Lessons In Product Management

Path2Product

Path2Product's Mission is to bridge the gap in product management experience for aspiring product managers, so the Lessons In Product Management podcast is here to support that effort, as well as provide valuable insights to existing PMs and PM leaders.

  1. 07/30/2025

    How to stop Sales from selling vaporware

    🎙 Episode Summary Host: John Fontenot Topic: How to stop sales teams from selling vaporware (promising unbuilt features) 💡 Core Problem Sales teams often promise features that don't yet exist (a.k.a. vaporware) to close deals. This creates chaos for product and engineering, derails the roadmap, and sets poor expectations with customers. 🧩 Why It Happens Lack of vision and strategy at the leadership level causes misalignment between product, marketing, and sales. Without clear guidance on: Who the ideal customer is What value the product provides...…sales operate independently and promise features reactively. Sales are under intense pressure to close deals and may overpromise to hit quotas. ✅ The Upstream Fix Founders and product leaders must define a clear vision and strategy, including: Product strategy (value prop, differentiation) Go-to-market strategy (target customer, positioning) Enablement is key: Marketing and product must empower sales to recognize good vs. bad-fit prospects. 🛠 Tactical, Downstream Solution When a feature is promised post-sale: Don’t drop everything to build it. Ask to talk to the customer to understand the why behind the request. Reframe the conversation with sales: “Let’s explore the real need and maybe we can deliver something better that helps you close more future deals.” Collaborate to design a more effective, differentiated solution. Bring customers into the process: this creates partnership, not just transaction. ⚠️ Contracts often include promised features that are never built and unless the customer feels misled or cheated, they’re rarely enforced. 🤝 Building a Healthier Process Establish a norm where product gets involved before a feature is promised. Sales can say: “That sounds doable. Can we loop in our product team to better understand your goals?” If your org values honesty and customer success, this approach will resonate. If not, it may be a sign to consider other opportunities. 💬 Final Thoughts You can shift from feeling powerless as a PM to becoming a true strategic partner. This approach builds trust with both sales and customers. Ethical, aligned organizations will benefit from this collaboration.

    10 min
  2. 06/17/2025

    Upleveling your PM career w/ Shobhit Chugh - CEO of Intentional Product Manager

    In this episode, Shobhit Chugh, former Google PM and founder of Intentional Product Manager, shares practical strategies for moving beyond execution and becoming a standout product leader—even when you don’t have formal authority or a supportive manager. 🔑 Key Takeaways 1. Don’t Mistake Productivity for Progress Just being busy doesn’t mean you’re growing. Like Amazon’s press release approach, define what you want to be known for before the next review cycle. Align your work to that vision and offload or eliminate tasks that don’t serve it.2. Influence > Delegation Product managers can’t “delegate” in the traditional sense. Find teammates who want to own tasks you shouldn’t be doing—for their own growth. Example: Shobhit handed off API spec writing to an engineer aiming to become a PM. 3. Make the Strategic Urgent Block time doesn’t protect strategic work—deadlines do. Make public commitments (e.g., “I’ll present this strategy next Thursday”) to create urgency and accountability.4. Think in Terms of Leverage Focus on high-leverage activities like:Continuous customer research (not just during discovery phases).Repeated communication of long-term vision.Building visibility with stakeholders and leadership.5. Avoid Common Mindset Traps Don’t assume company red tape is immovable—often it’s just unchallenged hearsay. Overwhelm is emotional, not factual. Audit your time and challenge false constraints.6. Develop an “Angle of Mastery” Instead of a generic “10-year B2B PM,” position yourself based on specific problems you consistently solve. Example: One client branded themselves as the “friction eliminator” in complex B2B platforms.7. Build Your Brand In a competitive market, being the “obvious hire” is essential. Build visibility on platforms like LinkedIn. Share your thinking, frameworks, and customer insights. Join Shobhit on your journey to product leadership at Intentional Product Manager

    30 min
  3. Bridging the Gap Between Product Management & Product Marketing with Daria Love, Director of Product Marketing at the Trans.eu Group

    05/14/2025

    Bridging the Gap Between Product Management & Product Marketing with Daria Love, Director of Product Marketing at the Trans.eu Group

    🔑 Summary: In this insightful conversation, Daria Love unpacks the often-blurred boundaries between product marketing and product management. She shares practical frameworks for collaboration, the importance of go-to-market (GTM) roadmaps, and how product managers and marketers can set each other (and the product) up for success. The episode is packed with strategic and tactical takeaways for PMs looking to deepen partnerships with product marketers. ⏱️ Key Topics & Timestamps: 01:45 – Daria’s BackgroundDaria shares her 14+ years in B2B SaaS and how she found her niche in product marketing. 03:39 – Her Favorite Area in PMMGo-to-market strategy and product launches—why she loves the unpredictable, cross-functional work. 06:22 – AI and RepositioningThe impact of market waves like AI on positioning and the tension between PM and PMM around messaging. 07:55 – Dual Roadmaps: Product vs. GTMDaria advocates for separate product and GTM roadmaps to avoid unrealistic launch expectations. 10:51 – Internal Stakeholder CommunicationClarifying responsibilities between PMs and PMMs when communicating launch plans internally. 12:34 – Product Adoption OwnershipWhy adoption is a shared responsibility and how PMMs help segment, enable, and message for different audiences. 17:04 – Avoiding Siloed Customer ResearchCollaboration between PM, PMM, and CS when interviewing customers, collecting feedback, or creating case studies. 22:35 – The Importance of SegmentationDaria and the host dive into how segmentation influences prioritization, measurement, and strategy. 26:42 – Building for the Wrong CustomersA cautionary tale: companies evolving past SMB but still building for them. 30:08 – Releases vs. LaunchesDaria breaks down tactical coordination between code readiness and marketing readiness. 33:24 – Early Involvement in the RoadmapHow PMs can benefit from involving PMMs at the ideation stage for better market alignment. 36:51 – Code Is Only 30% of the WorkWhy launch readiness requires internal training, customer education, and coordinated campaigns. 40:07 – Risks of Premature Feature ReleasesReleasing to production without internal enablement can erode trust and hinder adoption. 44:12 – Empathy for Internal PartnersPMs must support and enable internal teams like they do engineers to ensure successful product rollouts.

    47 min
  4. How AI is impacting the PM role w/ Irene Yu - Founder & CEO of Skiplevel

    05/06/2025

    How AI is impacting the PM role w/ Irene Yu - Founder & CEO of Skiplevel

    🎙️ Guest: Irene Yu Founder & CEO of SkipLevel – a company helping PMs become more technical without needing to code. Skiplevel article on how AI is changing the PM role 🔑 Key Topics & Timestamps [00:00 - 02:25] Irene's BackgroundIrene shares her transition from software engineer to starting SkipLevel. [02:26 - 04:45] Identifying the Technical GapsHer early software development experience revealed a lack of technical knowledge in PMs which created communication issues with engineers. [04:46 - 07:15] Why PMs Should Learn Tech FundamentalsShe explains how better technical understanding helps PMs ask better questions and write clearer requirements. [07:16 - 10:30] PMs Don’t Need to Code, but…Irene stresses PMs don’t need to be coders, but they should understand system architecture, APIs, databases, etc. [10:31 - 13:20] Creating SkipLevelIrene talks about how she turned her insights into a business – a learning platform that bridges the tech gap for PMs. [13:21 - 16:40] Common Challenges for PMsShe highlights issues like vague communication with devs and over-reliance on engineering for feasibility assessments. [16:41 - 20:00] How SkipLevel WorksOverview of the course structure – from foundational topics to applied learning on APIs and backend logic. [20:01 - 24:15] Advice for PMsIrene encourages curiosity, asking “how” and “why” behind technical choices, and building confidence through structured learning. [24:16 - End] Final ThoughtsImportance of continuous learning, especially in bridging gaps between business and tech for better product outcomes.

    48 min
  5. 04/28/2025

    Becoming a T-Shaped Product Manager

    Summary: In this episode of Lessons in Product Management, John discusses the importance of developing into a T-shaped product manager — someone who has deep expertise in one area but broad knowledge across many disciplines. He explains how the expectations of PMs are evolving, particularly with the rise of generative AI, and gives tactical advice on building a career growth roadmap. Timestamps: 00:09 – Introduction to the episode and topic. 00:23 – What is a T-shaped PM? (Depth and breadth explained) 01:10 – Defining the core responsibility of a PM: creating customer value that drives business objectives. 02:00 – Key PM tasks: Working with teams, getting buy-in, prioritizing, synthesizing information. 03:26 – Areas PMs can go deep in, and the need for broad competency across adjacent fields. 03:57 – Technical competency: Importance for PMs without technical backgrounds (mention of Skip Level course). 04:41 – Gaining competence in UX and research. 04:58 – Understanding go-to-market functions: marketing, sales, customer success, and product marketing. 05:30 – Importance of data and analytics skills: SQL proficiency, telling stories with data. 06:05 – Compliance, legal, and regulatory knowledge for PMs in heavily regulated industries. 06:30 – Product ethics: distinguishing between what you can do and what you should do. 06:55 – Financial acumen: revenue models, ROI, and understanding value vs. cost. 07:43 – PMs are at the center of organizations: Why speaking multiple "languages" matters. 08:07 – Embracing a long-term career journey rather than sprinting to learn everything at once. 08:35 – How to identify strengths and weaknesses to focus learning efforts. 09:23 – Real-world examples of technical and regulatory knowledge gaps PMs need to address. 09:42 – The need for PMs to evolve in the era of generative AI and automation. 10:34 – The shift away from traditional PM roles focused only on backlogs and PRDs. 11:28 – A call to action: Take ownership of your learning to remain competitive. 12:08 – Summary: Developing breadth and depth will determine your ability to land jobs, get promoted, and grow. 12:44 – John offers coaching help: Listeners can email him for a career growth roadmap session. john@path2product.io 13:00 – Closing remarks: "Go out and kill it!" If you're trying to break into product management, come join us at Path2Product to get the experience you need!

    13 min
  6. 03/25/2025

    How PMs Can Improve Working & Communicating with Engineers w/ Paul Lunow, Head of Technology and Innovation at XU Sustainable

    Lessons in Product Management - Working & Communicating with Engineers Guest: Paul LunowHost: John DoeEpisode Duration: ~28 min [00:00 - 01:37] Introduction John welcomes Paul Lunow to the podcast.Paul previously hosted John on Product and Cake.Background on Paul’s 20-year career in tech. [01:37 - 04:05] Paul’s Background in Product & Engineering Started in Berlin as a web developer, grew an agency to 30 people.Founded Nepos, a startup building a tablet for elderly users. Moved to eBay to experience corporate innovation. Now Head of Innovation & Technology at XU Group, building a B2B learning platform. [04:05 - 06:45] The Role of AI in Learning Platforms Discusses AI’s role in education.AI is a tool for augmentation, not a replacement for learning. [06:45 - 10:38] How Product Managers Can Work Better with Engineers The importance of psychological safety in teams. Engineers need a space to fail, ask questions, and collaborate. Great product managers create environments of trust. [10:38 - 14:46] How Much Tech Knowledge Should a PM Have? PMs don’t need to code but must deeply understand the product. The worst thing: a PM who pretends to know coding but doesn’t use the product. PMs should be the first to log in daily and experience the product firsthand. [14:46 - 18:08] Anti-Patterns: What Drives Engineers Crazy Overworked and stressed PMs create pressure and disconnection. Avoid last-minute changes and unclear expectations. Balance deep work vs. reactive work—don’t just respond to messages all day. [18:08 - 22:26] Managing Workload as a PM Split work into offense (strategic work) and defense (reactive tasks). Prioritize one key task per day instead of juggling everything at once. Time-box meetings and avoid unnecessary stakeholder discussions. [22:26 - 24:59] How PMs Can Earn Engineers’ Trust Be a sparring partner, not just a requirement-pusher. Never throw engineers under the bus—own decisions as a team. A PM should always support and defend shipped features. [24:59 - 27:36] Final Thoughts & Paul’s Work Mistakes happen—focus on developing strong personal values as a PM. Paul’s new novel about an engineer in Big Tech (available in German). Connect with Paul on LinkedIn. [27:36 - 28:00] Closing Remarks Subscribe to Product and Cake & Lessons in Product Management. See you next week!

    28 min
5
out of 5
26 Ratings

About

Path2Product's Mission is to bridge the gap in product management experience for aspiring product managers, so the Lessons In Product Management podcast is here to support that effort, as well as provide valuable insights to existing PMs and PM leaders.