Product Mastery Now for Product Managers, Leaders, and Innovators

Chad McAllister, PhD

Welcome to Product Mastery Now, where you learn the 7 knowledge areas for product mastery. We teach product managers, leaders, and innovators the product management practices that elevate your influence and create products your customers love as you move toward product mastery. To see all seven areas go to https://productmasterynow.com. Hosted by Chad McAllister, PhD, product management professor and practitioner.

  1. 3d ago

    595: How to innovate and help your company – with Chad McAllister, PhD

    Masterclass on how to innovate for product managers Watch on YouTube TLDR In this kick-off to a new innovation series, I’m breaking down what innovation means inside organizations, dispelling myths, sharing insights from a recent one-day innovation workshop, and emphasizing customer-centric value. I introduce tools like the Bain Company’s Elements of Value Pyramid, discuss how innovation creates organizational tension, and highlight Amazon’s mastery of balancing innovation with execution. The episode sets the stage for the next deep-dive on specific innovation processes. Introduction  This is the start of a new series on how to innovate and what it means to innovate inside an organization. Recently I had a great opportunity to do a one-day innovation workshop, and in this episode I’m bringing you some of the highlights from that workshop. For those of you who might be new to the podcast, my background is product innovation and product management. I started in electrical engineering and then became the person who spent time with customers, understanding their problem, developing prototypes of what solutions might look like, and then leading teams to make those prototypes into something real for the customer. Along the way, I got fascinated by a innovation problem, and that drove me back to do a PhD in innovation. I fully intended to be working for an organization after that, helping to lead innovation in the organization. Instead, I found myself teaching, and I’ve continued that. These days I have the pleasure of teaching graduate innovation, product innovation, and innovation management courses, as well as helping companies with innovation. Summary of Concepts Discussed for Product Managers Creating Value for Customers:The workshop started with an icebreaker that had participants take a product they had with them, like a pen or laptop, and describe the value that product creates for them. Real innovation is tied to delivering customer value, not just invention. Elements of Value Pyramid:Bain & Company’s Elements of Value Pyramid breaks value down into four levels: functional, emotional, life-changing, and social impact. The product must meet a functional need, but meeting emotional needs is also important and frequently overlooked. What Innovation Is:Innovation can be defined as is a  process of devising a product concept that satisfies the customer’s unmet needs. Innovation can also be described as  a process that consists of activity phases and decision gates which produces new or improved products. Another definition of innovation is  a process for developing a successful culture of innovation, bringing together the different individuals and groups across the organization for ideas to be created, developed, and implemented. In all of these definition, innovation is a process for delivering new value for a customer. Innovation Myths:Lone geniuses don’t often create innovations. Instead, innovation is usually done by a team. Innovation takes place over time, not in a eureka moment. Another myth is that failure is fatal. Since innovation involves doing something new, mistakes are expected and can lead to learning. It’s easy to think that innovation is someone else’s job, but everyone in an organization should be innovating. Innovation is a process that can be learned. Why Organizations Struggle with Innovation:A significant barrier to innovation is organizational tension between the “execution engine” (focused on predictable, reliable operations) and the “innovation engine” (which requires experimenting and embracing uncertainty). Successful companies integrate both engines and foster a culture that values experimentation and learning from failure. Application Questions In your organization, what does creating customer value look like in practice? Have you encountered any of the innovation myths discussed, such as the lone genius or “failure is fatal”? How have those beliefs impacted your team? How might you use tools like the Elements of Value Pyramid to better articulate value in your current product work? What are the greatest sources of tension between your organization’s execution and innovation efforts, and how could you address them? How can you make space for rapid experimentation and learning, even if your organization is focused on stability and predictability? Thanks! Thank you for taking the journey to product mastery and learning with me from the successes and failures of product innovators, managers, and developers. If you enjoyed the discussion, help out a fellow product manager by sharing it using the social media buttons you see below. Source

    14 min
  2. Jun 1

    594: Be part of the 5% of organizations implementing AI effectively – with Maggie Nichols and Jon Adams

    Product managers catalyze radical transformation using AI Watch on YouTube TLDR Most AI initiatives in business are failing, not because of technology, but due to weak systems and leadership challenges. Maggie Nichols and Jon Adams join me in this episode to discuss why AI isn’t delivering on its promises and what product leaders can do to drive real transformation. Success hinges on system-level change, cross-functional collaboration, and a willingness to reimagine how your organization works. Tune in to uncover actionable insights and leadership moves to get your AI journey on the right track. Introduction There’s a number that keeps showing up in the research on AI in business. Depending on which study you read, somewhere between 80 and 95 percent of AI initiatives are either stalling, underperforming, or being quietly walked back. Meanwhile, the headlines keep telling us AI is transforming everything. So what’s actually going on? I’ve got two guests with me today who have seen what is happening inside hundreds of organizations and what is actually working.   Returning guest Maggie Nichols is the CEO of Eureka! Ranch, a firm that has spent 35 years turning innovation from a random gamble into a repeatable system, working with over 2,000 companies across 22 countries. Jon Adams is the CEO of SALIX Data, a 25-year old firm that makes data meaningful for their clients and has deployed over 125 AI models across some of the most demanding industries — banking, healthcare, insurance, manufacturing, and more.  Together they’ve identified five themes they believe every leader needs to understand about why AI is failing in organizations and how to fix it. None of it is what you’d expect. Summary of Concepts Discussed for Product Managers AI is an Amplifier, Not a Rescue:Maggie and Jon challenge the idea that AI is a “magic pill.” AI only amplifies what’s already in place — good systems become better, but broken systems spiral further out of control. If your processes are dysfunctional, AI just makes bad outcomes happen faster. Success is often blocked by poor foundational systems and low-quality data that can’t be trusted to drive autonomous decisions. Systems Thinking:When problems occur, they are usually not due to individual effort but to system failure. Strong leadership that fixes the system unlocks both human and AI potential. Strategic Use of AI:Maggie introduces a two-by-two matrix as a framework to help companies avoid the optimization trap (see the matrix). The vertical axis has two regions: eliminating waste and growth. The horizontal axis has two regions: incremental and transformational. Many companies focus their use of AI on incremental work that eliminates waste, which doesn’t provide much ROI. Using AI for growth and transformation can provide more value. Maggie recommends 85% of work on incremental optimization and 15% on transformational work. Using AI to Reimagine Innovation:Jon points out that most organizations lack the change management abilities to implement radical transformations using AI. Sustainable AI success depends on building an innovation culture and aligning strategy, people, data, technology, and risk. AI Transformation Is a Journey, Not a Destination:Both guests emphasize the need for a system-wide, leadership-driven approach. Key steps include ensuring data integrity, building AI fluency across teams, spotting high-leverage opportunities, and sustaining innovation momentum. Be prepared for a multi-year journey. Radical transformation doesn’t happen overnight. Immediate Actions for Product Managers:Product innovators are uniquely positioned to drive the journey to AI transformation. Maggie encourages PMs to rebrand themselves as partners or catalysts for transformation. Seek out internal allies, have conversations about radical transformation, and help create systems. Useful Links Get more resources on AI from Eureka! Ranch Learn more about SALIX Data Connect with Maggie and Jon on LinkedIn Innovation Quote “I wasn’t called to be successful. I was called to be faithful.” – Mother Teresa  “ The factory offers only 3% of the opportunity for systems thinking. The real opportunity, 97%, is in strategy, innovation, and how we work together.” – W. Edwards Deming Application Questions How does your organization currently use AI? What would it take to pursue more transformational AI projects? How reliable is your team’s data (gold, silver, or bronze), and how does that impact your ability to leverage AI? In what ways are workarounds and departmental silos undermining your organization’s potential for system-level improvement? As a product manager, what can you do to foster cross-functional collaboration and leadership engagement around AI? What one system or process in your organization is ripe for radical reinvention with AI? How would you begin that conversation with leadership? Bio Maggie Nichols is the CEO of the Eureka! Ranch. Throughout her career at Eureka! she’s worked with hundreds of leaders to innovate across B2B, B2C, Industrial, Services, Government and non-profit sectors with notable organizations like Humana, March of Dimes, Department of Commerce, Butterball, Ford, Schlumberger, Johnson & Johnson, Frito-Lay, GSK, Toyota and Chase Bank. Today she leads the Eureka! Ranch, a company founded by Doug Hall, and serves as an executive coach for leadership teams focused on innovation. Jon Adams is the Co-Founder and President of SALIX Data, an award-winning provider of Artificial Intelligence, Business Process Outsourcing, and Litigation Support Solutions. Since launching SALIX in 1999 with his brother, Jon has grown the company from a basement startup into a global operation with teams in the United States, India, and Kenya, serving more than 2,500 clients across industries such as healthcare, financial services, legal, and manufacturing. A recognized speaker, Jon has presented at over 200 conferences worldwide, advising leaders on leveraging AI, automation, and analytics to drive sustainable growth. His leadership is grounded in partnership, stewardship, and a commitment to long-term impact for clients, employees, and communities. Thanks! Thank you for taking the journey to product mastery and learning with me from the successes and failures of product innovators, managers, and developers. If you enjoyed the discussion, help out a fellow product manager by sharing it using the social media buttons you see below. Source

    24 min
  3. May 25

    593: Building a customer-centric product culture at Komatsu – with Paul Krug

    Go where your customers work to understand their needs TLDR This episode of Product Mastery Now features Paul Krug, Senior Product Manager at Komatsu, discussing the role of culture in product management. We explore how to foster a collaborative team environment, get customer insights, and navigate organizational challenges to deliver products customers love. Introduction Today, we are exploring Product Management Culture. It is the most vital and often the most frustrating part of our work, because when the culture fails, it is likely the product eventually follows. This is applicable to all product innovation, but for context, I just toured Komatsu, makers of mining and construction equipment, including the largest machines I have stood next to. Our guest is Paul Krug. He is a Senior Product Manager at Komatsu, where he manages the Mine Air Products portfolio. Paul has a proven track record of doubling sales through customer-centric redesign and brings a unique perspective from his years in both general management and engineering leadership. Summary of Concepts Discussed for Product Managers Voice of the Customer at Komatsu:Komatsu uses an idea called “Gemba,” which means going where the work is. Paul explains that product managers at Komatsu can’t understand customer needs without getting their hard hats on and talking to customers where they work. Building a Healthy Product Culture:Paul lists attributes of an effective product management culture: accomplishment-focused management, regular cross-functional conversations, and the importance of strong team dynamics. He suggests that being a “people person” and building relationships with employees across the organization are essential for product managers. Navigating Constraints & Organizational Realities:Paul addresses challenges faced by product managers who are “responsible for everything and nothing.” Product managers need to act as organizational ambassadors to other functions in the company and know something about other parts of the company, such as engineering and accounting. Paul also recommended that new product managers seek mentors. Driving Change and Reinforcing Good Culture:Paul describes product managers as entrepreneurs embedded in large companies. Unlike a solo entrepreneur who can take large risks, product managers have to follow the rules of their organization. Paul recommends getting to know the unwritten rules and culture of your company, and when you find something you want to change, work with allies such as a VP to share the risk. To reinforce positive product team culture, Paul advocates for team travel, joint field experiences, and dedicated offsite strategy sessions. Systems Thinking & Expanding Responsibilities:Paul gave some examples of solving problems that are not typically the product team’s responsibility but were able to create more value for customers and the business. He noticed that Komatsu was losing sales due to not knowing how to price their products. Paul took the initiative to reevaluate pricing and approach it more strategically. His team also created a P&L statement to help them communicate more effectively with management, because “if you can’t measure it, you can’t improve it.” Useful Links Connect with Paul on LinkedIn Learn more about Komatsu Innovation Quote “The joy of accomplishment is the greatest joy there is.” – R. G. Letourneau Application Questions How do you currently gather voice-of-the-customer insights, and how could going where the work is strengthen your approach? What specific actions can you take to build and sustain a collaborative team culture in your organization? As a product manager “responsible for everything and nothing,” how do you influence stakeholders across different functions? When you identify cultural or process barriers, what steps have you found most effective for enacting change within your company? How do you prioritize the SLQDC product decision tree (safety, law, quality, delivery, cost) in your own work, and where do you see room for improvement? Thanks! Thank you for taking the journey to product mastery and learning with me from the successes and failures of product innovators, managers, and developers. If you enjoyed the discussion, help out a fellow product manager by sharing it using the social media buttons you see below. Source

    37 min
  4. May 18

    592: Skills that keep product managers relevant in the AI era – with Tom Leung

    A framework for making the most of AI rather than letting it replace you Watch on YouTube TLDR AI is fundamentally changing the role of the product manager. While core skills like solving customer problems and using human judgment remain, many traditional and entry-level tasks are being automated. Tom Leung, Director of Product Management at Meta, joins me to share his thoughts on the evolving role of the product manager. He also explains his Flare Wide, Focus Hard, Ship Less framework to help product managers make better prioritization decisions. Introduction The way we build products is shifting rapidly, and relying on the old playbook is a fast track to being replaced by AI. Today, we are discussing how AI is impacting the role of the Product Manager—the good and the ugly.  If you are feeling overwhelmed by the flood of new AI tools, or if you are feeling pressure from stakeholders to just build faster because “AI makes it easy,” you are navigating a very common friction point. In this discussion, you’ll learn actionable steps to adapt your role and a timely new framework called “Flare Wide. Focus Hard. Ship Less.”  Tom Leung is back with us. He is a Director of Product Management at Meta and Managing Partner at Palo Alto Foundry, which makes startup investments and provides startup advisory services. With past product leadership roles at Google and YouTube, he has spent over two decades driving innovation and is actively charting the future of AI in product management. He also has a podcast called Fireside Product Management.  Tom brings a wealth of knowledge as a two-time startup founder with successful exits and as an executive product leader. While he is currently a product leader at Meta, he’s joining us today to share his personal frameworks and industry perspective, not as a company spokesperson. Summary of Concepts Discussed for Product Managers How AI Is Disrupting Product Management:Tom and I open the conversation by discussing AI’s impact on product development. Many skills once vital to the product manager toolkit, especially early-career and administrative activities, are being replaced by AI agents. Tasks like competitive research and note-taking now require less human input, reducing demand for entry-level PMs but also freeing up time for higher-impact work. However, customer problem-solving, measurable impact, and sound judgment remain essential for product managers. Product Management Careers in Entrepreneurship:According to Tom, the old route of early-career PMs joining large organizations for foundational training is fading. Fewer early-career PM roles means aspiring PMs may need to build skills at startups or small businesses, where they can develop their use of AI. If aspiring PMs own an enterprise, they can celebrate advances in AI because they help their entire business, rather than worrying about being replaced by AI. Tom points out that this ownership mindset requires more entrepreneurial courage. New Key Skills for PMs:A critical new skill is managing and critically reviewing the output from AI agents. PMs must catch mistakes hallucinations and avoid outsourcing their judgment to AI. Humans are still needed for prioritization and decision-making, while AI accelerates prototyping and documentation. Tom suggests that early-career PMs today who are less involved in prototyping may still be able to develop pattern-recognition and intuition similar to their older colleagues because AI will enable them to rapidly prototype and ship many more feature and products. Evolving Product Development Processes:Tom notes that current documentation and roadmap practices were originally designed for a pre-AI world. AI enables the creation of more artifacts and prototypes in less time, but organizations haven’t yet redefined how to process or prioritize this expanded output. This calls for a re-architecture of product processes and more strategic focus. Using AI Tools to Write Product Requirements Documents:Tom shares his experience using AI tools such as Claude to write product requirements documents (PRD). He recommends giving the AI tool a long prompt with a lot of context and telling it to ask you five follow-up questions to make the PRD better. Rather than outsourcing your thinking to an AI agent, use it as a brainstorming and writing partner. Tom’s “Flare Wide, Focus Hard, Ship Less” Framework:Tom introduces his Flare Wide, Focus Hard, Ship Less framework: Leverage AI’s capacity to explore, but don’t lose sight of solving actual customer problems and smart prioritization. With the ability to build much more than before, product teams need to be judicious: Just because you can ship more doesn’t mean you should. Useful Links Subscribe to Fireside Product Management on Substack  Connect with Tom on LinkedIn Learn about Tom’s Coaching for product professionals and leaders Innovation Quote “The product manager of the future is going to be more like a hedge fund manager than a builder.” – Tom Leung Application Questions Which core product management skills do you believe will never be automated, and how can you double down on them today? How are you currently integrating AI tools into your product workflow, and what new challenges have you noticed? In what ways could your organization’s product development processes be re-architected to leverage AI more effectively? What strategies can you employ to ensure that increased prototyping speed doesn’t lead to shipping “slop” or losing customer focus? As the product manager role shifts, how will you develop or demonstrate strong prioritization and judgment skills to remain competitive? Bio Tom Leung is a Director of Product Management at Meta and Managing Partner at Palo Alto Foundry, which makes startup investments and provides startup advisory services. With past product leadership roles at Google and YouTube, he has spent over two decades driving innovation and is actively charting the future of AI in product management. He also has a podcast called Fireside Product Management. Thanks! Thank you for taking the journey to product mastery and learning with me from the successes and failures of product innovators, managers, and developers. If you enjoyed the discussion, help out a fellow product manager by sharing it using the social media buttons you see below. Source

    18 min
  5. May 11

    591: Train your mental fitness to improve your performance as a product manager – with Simon Jeffries

    Apply techniques from the military to show up as the person you want to be when the pressure is on Watch on YouTube TLDR In this episode of Product Mastery Now, I’m joined by former UK Special Forces operator and mental performance coach Simon Jeffries. We dive into actionable strategies and systems for product teams to perform under intense pressure without burning out or breaking. From building daily routines that optimize mental fitness to practical drills for responding under stress, our conversation brings military-grade performance insights to the world of product management. Introduction Pressure breaks some teams and builds others. In this episode, we are tackling how you and your product teams can perform under intense pressure without breaking. You face hard deadlines, shifting stakeholder demands, and unexpected feature failures. To avoid burnout and perform well, you need specific techniques and systems to manage your reactions, reduce decision fatigue, and lead your team through high-stress product development cycles. We’ll learn some of those techniques with the help of Simon Jeffries, a former UK Special Forces operator and founder of The Natural Edge. He trains leaders to build the daily operating systems required to perform at their best even when the pressure is immense.   Summary of Concepts Discussed for Product Managers Elite Military to Mental Performance Coaching:Simon Jeffries shares his journey from Special Forces to management consulting, where he first experienced the impact of unmanaged stress and inconsistent habits. Realizing he’d left behind the performance principles of the military, he began researching and deconstructing elite performance for application in everyday professional life. He explains that just like physical fitness, mental fitness can be trained. Three Pillars for Performance:Simon introduces his performance framework: Hardware (physical health) Software (mindset) Structure (routines and habits) If any one of these pillars is weak, it can lead to underperformance. When all of them are strong, you show up nine times out of ten as the person you want to be. Debunking Fixed Mindsets:Simon challenges the common belief that people can’t change and explains neuroplasticity and the growth mindset. To respond to stressful situations, he recommends a three-step process called the Chaos Drill: Take a deep breath, pause, and then intentionally respond, using phrases like “Good. Now what?” 60-Minute Freedom Gap:Product managers often feel the pressure of endless meetings and 14-hour days. Simon recommends taking intentional time at the start and end of the day, such as exercising, walking, or being present with family. In sports and the military, recovery and rest are treated as important as output, but in business rest is often forgotten. Simon explains how boundaries, planning, and saying “no” can yield outsized gains in productivity. After-Action Reviews and Building Trust:Drawing from military practice, Simon details how frequent, blame-free reviews help teams continuously improve. Listening to everyone’s voice equally, focusing on process (not personal blame), and encouraging vulnerability among leaders builds a culture of trust and growth. Quick Wins for Mental Fitness:From breathwork to environment design (turning off phone notifications, removing unhealthy snacks), Simon recommends adopting micro-habits that reinforce better decision-making and self-regulation throughout the day. Useful Links Check out Simon’s website, The Natural Edge Connect with Simon on LinkedIn or Instagram Innovation Quote “Success doesn’t come from the gear or the tech. It comes from the operator behind them.” – military phrase Application Questions Which of the three pillars—hardware, software, structure—do you find most challenging to maintain under pressure? Why? How do you typically respond to high-stress situations at work? How could you be more intentional in your responses? What current routines or boundaries do you have (or wish you had) to protect your mental fitness? How frequently does your team pause for after-action reviews or retrospectives? What would make these sessions safer and more constructive? What is one small change you could make this week to train your mental fitness? Bio Simon served as a Royal Marines Commando before passing Special Forces selection and completing three combat tours. He’s now the founder of The Natural Edge, where he works with business owners who look capable on paper but are reactive and inconsistent under real pressure.   Thanks! Thank you for taking the journey to product mastery and learning with me from the successes and failures of product innovators, managers, and developers. If you enjoyed the discussion, help out a fellow product manager by sharing it using the social media buttons you see below. Source

    19 min
  6. May 4

    590: So-called “best practices” for organizational management will destroy your company – with Eric Ries

    Product management practices to stay entrepreneurial as your company grows Watch on YouTube TLDR In this episode of Product Mastery Now, I’m interviewing Lean Startup pioneer Eric Ries about his new book, Incorruptible: Why Good Companies Go Bad and How Great Companies Stay Great. We discuss the friction that arises when established organizations try to innovate like startups, the underlying management and governance forces at play, and practical frameworks for protecting trust and fostering sustainable product innovation. Introduction You build a product your customers love. Then, the pressure mounts: You’re asked to cut costs, raise prices, hit this quarter’s numbers, and sacrifice trust for a quick win. If you have ever been told by leadership, “We need to act like a startup,” only to find the corporate structure makes it impossible, or if you have been pressured to alter a roadmap just to hit end-of-quarter metrics, you know something about this friction. In this episode, you’ll learn what drives this friction along with tools and frameworks to prevent it, which are detailed in the new book from Eric Ries, Incorruptible: Why Good Companies Go Bad… And How Great Companies Stay Great. Eric has revolutionized our field with The Lean Startup. Now, he is making waves with Incorruptible, offering the blueprint for building and protecting products and organizations that last.  Summary of Concepts Discussed for Product Managers Why Acting Like a Startup Is So Hard:Eric Ries explains that large organizations struggle to behave like startups not because of size or bureaucracy alone, but due to deeply entrenched management systems designed for predictability, not innovation. He draws on historical examples like GM’s invention of modern management to show that traditional accountability methods depend on accurate forecasting, which doesn’t suit the uncertainty of entrepreneurship. This fundamental mismatch creates friction for innovation inside established companies. The Corporate Immune System Against Innovation:Eric describes companies that act as creativity-dampening fields where organizational controls and accountability designed for operational excellence suppress new ideas. Such companies inadvertently build immune systems that destroy pockets of innovation by punishing risk-taking and prioritizing process over progress, even though everyone claims to value creativity. Eric’s Framework for Changing Culture and Management for Innovation:Addressing how to overcome these barriers, Eric emphasizes that culture, accountability, process, and people are all interconnected. He says that to create lasting change, a company can’t just take away the old process. They must replace it with a new process. He outlines his three-phase process for innovation: Phase 1: Begin with experimentation in the pockets of innovation, which are exceptions. Senior leaders must see how much influence and time are required for even the most basic innovation, so that they understand the barriers to innovation in their organization. Phase 2: Once the leaders and organization understand that change is possible, they can lead company-wide directives to change the culture and stimulate innovation. Phase 3: Finally, the deep systems of the organization, such as resource allocation and team construction, can change to optimize for innovation. A Single System of Entrepreneurship and Operations:I ask Eric whether he sees innovation and operations as separate or merged, and he explains that a single integrated system works best, with entrepreneurship as a function. Innovation that begins in the startup-like parts of the company must eventually be integrated into formal operations. For this to work, innovation can’t be confined to an entrepreneurial team, nor is operational excellence absent from creative work. Entrepreneurship should be treated with as much formality and rigor as other essential functions, like finance, with clear roles, measures, and objectives throughout the organization. Why Good Companies Go Bad:Incorruptible was inspired by Eric’s observation that as many companies grow, they succumb to “big-co disease.” He writes that the so-called “best practices” of organization management actually destroy value. His book explains why these best practices have been adopted and the new best practices that should replace them. The Downfall of FedMart:Eric shares the story of Saul Price, founder of discount retailer FedMart. Initially, Saul’s goal was to always put his customer first, and FedMart became very successful because of customer loyalty. However, when he took the company public, he was under constant pressure to cut corners. Saul took the company private again, but his board fired him, and soon after the investors drove the company into the ground by following “best practices” at the expense of customers. Eric argues that financial gravity is the most powerful force inside companies, and poor management practices can lead companies away from value creation. However, it is possible to build companies that are strong enough to resist that pressure. Elements of Better Governance:Eric recommends two questions to test the quality of governance in an organization: Coherence: Are all organizational resources pulling toward a common goal or have they fragmented into in-fighting? Integrity: Are the customers the first priority of business? Practical Advice for Product Leaders:Eric introduces the concept of torchbearers, those who irrationally commit to doing the right thing for the customer, even when pressured to cut corners. He urges product leaders to recognize trustworthiness as a critical resource, protect it, and frame discussions with executives and boards around its value. Speaking the language of finance by quantifying customer trust strengthens the case against short-term compromises. Useful Links Check out Incorruptible: Why Good Companies Go Bad…and How Great Companies Stay Great, released May 26, 2026, on Amazon or in your local bookstore Check out Eric’s newsletter, The Lean Startup Innovation Quote “ Mr. Roundtree, the owner of the Roundtree Chocolate Factory is not the leader of the Roundtree Chocolate Factory.  He is a good leader because he instills in his people this sense of common purpose. And the common purpose, not Mr. Roundtree, is their invisible leader.” – Mary Park Follett Application Questions Where do you see the biggest friction between innovation and operations in your organization? How does your company measure progress for new initiatives, and is it aligned with the uncertainty of innovation? What creativity-dampening controls or processes exist in your environment, and how could they be changed or bypassed? How is trust with customers tracked and valued in your company’s decision-making, and how could you better protect it? Who are the torchbearers in your organization, and what can you do as a product manager to support, empower, or become one? Bio Over the last two decades, Eric Ries’s ideas about continuous innovation, long-term thinking, governance, and market reform have reshaped company building and management practices. He is the creator of the Lean Startup method, and the author of the New York Times bestseller The Lean Startup; The Leader’s Guide; and The Startup Way.   As a founder, he has put his own ideas into practice with The Long-Term Stock Exchange (LTSE); Answer.AI, an AI R&D lab; the Lean Startup Co, which teaches and supports the implementation of Lean Startup; Virgil, a legal services startup; and IMVU, where the ideas that became the Lean Startup method were forged. On his podcast, The Eric Ries Show, he talks to guests including world-class technologists, thought leaders, and executives working to build profitable companies for the long-term benefit of society. Eric has served as an entrepreneur-in-residence at Harvard Business School and IDEO. He lives in the San Francisco Bay Area with his wife and three children.  Thanks! Thank you for taking the journey to product mastery and learning with me from the successes and failures of product innovators, managers, and developers. If you enjoyed the discussion, help out a fellow product manager by sharing it using the social media buttons you see below. Source

    24 min
  7. Apr 27

    589: Lessons from 30+ years at McDonald’s – with Mike Yontz, McDonald’s Corp

    Delighting customers turned this McDonald’s fry guy into an owner/operator of 11 franchises Watch on YouTube TLDR In this episode of Product Mastery Now, I’m interviewing Mike Yontz, owner/operator of 11 McDonald’s restaurants, about scaling customer experience, leadership philosophies, and innovation within the McDonald’s ecosystem. Mike shares his journey from “fry guy” to owner, the importance of empathy and leadership development, insights into McDonald’s collaborative innovation, and advice for maintaining customer focus as organizations scale. Introduction Can you answer this riddle? I’m sitting at a cafe early one morning, working on my laptop. I observe three customers in a row going to the front counter and being greeted by name. As the fourth customer approaches, the person behind the counter says, “Good morning Tim. Here’s your newspaper. Do you want your usual?” Where am I? If you answered a local coffee shop, that would make sense. A Starbucks maybe? Not one I have been too. No, this occurred at a McDonald’s store. I was shocked. I was also curious who the person behind the counter was that welcomed customers by name. So, I went to find out and then we talked for an hour about what it takes to create a delightful customer experience like that.  The person behind the counter was Mike Yontz, owner/operator of the McDonald’s store. Turns out Mike has “ketchup in his veins.” He started as a young “fry guy,” and has since worked his way up to currently owning 11 stores. He is a second-generation operator who has lived through the evolution of the world’s most iconic brand—the Golden Arches.  Scaling a culture of excellence is one of the hardest challenges in leadership. In this discussion, Mike shares the philosophies and practices he uses to maintain that level of customer delight across 11 stores and 500 employees. Summary of Concepts Discussed for Product Managers From Fry Guy to Owner/Operator:On his journey from a 14-year-old fry cook to leading 11 McDonald’s stores, Mike developed operational knowledge along with an understanding of how to lead people. His goal is to make life easier for his employees and be empathetic to their needs has served him well throughout his career. When I met Mike in 2014 in Arizona, he owned and operated just one McDonald’s franchise. He described his time in Tucson as the biggest moment of his life. He was on a mission to honor the legacy of his late father, whom he describes as a “strong McDonald’s man.” After success in Tucson, Mike transitioned to flipping underperforming restaurants and now owns 11 stores with hopes to grow further. He now supervisors store managers and focuses on scaling the company. Although he isn’t serving customers behind the counter, he still approaches his job with empathy, aiming to improve the livelihood of the employees who have supported him. Scaling Culture and Customer Experience:The key to maintaining high-quality customer service across multiple stores is building a core team that shares Mike’s empathetic, customer-focused vision. Mike ensures that every employee, down to the fry guys, know they are welcome to share ideas. He talks about the responsibility of creating meaningful opportunities and the practical benefits of promoting from within, such as increased retention and stronger team buy-in. Innovation and Collaboration at McDonald’s:Mike describes his involvement recent innovation initiatives, such as serving as a beverage “champion” connecting headquarters and franchisees. It’s difficult to roll out new items to tens of thousands of restaurants across the globe, and McDonald’s uses test kitchens to test new products and processes to ensure those roll outs go smoothly. Staying Connected to Customers:Mike discusses the challenges of maintaining a direct connection to customers as businesses grow. Mike shares practical tools like visiting his own stores and competitors. He leverages both direct experience and customer empathy to spot friction points and improvement opportunities. Useful Links Read my article about Mike from 2014, What McDonald’s Should Learn From Mike: How Customer Service Brings Success to Small Businesses Check out Mike’s website Learn more about McDonald’s innovation incubator, Speedee Labs Innovation Quote “If you don’t find a way to make money while you sleep, you will work until you die.” – Warren Buffett  “If you want to go fast, go alone. If you want to go far, go together.” – African proverb Application Questions How can you maintain empathy for your customers as your responsibilities and teams scale? What systems and rituals can help set cultural expectations for customer experience in your organization? How might you structure career development and leadership opportunities for your frontline employees to promote retention and growth? In what ways can you balance innovation and customization with the need for consistency across products or locations? What are practical methods for “drinking your own champagne” in your product context, and how can this habit uncover useful customer insights? Bio As a second-generation McDonald’s franchise owner/operator, Mike Yontz’s story is rooted in family tradition, building on his father Bill’s legacy with the brand that began in the late 60s. In 1995, at the age of 14, Mike followed in his father’s footsteps and began working as a “fry guy” and drive-thru order taker. “I joined the team and worked on and off for several years, like many do, until ultimately I made a decision to choose McDonald’s at about the age of 20,” says Mike. Today Yontz Enterprises owns and operates eleven McDonald’s locations in the Orlando area, employing over 500 team members united under the Golden Arches.  Thanks! Thank you for taking the journey to product mastery and learning with me from the successes and failures of product innovators, managers, and developers. If you enjoyed the discussion, help out a fellow product manager by sharing it using the social media buttons you see below. Source

    19 min
  8. Apr 20

    588: Customer interviews that lead to actionable insights – with Amy Meginnes

    Step-by-step methodology for customer discovery – for product managers Watch on YouTube TLDR In this episode of Product Mastery Now, innovation strategist Amy Meginnes shares a step-by-step methodology for effective customer discovery. Learn how to target the right people, frame and ask effective questions, conduct interviews confidently, and turn conversations into actionable insights while avoiding common research pitfalls. Whether you’re a startup or an enterprise product manager, Amy’s tips help you deeply understand customer needs so you can build products that truly resonate. Introduction Your next breakthrough product idea isn’t hiding in a competitor analysis report. It’s sitting in the head of a customer who doesn’t even know how to ask for it yet. But how do we reliably get that information? You’ve been there: You build a feature based on what customers said they wanted, only to launch it and see it not used. It’s hard to talk with customers in a way that extracts actionable truth from them, but this discussion will change that. In this episode, you will get a step-by-step methodology for customer discovery. You will learn who to target, the questions to ask to bypass polite answers, and the approach to turn pages of interview notes into actionable insights. To help us do this, Amy Meginnes is back on the podcast. She first joined us in episode 575: How to run innovation workshops that actually ship products. Amy is an innovation strategist and facilitator at Phillips & Co., a leading strategy and innovation consultancy. She has over a decade and a half of work in strategy, research, and experience design engagements with Fortune 500 companies as well as startups. Summary of Concepts Discussed for Product Managers Which Customers Should You Talk To?Amy explains that whom you interview depends on what you’re trying to learn. Power users reveal what’s working and where features are missing. Churned users can pinpoint friction points and reasons for leaving, while non-users help test new market positioning or product concepts. Maintain clarity on your research goal and choose the audience best positioned to provide those insights. Finding and Recruiting the Right Participants:Start with your own CRM to identify current, past, or churned users, and look at segmentation by geography or role. When that isn’t enough, explore partner organizations, professional associations, and even get creative with direct outreach on platforms like LinkedIn, Reddit, or Craigslist. In B2B or distributed consumer environments, talking to distributors or observing customers in stores can be scrappy but effective. How Many Interviews Are Enough?You rarely need a large number of interviews for meaningful qualitative insights. Patterns typically emerge after 8–10 interviews with the right people. Choosing the Right Interview Forum:Zoom interviews are now accepted and are likely the most convenient. In-person focus groups can provide richer feedback, especially with physical products. Whenever possible, involve other team members, such as engineers, marketers, or leadership, as observers so they hear customer feedback firsthand. Write down or record direct quotes to help you more powerfully and directly communicate customer ideas to other stakeholders. Asking the Right Questions:Prepare simple, open-ended questions that draw out stories, not just yes or no answers. Avoid leading questions or pitching your solution in the question. Emphasize that negative feedback is welcome, provide an outline for the conversation, and open with easy experiential prompts before drilling down into challenges, workarounds, and priorities. Amy’s favorite prompts include: What has nobody in this industry solved? Here’s a magic wand. You can solve one thing. What is it? You can see that we’re trying to learn about X. What else should I have asked you about? Synthesizing and Sharing Insights:Look for recurring patterns across interviews. AI tools can help look for patterns, but always validate their outputs and ask for direct quotes that support the insights they find. Useful Links Learn more about Phillips & Co. Connect with Amy on LinkedIn Innovation Quote “Perception is reality.” – Lee Atwater Application Questions How do you currently decide who to interview or survey for customer discovery—and what might you do differently after this episode? What are your favorite (or most challenging) methods for reaching non-users or churned customers? Do you involve your larger team (engineering, marketing, leadership) in customer conversations? If not, what barriers exist? How do you ensure that the questions you ask are open-ended and not leading—what’s worked or failed for you? When analyzing customer interviews, what tools or methods have been most helpful for you in synthesizing and sharing actionable insights? Bio Amy brings 15+ years of expertise in strategy, research, and innovation, transforming organizations from start-ups to the Fortune 500 across technology, life sciences, healthcare, retail, and hospitality. A University of Iowa graduate and former Archeworks fellow, she applies human-centered design to tackle complex challenges – from Chicago’s housing crisis to global education equity as Board Chair of Pangea Educational Development. Thanks! Thank you for taking the journey to product mastery and learning with me from the successes and failures of product innovators, managers, and developers. If you enjoyed the discussion, help out a fellow product manager by sharing it using the social media buttons you see below. Source

    26 min
4.9
out of 5
66 Ratings

About

Welcome to Product Mastery Now, where you learn the 7 knowledge areas for product mastery. We teach product managers, leaders, and innovators the product management practices that elevate your influence and create products your customers love as you move toward product mastery. To see all seven areas go to https://productmasterynow.com. Hosted by Chad McAllister, PhD, product management professor and practitioner.

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