This! I keep coming across this message recently... "Tidy up your side of the street before judging others". It reminds me of the management advice to "manage yourself first" or even... "be the change you wish to see"! Since I left Xero, I've been on a mission to speak to organisations on a global level, to broaden my perspective of challenges and opportunities in the SaaS industry. One of the most common stories I hear is that the product or engineering team is not delivering results. When I dive deeper into this conversation, more often than not, I find it's because there is a lack of clear strategic goals for the team to work towards. If you are a leader feeling frustrated with a lack of results, first ask yourself: How do I feel? Am I split between competing priorities? Am I confused about the direction of the product? Can I list the top 3 strategic goals? Do I know how we're measuring these goals? Is my workload aligned with the strategic goals? If you don't know, then neither does your team. ✨ My advice if you are not getting the results you wanted from your team, is to check and define the 1-3 strategic goals that HAVE to be met this quarter. Define how you will measure them, the impact they have on the customer, the opportunity for the business and don't shut up about them. ✨ Need a hand? Give me a call to discuss your challenges, I'd love to help your organisation achieve its vision! hannaheick.com
CEO: “We need to replace our entire product team” Me: “Um, ok, let’s talk about this for a moment…” As a CPO and product advisor I’ve met plenty of CEOs and execs who are frustrated with the results they see from their product teams. Often they feel like all they need to do is replace the existing team with more experienced, “better” PMs. But really they're blaming PMs for some of their own shortcomings as leaders. Results from a product team depend on putting great PMs in a great environment. If you don’t have a great environment, it doesn’t matter how good your PMs are, you’ll still be disappointed with the results. Maybe your PMs really are awful, but before you fire them all and hire new ones, I’d make sure you fix the environment: a) It’s much faster, cheaper and less painful b) You’ll have to do it anyway c) You’ll be surprised by what you can get from your existing team So how do you create a great environment for PMs as a leader? 🎯 Have consistent goals Of course you want to be agile, but try not to change the priorities all the time. Every quarter is ok, but every week or two and your teams will never get going. 🛡 Minimize distractions Progress is inversely correlated to the number of initiatives you have. Make sure your teams aren’t getting distracted by execs’ pet projects, internal requests or customer feedback. Have a very small (1-2) number of priorities for them to focus on. 🗺 Explain the context Spend the time up front to explain your goals and the features you’re asking for. If all you’re doing is demanding widgets from your product team, likely they’ll have a very different idea from you of what they are building and why. 💰 Talk about the money You can’t expect your PMs to make commercial decisions if they don’t have visibility of the business financials. Make this a part of every discussion (but just a part - it’s not everything!) 🛑 Be explicit where you will take risk Teams are usually quite conservative when it comes to risk, because when the site goes down they get blamed. If you want to move quickly, be very clear about the risks that you are willing to take. 👥 Manage their role breadth PMs can be excellent at lots of things - comms, analysis, delivery, user interviews… pretty much whatever you need them to, but they can’t do it all at the same time - there are only so many hours in the day. Make sure tasks as split evenly across design, engineering and data. 📄 Agree a lightweight reporting process As a leader you need status updates. To fly blind would be reckless. But bloated reporting burns many hours each week. Take 1-2 hours up front to co-create a reporting process with your PMs (i.e. tell them what you really need, and let them figure out the best way to deliver it) and you’ll save them huge amounts of time going forward. And if there’s anything I can do to help, give me a shout. We’ve got lots of tools on Hustle Badger to accelerate product teams, and I offer private workshops and advice.
Customer-focused goals define path. Clear vision empowers delivery.
Product specialist | Startup generalist
7mo💯