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Everything is a product management problem

I was going through some posts I had written years ago for other blogs when I happened upon one that—while originally targeted at helping folks reassess their careers—seemed to play really well in the realm of being an entrepreneur and building startups.

The basis of the post is this: Everything is a product management problem. Not just the product. Not just features. Not just platforms. Everything you do.

The same techniques and skills you use to manage product development can be applied to your startup, your business plans—and you, yourself.

It’s about compromises and resources and time. It’s about ship dates. It’s about controlling feature creep. It’s about making go/no go decisions. It doesn’t matter whether you’re an engineer, marketing, management, or sales. In the startup world, everything is a product management problem.

With that in mind…

Everything is a product management problem

Now, I’m no expert in product management. But let’s be honest, if we sat around and waited for me to write only on things at which I am expert, we’d all be in for a long, cold wait. So, all of that aside, I do know a number of good product managers. I’m even luckier to know a couple of exemplary product managers.

And because of that, I’ve gleaned—at a very high level—some insight on product management. I mean, I’ve spent a lot (a lot) of time sitting in product management meetings and listening. My primary contribution to product management meetings?

Yes, vital component. That’s me.

But it’s good. Because when I keep my trap shut, I actually listen, so I’ve managed to pick up a few things here and there.

And here’s where the worm begins to turn.

So, the other day, I’m staring off into space, thinking about product management, and this occurs to me: Everything is a product management problem.

How so? Well, let me outline some of the high points of product management.

So taking those high-level points, shouldn’t we all be product managers for everything we’re doing? Shouldn’t we be product managing our startups? Product managing our investors? Product managing our employees? Product managing our product?

I mean, couldn’t your startup use some product management? A timeline? A life cycle? An attainable list of features and functions to be launched at specific intervals? What does version 3.5 of your startup include? Is it Windows, Mac OS, and Linux compatible? What mobile platforms do you support? Where are your feature/function gaps that could move your startup forward or doom it to inadequacy? What features do you want versus what functions does the business want? What happens when a competitor enters the market?

How’s your startup’s usability?

Think about it. Your startup will be better for it.

(Note: I tweaked this a little. The original post ran under the title “Product management is everything and everything is product management.”)

(Image courtesy Jeff Kubina. Used under Creative Commons.)

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