think about it I think about velocity is sort of the the quantity of work and latency is how quickly you can go from an idea to actually being able to test that idea and learn whether or not that idea was the right one cool one of the questions like to test out latency that I like to ask PMS is if there's a really simple change that you want to make to a product like being able to change a button so you can test two different texts on a particular button how long does it take to go from we think that this change is worth making to actually getting the results of whether or not it was the right change got it cool the second thing is really thinking differently about how to make decisions I think a lot of really effective companies today that have large audiences get to rely on an experimental way of making decisions so you throw things out there you run an experiment you get to see what's statistically significant and based on that that provides a really nice way to learn about what users want and iterate towards an optimal product at a startup you can't do that you just don't have those users to test with and I think a lot of startups make the mistake of trying to use an experimental approach too early where it just takes either way too long to get statistically significant results which reduces that latency or those results aren't as valid because you have to use a much smaller sample set and so I've had to shift my mindset from an experimental oriented approach to making decisions to much more of a conviction oriented approach and you know I've often found myself asking the question of like do we just have enough data to have informed conviction and we should move forward and stop digging move forward in a particular direction and then see whether or not that turns out to be the right one because too often in a startup you can spend a lot of time sort of in paralysis around analyzing market research or going through all the different things you could do strategically thinking about all the different potential you know variants that you could you could build all the different pricing strategies whereas in status startup just make sense to kind of get to a point where you have conviction execute on that and then move on to whether or not that felt like the right thing in which case you can double down or you know that was the wrong thing in which case you can shift Direction and do that pretty quickly awesome what else one of the things that I found really surprising is the networks are pretty different so you know I've gotten a chance to work with an incredible amount of great people over the years and when I was starting a company I was excited to reach out to people tell them what I was doing and there were a number of people that I'd worked with at larger companies that I was potentially excited about working with and what I found was that you know the people sort of really build their their Lifestyles and their careers around a particular stage and there are some people that like to move between stages but the majority of people don't a lot of people that are at larger companies they like the benefits that come with that they like the types of problems that they're working on yet there's a whole other community of people who love to work earlier stage could be Founders it's also Freelancers who like to help to build startups it's investors and angels and so that's been a really really interesting part of the journey is meeting new people getting to know those networks and starting to build out you know a group of people that are as passionate about that earlier stage as I am got it so you're finding that like the network you may have had from say Tinder or Facebook aren't like the entrepreneurial type that maybe are they're not necessarily as as useful as hiring potential and things like that is that what you're finding yeah I think a lot of times you know people that are at larger companies are used to working in a particular way they've you know mastered their craft in terms of how they think about the next thing in their career they really want to go deeper into that craft and people who like the earlier stage are much more generalist they're fine with kind of moving back in time like you're not going to find a lot of senior engineering leaders or senior product leaders that want to write codes and specs at big companies but you will find those in those networks of people that are founders and that are interested in the earlier stage that's a really interesting Insight that you think you're building this huge network from from a big company you're working at and it may not be the network you need when you want to start a company do you have any other pieces of advice for a Founder that's like hey I want to start a company in the future in the next few years say Facebook or Google any other uh things you think they could be doing now to set themselves up for success I think it's important to plug into an early stage Network as soon as possible there's a bunch of different ways to do that today there's communities that are focused on Founder dating there's communities focused on just being a place where Founders can spend time there's a great community of people in the Indie hacker community and a few other related communities and so I think it's important to connect with folks that are builders that are excited about entrepreneurship both on the development side and the operation side as well as on the investment side connecting with angels and investors who are seeing you know what's happening within earlier stage companies what are the things that are top of mind what are the technology trends that people are really taking advantage of another really interesting I think difference is the way that you market and grow for an early stage company is very different than how you might Market or grow for a later Stage Company where you have much larger budgets and so the people that might be great at building out marketing campaigns at a larger company are going to be very different than the people who are more sort of earlier stage more hackers that are looking at you know there's these really interesting new channels of distribution that you can take advantage of or interesting techniques on Tick Tock or interesting SEO techniques that you can take advantage of so it's really two different networks as well as two different phases of knowledge and so I think it's important for people that want to eventually found something to work on fostering that Network so that you can connect into that community at the moment that you're ready to make that lead are there any other specific communities that come to mind as places that either you feel invaluable or that you think are worth checking out for folks that are like cool Indie hackers I'll check that out is there anything else that comes to mind as a really good place to spend some time right now yeah I think two of the best communities are the Indie hacker Community what I really like about that is it's a lot of people who are think thinking about how do I build something solo and that's really different from being at a larger company if you can think about a spectrum of you know you have a larger company somewhere in the middle you have VC back startups where you can take some of the ways of thinking about things that you learn at a bigger company and apply it because you have the ability to invest a significant amount of resources and then at the opposite side there's one person who's got a dream they want to start something they're trying to figure out how to do everything themselves they're entirely generalists in terms of being book Builders and sellers as well as figuring out all the logistics so I like the Indie hacker Community another really good Community is everything Marketplace is Mike the founder of that Community has just done a fantastic job of bringing together a set of Founders he's specifically focused on Marketplace businesses which have some unique Dynamics to them especially in the very early stage but it's a great example of even if you're not into marketplaces I think it's worth looking at what they're creating the events that they're running the people that are involved they've just done a great job of curating that whole experience to provide a really great foundation for Founders I'm also a huge fan of the community I love Mike we're internet friends I love hearing this I think this site is everything marketplaces.com to check out the community and if it's not you just Google it we'll also put in the show notes so reforge you've brought it up a couple times and this kind of gets to what I want to spend the meat of our conversation around you built the reforge product leadership program the product strategy program so those are two areas you spend a lot of time thinking about product leadership product strategy so starting with product strategy every PM every founder every leader would say that they want to get better at strategy like I guarantee if I ask every PM do you want to get better product strategy 100 would say absolutely but it's this very mushy vague general idea of strategy I'm going to get better at strategy I'm going to be better I'm going to be more strategic you have this really cool kind of framework mental model that you call the product strategy stack and so I want to spend a little time on just talking about what is this concept and how does it help you think about strategy Mission Vision all these things and how these things play together so let's just start with what is the product strategy stack the goal of the product strategy stack is to help people take a set of terms that are normally conflated together like goals roadmap strategy and separate them into really clearly defined parts and the reason I first started using this concept is I would often have PMS come to me and they wouldn't know whether to decide between doing a or b so it might be that there's two features they're roughly the same opportunity size and they wouldn't know whether or not they should execute the first feature or execute the second feature and more often than not when I talked to teams and helped to debug that issue what it came down to was that there wasn't a deep enough understanding of what the strategy is so what is the framework that should actually inform that prioritization and so oftentimes I was seeing difficulty prioritizing as well as tactical issues surface in the day-to-day and be able to be tracked back to pretty fundamental gaps in terms of individual PM's understanding of strategy and oftentimes those gaps were not just because the person might not understand the strategy it may also be because the strategy hasn't been completely defined and so the product strategy stack is a system that helps people understand what framework they're using in order to make decisions and what's going to drive value for the business so the top of the stack is the company Mission and the company Mission is the change the company wants to bring to the world it's really a qualitative aspect inspirational statement of what is the company's purpose and in some cases it might not be a company it might be a particular team within a company or it might be a particular subsidiary depending on the environment you're in but it's basically the overarching mission that helps to guide the process of moving forward the second thing is strategy so whereas a mission is aspirational strategy is rigorously logical the strategy is the logical plan that your company is going to use to bring that mission into being and so it's got to be very specific it's got to be very rigorous and it's basically the approach or the plan that the company will use to make progress on achieving its Mission and so the mission and the strategy at the company level really Define what is the company trying to accomplish and so the next level of the strategy stack is the product strategy and the product strategy is the connective tissue between what is the company trying to accomplish and what are the day-to-day things that the product team is doing and so underneath the product strategy the product strategy informs a roadmap and the roadmap ultimately informs the goals and so those five pieces the company Mission the company strategy the product strategy the product roadmap and the product goals all work together as a system where if a PM is looking to Define strategy they can work top to bottom and if they're looking to debug strategy they can actually work bottom to top and so if you're having trouble meeting your goals it might be because the roadmap isn't set up so that it can help move those goals forward if the roadmap isn't right it might be because the product strategy hasn't been really clearly articulated If the product strategy isn't right it might be because the team doesn't understand deeply enough what the company's strategy is how the product fits into it and ultimately the company's mission that is trying to make progress on super cool I have a bunch of questions one is interestingly Vision doesn't come up in the stack does it roll into one of these or do you just like no vision necessary I think about Vision as part of mission I always get confused about what the difference is between vision and Mission and so you know when I was originally working on this there was a version of this that had the mission and the vision together there were versions that kept it separate often what I've heard of as the distinction is the vision is sort of the vision that the company sees for the future and then the mission is the mission that the company has in light of that vision and I think you can really bring those two together and you can both describe that world and the role that the company plays in a single statement and that's usually enough to make uh make progress and help to start to define the strategy cool but I know you've you've written about this as well and you've put a spotlight on on Vision so be curious as to how you see the the mission and the vision playing together yeah I think I think that the most important thing is people just get stuck on these and try to Define them and make them perfect and I think the most important thing is just don't overthink it just like put something that sounds right and people are excited about in a line around that's the most important thing the way I think about it is the vision is Mission is just like what are you trying to achieve in the world and then the vision is what does the world look like once you've achieved it like what is the vision of the future and the mission is what are you trying to do in this future so that's the way I think about it what are you trying to do what does it look like but I think keeping it as one thing is great like whatever works you know there's no one way to do it I also know that you're a big believer in the vision when you think about a vision and Define a vision making it very visual versus just like a doc can you talk about that this framework originally started when I was at TripAdvisor and we had to develop a plan for what we wanted the strategy to be for trip planning this was going to be a really big new feature for the company and for the product trip planning is one of these intractable problems there have been a number of startups that started as trip planning startups and nobody had really nailed it Google at the time had a trip planning app that had some interesting elements to it but it wasn't really clear that they were nailing it and so we knew that there was both a really valuable problem to solve here but also a really difficult problem and we wanted to take an end-to-end approach to solving for this where rather than just kind of working bottoms up and getting to things experimentally where we might not actually ladder up to a clear product strategy we instead wanted to work top down Define what do we want to achieve how are we going to achieve it and what are the incremental steps we're going to use to get there and one of the things that we said with steak that we put in the ground was the strategy doc wouldn't be complete without wire friends this was the first time that we were we were doing that in the context of strategy and the thing that we were really trying to solve for is the fact that oftentimes when you talk about strategy in words alone everyone takes away different interpretation of that strategy whereas when you actually can show people wireframes of what the product will look like when that strategy is implemented it creates much more alignment and so the analogy I like to use it's a little bit like working with an architect you would never work with an architect that didn't provide you a blueprint of the house that they want to build for you because being able to describe a house in words alone is not enough everyone will come away from that with sort of a different interpretation of what is needed but once you can see the blueprint and the blueprint doesn't need to be High Fidelity it's a conceptual framework that shows you how things are laid out it helps you understand how the pieces are going to come together and most products are ultimately rendered in terms of visuals they're they're pixels on a screen and so it's important for you to understand how are those pixels going to be organized I think an interesting litmus test question for this is in a lot of mobile apps can only have four or five things on their nav bar what are the four or five things if you just describe your strategy in words people might come up with one nav bar that's completely different than another nav bar and as a result you then find that the moment that you're implementing your mobile app that there's completely different perceptions of what's valuable to the company and how the functionality should be organized and so the process of setting your strategy and then defining it really crisply in wireframes helps to get really specific and concrete about what it is that you're building what's going to fulfill the strategy and what are some of the trade-offs that you need to make in order to bring that into fruition because there's always going to be a limited number of pixels on screen imagine PM's listening to this might feel okay yes I would love wireframes and all of my vision documents full Fidelity designs of everything I want to do here's here's what I'm doing I imagine they often don't have a designer available they don't have this together for some review that's coming up what do you suggest to these folks is it like as a PM just sketch it out briefly is something better than nothing what do you suggest for when there's like just not anyone to help them do this well I think it's great if you're able to work with a designer but I also think it's really important for PMS to understand design to understand ux and UI you can always just sketch things on paper if you don't have design skills I've also time and time again throughout my career I've gone back to balsamic which is a really good wireframing tool it's been around for a while it's incredibly fast to work with and often in an afternoon you can create a set of very high level conceptual wireframes that you can put in front of people that will give them a much clearer understanding of what it is you're trying to build and if you were just to share them with them a spec that is words alone so I would suggest you know learn how to sketch learn balsamic having that ability to think at a conceptual level about how UI and ux works is I think a critical part of being a product manager and if it's a skill that you don't have today there's great resources to be able to work on on that skill and I think it'll make you feel a lot more empowered as a product manager as well if you don't need to feel like you've got to depend on a designer to help you visually think through your product each and every time no excuses fumes exactly okay so coming back to to the product strategy stack can you share an example of a company you worked at and how you how would that stack kind of all played out like an example and just to come back to its mission strategy product strategy roadmap goals and while you're talking I'm going to try some new I'm going to pull up a window that shows your visual of this thing and it'll show up I think in my screen look at that and so if you're on YouTube or you can actually watch these videos on Spotify now in case yet people that are listening have noticed a new feature they just unlocked for my podcast where these videos are on Spotify so cool opportunity to check it out on Spotify or YouTube but let me come back to you with the question basically is there is there an example you could share maybe from Tinder or Facebook or something like that of the product strategy stack in action so the article itself has an example which I won't go through now of slack versus Discord I think that's a really interesting example because the products are so similar and yet the company strategies and the missions are so different they're serving incredibly different audiences despite the fact that many of the items on those teams roadmaps are likely the same threading reactions Channels video video chat things of that sort I think a really interesting example from my past life is comparing Tinder versus hinge both of them are dating apps but they have missions that are really different so hinge's mission is almost created in response to tender hinge's mission is designed to be deleted this is something that is prevalent throughout all of the marketing which is come to our app we know that if our app works for you you're going to find someone you're going to kick off a long-term relationship and you're going to delete our app and we consider that a success versus tinder's mission is really to make single life more fun tinder's mission is to be an app that's on people's phone um whenever they're single and often you know throughout their throughout their 20s and into their early 30s and so those missions are really different one is a temporary use case the other is a continuous use case and so despite the fact that they're serving the same underlying use case which is to help people meet each other they have very different missions the company strategies are also pretty different they have some similarity around how the apps are monetized both apps are freemium you can use the product for free and then there's particular features that are monetized the features that are monetized share some commonalities so there's some commonality in terms of monetization model there's a really big difference in terms of customer acquisition model hinge relies a lot on television ads that helps them Reach the audience that is likely to use their product tend to relies much more on influencer marketing and event-based marketing so there's some interesting similarities between the companies in terms of the strategies and some interesting and important differences the product strategies for Tinder and hand are actually really different so Tinder was the original swipe based dating app it was built to be a really lightweight experience where swiping is really fast getting into a match is really easy chatting is really easy and hinge is one of the first really successful post-swipe dating apps so they deliberately did not build the product around the mechanic of swiping instead they wanted people to spend more time on each other's profiles they wanted to create more tools for those profiles so Tinder profiles are very simple hinge profiles have problems those prompts allow people to get to know each other that Sparks interesting conversations that leads to deeper conversations that ultimately leads to long-term relationships and so because of that difference in product strategy there are some differences in product roadmap but there's also some similarity in product roadmap both Tinder and hinge made a significant investment in video chat post pandemic knowing that people were going to spend a lot more time online before they met in person and so as a result they needed to enable people to talk with each other via video within the product and then the last piece is on goals so ultimately both companies have very similar goals in terms of they measure success based on meaningful conversations so they want people to match they want people to chat with each other but the specific product mechanics that enable people to get into those conversations are different so the high level product goals are really similar some of the more detailed product goals are really different and so you know using the the strategy stack you can get a really good feel for where strategies informing particular decisions and when a decision should look like competitors and when a decision should be different than what one of your competitors or comparables is doing I have so many questions about Tinder it feels such an interesting company and journey and product I guess one question is you shared some examples of product features that you built because of the specific strategy is there any others that come to mind of just like we built this thing and hinge would never build it because we have such different strategies there's a counter example which I think is really interesting which is um almost every dating app has filters and a whole set of filters so you can filter based on occupation income religion height smoking preference and Tinder for it's now got some ability to filter but for the large part has resisted the urge to put those filters in into place and the reason was from a product philosophy standpoint they wanted people to get to know each other and chat rather than to feel like tinder's a search engine for people where you plug in a bunch of criteria you can go into that specific filtered list and then meet only the people that you want to meet and that really reflects in the product as well a lot of people like using that product because they meet people that they say they never would have met otherwise because if they were given the ability to put their criteria in of course they're going to put their criteria in and they're going to look at a filtered narrower set of people and so by keeping the product experience really lightweight really serendipitous they were able to create a way of meeting each other that's really different than the other dating products which are more of those search engines for people when you think back on your time at Tinder what's what's like a memory or story or wild experience that comes to mind if there's something that comes to mind so Tinder was always interesting in terms of product Discovery we did a lot of focus groups when I was there we had people talk about their preferences around dating both one-on-one and ending groups and those always led to really interesting conversations one of the things that to me was the most surprising is when I was there we noticed that there was a small set of Tinder that we're spending a lot on Tinder and so you'll often see this behavior in social games where you have users that are essentially whales who you know your average R pool might be thirty dollars and a whale is spending two hundred dollars or three hundred dollars and so we noticed that a really significant percentage of a la carte Revenue which is microtransactions was coming from a very small single digit percentage of users and when we looked at how much people were spending our hypothesis was these must be high net worth people that are looking to flaunt their wealth and they don't really care about the money what are they spending on by the way just to make that clear because it's been a long time since I've tried with Tinder what are you buying Nintendo what are the micro transactions yeah so tinder's modernization model has two pieces to it it's got a subscription there's a couple of different tiers to the subscription there's a base subscription called Tinder plus and then there's the the default subscription or the main subscription called Tinder gold and Tinder gold the advantage of Tinder gold is it essentially allows you to break the rules of Tinder so Tinder normally you can't see who swiped on you and you're only going to match with someone if you swiped right on them and they swipe right on you Tinder gold allows you to see all of the people who have swiped right on you so you can go through those people and determine do you want to match with them so really important sort of fundamental capability that people are willing to pay for on top of that there's a set of a la carte products where you can buy you can essentially buy them in bulk you can use one of them you can buy multiple of them the two primary ones are super likes so super like allows you to send a super like to an individual person if you send that super like they're three times more likely to match with you so it's a really good way to you know in a very targeted way say that you want to meet and match with someone the other product is Boost and so boost works the same way that Facebook Boost works or you know any other boost product works where your profile is going to show up a certain amount of times within the feed if you pay to boost it it will show up more often and so what we noticed was that there was a set of people that were spending hundreds of dollars a month on Boost and super likes let's just Identify some of these users put together a usability study and start to talk to some of them and understand why they're using Tinder and that why and why they're willing to spend so much money and so what we found was actually it was very very different than what we had assumed it was essentially people saying I really want to meet someone they have a use case so sometimes these were folks that were in the military so they were moving around a lot or they were sales folks they were often in different cities or they were someone that was new to a particular City and it wasn't that they were a higher net worth they weren't earning any more than the average Tinder user they just had a much more intense use case they wanted to meet someone and what they were framing the cost of Tinder on was not the cost of other subscriptions they were framing it on the cost of dating and they were saying you know if I go on a few dates a month that's probably a couple hundred dollars anyway it could be even more than that you know depending on whether you're in New York City or other places and so they thought about that spend of a couple hundred dollars a month on Tinder as a small investment to make sure that they could date the people that they wanted and so it was a really interesting example of we identified something quantitatively that was really interesting that we knew was potentially a lever to grow the business are assumptions about why that use case was that use case were wrong and when we ended up talking to users we had some really surprising and fun conversations as a result and we were also able to recalibrate and understand what those people were solving for they're really solving for the utility of meeting people more effectively and not having to spend as much of their time to do it and they were framing the price in very different ways than the average user I always love these examples where you see something in the data you think it's something and then ends up being something else after you talk to customers can you share what you built or changed in the product because of that or is that is that a private yeah so there were two things that came out of those conversations one is Tinder Platinum so that's the third tier of the product that uh is a little bit more expensive and then comes with some additional features as well as a bundle of these consumables that you can use within the product additional super lights and boosts and the other feature that came out of that is you know it's almost like a super swipe it's the ability to instead of just send a super like you can send a super like with a note and so it costs a lot more than a super like does but it essentially allows you to break another rule of Tinder which is you can't chat with anyone before you match this allows you to send that first chat message to a person before you've matched basically to show that you're really interested in matching with that person further increases the likelihood that you'll match with them and we were able to price it at a point which was much higher than we thought the pricing was going to be because we knew that people were thinking very differently about what the utility of that would be that is awesome what a success story of a product team product experience going through Discovery research data designs launch Revenue nice work and it was great the PMP was working on it yeah for about a week she was running into my office a couple times uh every time she had a call with one of these folks to share what she learned and so those are like the high level takeaways but it was really interesting to get to know this demographic better and just uh and then just talk to users I think oftentimes people don't uh spend enough time just picking up the phone and having a conversation one-on-one with the user of a product and getting into understanding their psychology what value they're getting and how to really optimize for that today's episode is brought to you by Nero an online visual whiteboard that's designed specifically for teams like yours and mine I have a quick request head on over to my board at miro.com Lenny and let me know which guests you'd love for me to have on in 2023 and while you're on the mirror board feel free to play around with the tool it's a great shared space to work closely with your colleagues to capture ideas get feedback and iterate quickly and easily on anything you're working on for example in Miro you can build out your product strategy by brainstorming with sticky notes comments live reactions voting tool even an estimation app to scope out your team's Sprints your whole distributed team can come together around wireframe and draw ideas with a pen tool or even put mocks right into the mirror board and with one of miro's ready-made templates you can go from Discovery and research to your product roadmap to customer Journey flows final mocks you get the picture head on over to miro.com Lenny leave your suggestions that's miro.com Lenny I feel like being a PM is such a thankless job so often and these are like what you live for as a pan it's just like these success stories absolutely one of the things that was unexpected when I started at Tinder was a couple of times a week I would meet someone or I'd be in an Uber and the Uber driver would tell me people would share like oh I met my boyfriend or girlfriend or I met my wife or her husband on the platform it was really great to hear the stories one of the things I didn't realize is the degree to which because of tinder's very lightweight designs it's been able to support the lgbtq community much better than other dating products and so some of my most fulfilling conversations with people who felt like they wouldn't have met their significant other without Tinder because there was just no place to do that wow man fulfilling impactful interesting surprising what a what a role I actually met my wife online on a on a defunct dating site app called howboutweed.com you remember that one at all no I've never heard that it was too good it just matches people it's like it it reached hinge's Vision too well where they just nobody needed to stay on uh we don't just spent a lot of time on it but basically the concept was how about we and it's like a date concept so instead of browsing profiles you browse date ideas and then you say hey I want to do this date with you and let's let's go out and try it out and uh it worked out for us that's really cool there's so much opportunity I think there's a lot of really good dating ideas that haven't been explored yet hmm interesting all right good investment tip coming back to the product stack getting back on track one interesting thing about your product stack that's a little bit contrarian is you put a gold after roadmap and I'm curious why that is why you think goals should come after having a road map yeah it's definitely a contrarian point of view I've had a few people yell at me about this typically what happens is goals are almost the start of a strategic process rather than the end of it a company will say we need to increase our Revenue by X we need to increase our retention by why what's our strategy to be able to to do that and what I found over the years is that that goals first approach puts the entire energy of the product team on moving the goals without any sort of structure of what success looks like and why the analogy I like to use it's a little bit like taking a road trip and starting out by saying hey we need to drive 250 miles it's like no if you're going to take a road trip you first decide where you want to drive to if you're in La you might take a road trip to Vegas and so our destination is Vegas and we'll know whether or not we reach there if we've driven 250 miles because that 250 mile goal is in the context of a destination and so I think about all of the pieces of the strategy stack as being really clear about what is the end destination that you're solving for and then you should work on goals to the extent that they help you reach that destination and if you find that achieving your goal is actually pulling away from the destination then there's a really important conversation to be had about do we leave that gain on the table because it's not aligned with our destination or do we need to change our destination I think what happens too often when people start with goals and then create the roadmap is that the goal takes precedent ends and there's no there's no context there's no principles that are ultimately driving that and so those decisions about the direction of the product come and go without even really being noticed because there's nothing to calibrate against so I 100 agree that strategy should come ahead of goals what's interesting is how do you so if your approach is strategy then figure out what you're building and then figure out your goals how do you prioritize the road map because from my perspective come up with your strategy how are we going to get to where we're going to get goals to me or how we measure progress towards that and then the roadmap comes out of what's going to help us achieve this goal and how do we prioritize based on what's going to most impact this goal that we have so how do you approach prioritizing and picking what's going to be in the roadmap if you don't have your goals is it more like here's the main kpi or you have like a rough sense of kpis and metrics you're going to watch and use that to prioritize or how do you think about that yeah I think it's part of the strategy you'll typically have some quantifiable elements of that that strategy so for example for TripAdvisor our strategy was with trip planning we wanted people to come directly to TripAdvisor and spend more time on TripAdvisor and so what was happening was that most of a person's usage of TripAdvisor was interleaved with visits to Google and so people would search for something Boston hotels come to TripAdvisor they might say no I want to look at New York they Google New York hotels then they come and look at TripAdvisor and TripAdvisor is in a really good position to actually not have a person go back to Google because we knew about the preferences we knew about their states we knew who else they might be traveling with and so more of that planning activity Could Happen directly within the product and so the problem was that you know at a company like TripAdvisor which was which is very experimental very quantitatively focused the product teams were constantly optimizing for what's going to drive bookings in the moment and so the thing that drives bookings from a visit it to Google naturally moves a person down to transaction path and gets them to the booking and doesn't have them stop along the way to set up their trip and start to add things to their trip and create their their wish list that actually gets in the way of the transaction itself and so in the absence of that strategy around we actually want to get people to come directly to TripAdvisor more often we were doing so many things that ultimately undermined that strategy and got people to sort of LeapFrog through the product instead of stay with the product and so that's a really good example of where you know if we know we want to generate that long-term continuous relationship with the user there's a set of things from a roadmap standpoint that we can do to do that we can prioritize those things we can use numbers we can opportunity size them we can prioritize based on that and then we can measure whether or not we made progress based on that strategic and very conceptual understanding of where we want to go so the biggest takeaway I think we both fully agree on is your strategy should come ahead of having goals and coming up with your goals and aligning on goals no question speaking of goals you also have some really interesting insights on just how to come up with goals and best practices for aligning and setting goals I'll have to dig into that a little bit and then and then I have another topic I want to talk about yeah that sounds good so I've done a little bit of writing about goals which came out of I've been at multiple companies that have put okrs into practice and had a really hard time with that and I've talked to a lot of product teams who have had a hard time so the question I started asking is like why are companies having a hard time with okrs what's happening that is preventing teams from being able to set goals that they really understand how to achieve and achieving those goals and one of the things that I found which I think was sort of a first principle that's that's happening at a lot of companies is this idea of always focusing on outcomes over outputs and it comes from a good place which is ultimately and I I think this is the case like ultimately a PM needs to measure their success based on whether or not they generated valuable outcomes for the business but that doesn't necessarily mean that in this quarter we need to commit to a specific outcome or that we should commit to a specific outcome that we may or may not know how to move and so I think ultimately the goal is to drive outcomes but oftentimes there's things that come before that that need to be addressed ahead of time so you can really understand what the plan for meeting those outcomes is going to look like and so I refer to that as like the frontier of understanding there's a point at which what the team knows and what the team doesn't know there's a junction point there which is this Frontier and it could be actually we don't know what moves retention if you ask me to remove retention I can brainstorm 10 experiments but I don't actually know why people are continuing to use our product and so then it doesn't make sense to commit to a retention goal because you're gonna you know sort of throw spaghetti against the wall have a bunch of experiments some will stick and maybe you'll be able to move the metric but you won't have understood exactly why or you might move the metric in a way that is not tied to the strategy that you have as a business so the first type of risk is really understanding risk and if you don't understand how to move a particular metric then the right goal is to set a goal to increase your understanding not to move that metric once you have an understanding of how to move the metric your team may or may not be able to execute very well it might not be able to execute those sorts of experiments it may not have the resources that it needs to execute and so then you might want to set an execution goal so we want to hit 20 experiments this quarter and if you can hit those 20 experiments you'll know that you're executing really really well and even if those experiments don't work that moves that Frontier a little bit forward and then finally the ultimate Frontier is strategic risk like we understand how to move retention or we think we understand how to move retention we're going to do a set of things to do that and then you know either we'll learn that our understanding is correct in which case we can pull that lever more or we'll learn that it's not correct in which case we need to go back to understanding and goal ourselves based on that that is really interesting so the term is Frontier of understanding right and exactly there's four buckets that you just described of types of goals can you repeat them again yeah and so the four buckets are it starts with understanding risk which is we have something that we want to do but we don't really understand what the levers are then the next thing is dependency risk which is we understand what we think the levers are but we may or may not have the tools that we need in order to make progress then there's execution risk which is we have all the resources that we need we have a really strong hypothesis and then we may or may not be able to execute against those hypotheses and the last thing is strategic risk which is we have a hypothesis and it might turn out that that was not the right hypothesis oh man I wanted to move on to a different topic but I want to dig into this a little bit because it's really interesting so a lot of people work at companies where they're product manager leader is not going to be like cool it's been a quarter understanding if we can move this metric that seems like you have to be a really uh evolved leader to be okay with that or is that even not a good idea to spend a quarter doing that how do you like think about not actually having a goal that is moving a metric that people care about and focusing on understanding and kind of pushing this Frontier of understanding further versus just moving a metric that people actually want you to move you know it might be that for the quarter the way that the company works the things that it's focused on you need to actually you know commit to a goal to move retention or a goal to move your follower account or something like that there's two ways to do that one is you can commit to that goal and then in three months kind of hope for the best and just do a lot of work that you think might actually move the lever the other thing is to say you know actually that Journey towards hitting that particular goal we can break into initially let's spend a couple of weeks understanding we'll talk to customers we'll do some analysis we'll form some really good hypotheses and then based on those hypotheses we'll start to figure out like what do we need to execute on in order to start to validate those hypotheses and then we can execute on those things and validate those hypotheses and depending on where in the quarter things start to go off the rails you'll have a feeling for where that Frontier is and when you miss the goal you can then go back to the team or the leadership and say we missed our goal but I think I know why here's the things that we did within the quarter and here's where things started to go off the rails here's what I'd suggest that we commit to for the next quarter so that we can be much more sure that we're going to hit our goal and Leadership is always going to be outcome driven but they also want to have a lot of confidence that we're going to be able to hit those outcomes and so if you can clearly convey the learning and provide a really clear path that will get them that confidence they're often going to be much more so important than you anticipate I think the the desire to always set outcome based goals is just shorthand for we want you to move the needle and we want you to be thinking about that that doesn't mean that you do that in the absence of really detailed understanding and and really you know honing your execution process so that you can execute flawlessly so you know approaching things in that way can help you change the conversation and make it much more specific and you also have a post about this exact topic right I do yeah I've got a post on the reforge blog can't remember the title I think it's a better goal with ncts instead of okrs Okay cool so if your manager is not buying what you're saying that could be interesting to share with them and see if that'll change their mind like your first point is worst case you just hope for the best you know that you're not your Frontier of understanding is not that far but uh still set that ambitious outcome base goal and then hopefully works out but in reality it may not be realistic I think you can think about it as a two by two Matrix on one axis of the Matrix you have did we hit our goals and on the other axis we have do we know why and it's you know ultimately you want to be in the upper right quadrant you want to hit your goals and know why you hit your goals some teams are in the quadrant where they hit their goals but they don't know why which is good for now but it's eventually going to catch up with you and then an important thing to be in is if you didn't hit your goals to make sure that you're at least understanding why or at least you're making progress on understanding why and I think too often teams get so focused on the goals they get less focused on the learning okay final topic product management competencies so this is a post you wrote a while ago it's the post I've shared most of your of your many writings online and I'm going to pull up this image on my screen so another plug to check it out on YouTube or Spotify can you talk about what this is and why it's important for PMS to think of their career in this in this View and in general just understand what the components of a great PMR yeah definitely so we developed this at TripAdvisor when I joined TripAdvisor the company was newly public and as part of being a newly public company and wanted to grow different teams really quickly including the product team and what we're finding is that hiring a product out of industry and at the time we're based in based in Boston so hiring a really good experience PM in Boston was taking between three and six months and that just was too long to reach the sort of growth goals that we wanted to hit from a team perspective and a headcount perspective and so the header product there air came up with this program called the product rotational program where we would hire people directly out of business school and out of undergrad into their first product role regardless of whether or not they had prior product experience and they would go through two years of rotations so four six month rotations where they would be able to focus on teams that are you know zero to one teams or growth teams or infrastructure teams so the goal was in about two years to get a person to be able to experience various different parts of product management and have them come out with the skills to be a senior and effective product manager and so as part of that we really needed to Define very clearly what is product management and how do we help people identify the skills that they need to be an effective product manager and give them a plan so that they can grow those skills and so that's how this framework initially came to be the framework consists of 12 competencies in four different areas these competencies I think are the same for apms as they are for cpos and I can talk a little bit about how they change as a person gets more senior but these 12 areas are equally important regardless of where you are within your product management Journey the specifics might change but the the overlying structure Remains the Same the first thing that's really important is product execution so PMS need to be able to work with their teams to build product and that breaks down into three sub-competencies the first is functional specification so that's the ability to work with your team to Define you know what is the PRD or the functional specification that defines what you want to build the second thing is product delivery which is the ability to work with engineering and design and the other teams to take that specification and turn it into working product and the third piece which I've changed from quality assurance is Now product quality is making sure that what you build is high quality not just from a technical perspective but also from a design perspective a usability perspective and a business perspective and so ultimately that's the foundation of being a successful product manager is being able to execute and that's as true for an APM as it is for a VP or a CPO an APM is going to think about product execution in terms of their day-to-day individual contribution but a CPO is going to think about product execution in terms of the systems that they create to enable teams to Define really good specifications to deliver products really effectively to execute flawlessly and to deliver products that have a very high bar of quality the second area is customer Insight so in addition to being able to build products you need to understand customers so you can figure out what to build the three sub components here are fluency with data which is the ability to use all of the data at your fingertips to make decisions about what customers need the second one is voice of the customer which is the ability to have the conversations with the customer so that the product manager can be the advocate for the customer throughout the entire company as well as the advocate within the product the third is user experience design and so this goes back to our earlier conversation about wireframes I think a fundamental part of being a really good product manager is the ability to think about the user experience in a very detailed way to make sure that you're not just defining functionality but you're really clearly understanding how that functionality turns into user experience and this is very explicitly user experience design and not user interface design because the experience of your product may vary if you're building apis then your experience is actually the API spec if you're building ml models then your experience might be the training training models or the other systems that you're using to identify the effectiveness of those those training models so this can be a skill that you can think about really broadly across a lot of different product roles the third piece is product strategy and that breaks down into three things the first one is being able to own business outcomes so it's really important to move away from thinking about product as shipping features to driving business outcomes and so this competency is about understanding how does your product or the features that you're working on plug into the business and drive value for the business the next competency is product vision and Road mapping so that's the ability to take the individual pieces of work that you're doing for a product and put those together into a coherent vision and roadmap that allows you to build towards the product strategy and the company strategy over time the third one is strategic impact you know just like product Road mapping is a sequence of features I think about strategic impact as a sequence of business outcomes so initially PMS needs to be really focused on owning business outcomes and delivering business outcomes But ultimately what's really important is does that sequence of business outcomes move the strategy forward and help you deliver impact on that strategy and then the fourth and final piece is all about leadership so it's influencing people the first self-confidence is stakeholder inclusion so that's being able to work with all of the different people throughout your organization to Rally them around the work that you're doing the second one is team leadership this is one that doesn't actually come into play until you have direct reports but once you have direct reports being able to help those direct reports become really great product managers is a critical skill and the last one which is always really important for PMS is being able to manage up so that you can win the support of the leadership within your organization amazing what a crazy ass job this product management job is it's crazy you just got to do that and then you're good oh man this is an incredible framework I've never found a simpler more beautiful very clear easy to consume and share version of what the PM role is so if people are looking for some inspiration for figuring out how to define the PM or other company set up the career letters I always Point them to this and we'll definitely link to this in in the show notes and thank you for doing such a great job walking through it there's a lot there yeah definitely and then um on my website I've got a downloadable kit that's got tools to evaluate yourself it goes into each of the competencies in more detail it talks about some of the different archetypes so you'll find like certain styles of PMS have certain clusters of competencies you know if your growth PM you might have a certain Focus that might include a lot of focus on data and outcome ownership if you're more of a product Discovery or product Innovation PM you may have a different set of skills so being able to sort of map yourself out will help you understand you know where you want to grow and what types of roles are a really good fit for you plug the site while you're at it where do they find this exactly they can find it at ravi-meta.com so m-e-h-t-a sweet you have this kind of concept of exponential feedback that kind of relates to this and just like partly touches on why this is so important for PMS to think about can you talk a bit about that yeah definitely so this is something we can we talked about in the product leadership program what are the most challenging things I think for both a PM as well as a product leader is to figure out how to grow yourself and grow your team and a key way to do that is through feedback it's really important to provide people with good feedback to help them understand how to grow but the problem is and this is true you know in a casual one-on-one as much as much as it's true in an annual performance review it's oftentimes the feedbacks that people provide is very surface level it may focus on particular symptoms but not root causes and so one of the ways that this framework can help is I'll often encourage people when they're first starting to use the framework just to go through each competency and rate themselves needs focus on track or outperforming on each of the competencies to quickly get a read on where you feel like you're Landing you can ask your manager to do that same thing you can do that in five or ten minutes and then the areas where your manager and you see eye to eye and the areas where you guys see differently is stimulus for a really deep conversation and so I think that is like the entry point to providing exponential feedback and I think about exponential feedback as feedback that has compounding returns so if you give someone feedback on a particular symptom or you give them feedback on something that's tactical and they fix that in a moment the feedback the conclusion that feedback it just happens and then it's gone but if instead you help a person understand the underlying behaviors that led to that particular situation then they can focus on growing themselves they can also focus on helping to diagnose their own performance more effectively and that leads to compounding returns where they just keep getting better and better over time and so the ability to kind of apply the competencies as a lens helps you move out of that abstract kind of surface level feedback into very specific categorizations of things that a person might need to work on which I think gets to the root cause of areas a person can grow in and that ultimately leads to more effective feedback that has those compounding Returns on that thread just maybe a last question here if your manager isn't good at this and isn't giving you this sort of feedback do you have any advice for how to get feedback from people like this mentors anything like that if your manager just kind of isn't doing that isn't filling that role for you one of the things you can if you are in a product role is you ask them to do this exercise and evaluate you your manager will almost certainly have some impression of your performance that they haven't necessarily you know if they're not doing it proactively they probably have it intuitively and helping them get it down on paper and getting it more specific can be a really good way to start that that conversation so that's one thing that you can you can do a second thing is like I think oftentimes people refrain from giving feedback when they feel like that feedback is going to be intrusive so just inviting your manager to say look I'm really looking to level up please give me feedback you know whenever you see something you can give it to me in real time don't worry about wordsmithing it I just want to make sure that I'm getting better that agreement with your manager and giving them permission to give you that feedback will make sure that the stream of feedback has a much higher volume and starting with the quantity of feedback as a way to get eventually to quality of feedback as well as you're talking I'm thinking of the advice Jules Walter shared on this podcast a couple episodes ago of when you get feedback no matter how it makes you feel whether you're think inside or not just be very enthusiastically thank you so much for that that was really helpful it's so key because then you've rewarded the person for giving you feedback even if it hurts inside and then they'll want to do it yeah in the future yeah anything else that you want to touch on or share before we get to our very exciting lightning round one of the challenges I hear PMS that are moving into leadership roles is they often worry about micromanaging their teams and so I kind of see two failure modes for people that are taking on their first leadership role the first one is that they do actually micromanage and so they don't let the person on their team have the autonomy that they need to figure out a path forward and there's two problems in that one that really you know makes that person feel like you don't trust them the second thing is that rate limits the size of the team that you can manage because you can only do that for a finite set of people before you yourself are Tapped Out on bandwidth it's usually a couple of couple of folks so that's one failure mode where people sort of treat their first direct reports as an extension of themselves the second failure mode that I commonly see is just a completely hands-off mode of leadership where a person assumes that you know the new person on their team they trust them they give them a lot of autonomy but as part of that they don't give them the context that they need so that person may be able to be successful but may actually lack the guard rails and the Frameworks to channel their efforts and so I think the right solution here is to say actually micromanagement Is Not a Bad Thing some of the most Innovative leaders in Tech are famous Micro Managers Steve Jobs was a micromanager Elon Musk as a micromanager Mark Zuckerberg's a micromanager ultimately as product Builders and product innovators The Details Matter and sometimes you need to zoom into what is the text on a particular button say and you might have a strong opinion on that and so it's okay to engage at that level I often encourage product leaders to think about their process of becoming more senior not as a matter of getting more and more high level but of increasing their dynamic range so CPO it's not that a CPO never thinks about tactical issues it's that they spend a lot of time on strategy but they also can zoom into specific issues and so a framework I like to use with with product leaders that I'm coaching is to think about a matrix your ideal goal is to lead in a scalable way which means you feel really confident about the direction of your team and your team has the autonomy to move in that direction there's another really effective way of leading which is selective micromanagement which if you don't feel confident in the direction that your team is moving the right answer is not to be hands off and to let them go in that wrong direction the right answer is to micromanage but do it in a very tactical in a very temporary way so that you can help them understand what is the right direction moving forward so that you can then pull back and the two failure modes are you know if your hands off and you let that team go off the rails that hands-off mode of leadership might feel really good in the short term it might help you avoid micromanaging in the short term But ultimately it's going to mean that that team doesn't get to where they need to go and then what we commonly think of as micromanagement I think more of as micro mismanagement which is you don't feel like you've got a sense of control or a sense of confidence about what the team's doing the team doesn't feel like they have a sense of autonomy there's not a clear end in sight and ultimately both the leader and the team are frustrated so I think the two really effective functional ways of leading are scalable leadership where the team has autonomy you have confidence or selective micromanagement where for a brief period of time you might take away some of the team's autonomy to set them on the right track but with the goal of getting back into that scalable leadership mode I really like this topic I feel like this could be a whole other thread maybe one quick question along these lines would you call it selective micromanagement yeah is there like a heuristic you have in mind of just like what does that mean in practice like one out of every 10 decisions maybe you push them in a direction that you need them to go how do you how do you figure out what's selective enough is there in your experience I think it often comes down to being overly detailed at the moment that you see a problem so helping the team get back on track by any means necessary including you know potentially you're getting really detailed about the decisions that the team is making but as you do that think about the Frameworks that you're using to help the team make decisions and help the team understand that framework and so over time the goal is to replace you actively kind of going in and guiding the team's decisions with them having a framework that they really understand so that they can make the decisions that are aligned with where you think the right direction is is to go and the ultimate success is that you give enough of a framework and the team has enough autonomy that they get to answers that are even better than you could come up with and so that gives the team an incredible feeling of power and that gives you a leader as a leader an incredible feeling of confidence in the team's ability got it yeah what this makes me think about it like as a product leader most of the time you need to push your team to do the thing that you believe is right and maybe once in a while let them make a mistake and have them learn from it but it's not it's not the other way it's not like cool let them make all the mistakes and once in a while correct it's the opposite like your your ass is on the line if they waste time and resources and fail so yeah your job is to make sure they're doing they're heading the right direction there's another framework that we talk about in product leadership which goes into this topic which is you know as someone who's working with a manager there's kind of two things that you're constantly solving for one is the degree to which you're aligned with your manager and the second is the degree to which your manager has confidence in you and so if there's a high degree of alignment and a high degree of confidence you have full support but there might be cases where there's actually not a high degree of alignment you want to go in a different direction than your manager wants to go in but if you have their confidence you'll get their permission you'll get their support to go in that direction and so keeping an idea of like where you are on that radar is really helpful for understanding the currency that you have to be able to push things in the direction that you think is the right one and if you don't have your leaders confidence and you're not aligned with them you know that's not a recipe for Success like one of those things needs to needs to change either you need to do things that they are aligned with or you need to do things to win their confidence and your ability to kind of pick a different path forward I like that one final tangential totally out of nowhere question uh ahead of my notes that you've been doing some stuff with AI in your coaching work and so I wanted to ask you what do you how do you think AI will work with PMS and just coaches and us as I don't know Professionals in the workplace what have you found so far in your experience there so when we started alpace we knew that AI was going to continue to advance and that eventually we would want to think about AI as a way to amplify coaches and to help make them more efficient and more effective we thought that that was going to be a multi-year journey and that we would get to it at some point in the future but this year has been incredibly exciting with the advances that we've seen from openii and stable diffusion and mid-journing all these different models and so we've actually accelerated a lot of our roadmap around that we have an interesting opportunity to use AI in the product where uh one of the things that makes outpace different from other coaching platforms is we provide both content as well as the coach and so each week a person will go through a 20 or 30 minute session that section includes a brief audio lesson and that includes interactive exercises that go into how would you use the things that you just learned in that lesson and so one of the things that we have is we've got text content from all of the participants in outpace where they're providing very specific answers to very specific questions we're using that content to prompt in this case open AI to give suggestions to the coach and so the coach can go in and say help me with a suggestion of what I should say as feedback to this particular response and then the coach can go in and tailor that based on what they know about that person and one of the most amazing things is we've been able to simulate different styles of leadership by using different types of prompts so we can have suggestions that are really action oriented that provide lists of next steps we can have suggestions that are more sympathetic that focus on the person's feelings we've got suggestions that are more inquisitive which ask follow-up questions we've got suggestions which are informative which provide Frameworks and advice so it's really pretty remarkable how far the technology has come you know I know we're at an interesting time right now it's going to be interesting to see how things play out I think one of the most interesting things about it is not AI as a replacement for people but AI as a way to amplify people and make them more effective and I think we'll see a lot of that in in terms of both image generation and text generation where it's less about AI doing all the work and more about AI providing a really good starting point I loved the idea that people had these visions of where their product's gonna go in like five ten years and the vision's like happening so soon and that's got to feel nice but then you gotta rethink oh my God what's her new vision of the future at this pace it's been really exciting I haven't been this excited about tech you know in a long time and I think you know it was we knew we would need to Pivot in order to embrace this more but it completely makes sense and it fits really nicely into something that we're already doing well with that we've reached our very exciting lightning round I've got six questions for you I'm gonna power through them and whatever comes to mind just share it away sound good that sounds good cool what are uh two or three books that you recommend most to other people I really like hooked that's a book that you know I know is uh came out a few years ago but I find that that model is just such an effective model for thinking about how to create products that are engaging I also really like working backwards I think Amazon has such a unique way of going about Building Product and they they've been so opinionated about what matters within that that process it's great to get a really detailed window into that I was always curious about how it worked and working backwards was a great way to to understand that a lot better for folks that are interested in that we had a Ian Mcallister on the podcast talking a lot about that stuff so if you're interested in working backwards and don't want to read the book there's a podcast episode for you speaking of podcasts what's a favorite other podcast of yours other than the one you're currently on yeah one of my favorites is the Ezra Klein show I love the fact that he talks about a bunch of different topics he's often got contrarian points of view he just had an episode recently about a skeptical take on AI that I disagreed with a lot but it was really interesting to think about it from a different perspective one of the best compliments I got about this podcast is someone telling me that they listen to these two podcasts as the only two podcasts they listen to and they always have to pick one or the other when they're going in their morning walk I mean yeah that I you know you and I were talking a few months ago and that's that's sort of the boat that I'm in I've been listening to your podcast I've been listening to Azure Klein and then there's a couple of others that are in the mix but the ones that I keep going back to when I'm walking the dog or those two podcasts what a dream thanks for having me on oh man it's not over yet next question favorite recent movie or TV show that you really enjoyed I love Andor I I just finished watching it about a week ago I think it's not just a great Star Wars piece of content it's just a really great piece of Science Fiction I think a lot of Science Fiction has gotten very samey and very dystopian recently this was such an interesting like reflection of what's happening today uh really deep thinking about what the future could look like really good expansion of the universe so it was just great on a lot of levels freaking love Andor a huge plus one on that favorite interview question that you like to ask my favorite interview question is tell me about a product that you love and I can have that question last five minutes I can have that question last 60 minutes and so that's the first question that I'll typically ask people during a screening interview I use the word love very deliberately I want to see what products in their lives they really gravitate to and they engage with and that they can use that word with that helps me understand a lot about what they what they value and then I'll ask a whole series of questions which is you know why do you love it why do you think other people love it you know what would you like to see about it in the future pick a feature that you'd like to build for that product why do you think that's a good feature how would you measure the success of that feature so I've used this for years it's just such a good way to help understand the product sense that a person has help get to know a person a little bit better it's always interesting when people pick products that are more physical products to to see what they're into in terms of hobbies and things of that sort what are five SAS products that you use at your company or your team on your team air table has been amazing it's such a powerful tool we just rebuilt our accounting system and airtable webflow we're using constantly it's really changed how we think about building products we now ask you know do we need to build code or can we do something in webflow we're using superhuman I spend most of my day in superhuman it's uh an incredibly fast email client so I love having it on my team a lot of the team today is using desk script or descript to edit videos they found that to be something that works so much better than prior audio and video editing Solutions and then I've always loved balsamic I've been a balsamic user for probably 10 years now and whenever I get stuck on a user experience issue I go in I create some wireframes and it always helps we used this script slash D script I also don't know how to pronounce it on this podcast so a huge recommend of that final question you are building a company that is helping people find coaches do you have any tips for someone that is talking to a potential coach and what they should maybe ask them when they're trying to decide if it would be a good fit yeah I think one of the questions that's really helpful is tell me about the client that you're most proud of helping what was the challenge if they were facing how did you help them meet that challenge the person doesn't need to go into anything confidential of course but I think what's really nice about that question is it gets you really deep insight into what they value you get to see where their pride comes from it gives you insight into how they engage with the people that they're helping and then you can understand you know is that does that sort of map with what you're looking for in terms of a coach Ravi this was everything I hoped it would be I learned a lot I had a lot of fun two final questions where can folks find you online if they want to learn more and how can listeners be useful to you you my startup is out Pace you can find it at outpace.co we publish a lot of free resources we just published a resource that you helped us with Ronnie called to unlock your product manager potential we also have a q a service where you can ask questions of coaches our goal with outpace is to get more and more people to experience coaching whether that's in an active coaching relationship or just a really quick conversation with a with a coach so come to outpace.com that'll be really helpful for us and hopefully really helpful for you as well and then if you want to follow me I'm on LinkedIn you can also read my writing at Robbie dashmeta.com amazing Robbie again thank you for being here and we'll share all these in the show notes and all these links you mentioned thanks again yeah thanks so much for having me this has been great thank you so much for listening if you found this valuable you can subscribe to the show on Apple podcast Spotify or your favorite podcast app also please consider giving us a rating or leaving a review as that really helps other listeners find the podcast you can find all past episodes or learn more about the show at lennyspodcast.com see you in the next episode [Music]