TEI 295: Do you have what it takes to be a great product manager? Results of the Product Team Performance study – with Greg Geracie




The Everyday Innovator Podcast for Product Managers show

Summary: Five factors of successful product managers<br> Do you and your product teams have the characteristics required for success? The Product Team Performance study has been identifying the characteristics of high-performing teams since 2012. Of the 31 factors found through the studies, I discuss five of the most significant ones with Greg Geracie, principal researcher.<br> Greg is the CEO of Actuation Consulting, a global provider of product management training, consulting, and advisory services to some of the world’s most well-known organizations. I’ve known Greg for several years, through his work on the ProdBOK book, which is the<br> The Guide to the Product Management and Marketing Body of Knowledge, as well as our mutual involvement in PDMA and AIPMM professional associations for product managers.<br> Summary of some concepts discussed for product managers<br> [2:50] Tell us about the survey of product managers you’ve done since 2012.<br> It’s a performance study comparing factors of product teams that excel versus those that struggle. We use an independent statistician who conducts regression analysis on the survey data.<br> [3:15] What’s new this year, in your sixth study?<br> Approximately 40% of the questions are new, derived from our consulting, Q&amp;A with live audiences, and our sponsor Planbox, who submitted five questions related to innovation. The rest are questions that we’ve been tracking on a longitudinal basis and demographic questions that help us better understand our respondents. Another important change is that when we started the study, it was very difficult to find hard data on the topics that our consultants were interested in; now, after years of research, anyone interested in answers to questions about product management and innovation topics can easily find information from our studies.<br> [7:37] Who are your survey respondents?<br> We’re interested in hearing from anyone actively involved in product development. Ninety-seven percent of survey respondents have an active role in creating or enhancing products or services in their organizations, so targeting has been very good. Some additional demographics about our respondents this year:<br> <br> * 54% are product managers or product owners (higher than the norm from past years)<br> * other 46% are from a wide variety of roles including development managers, engineers, project managers, UX professionals, and more<br> * slightly more than half report to a C-level executive or VP<br> * 51% are in hardware software technology vertical<br> * 45% are from companies with revenue $50 million to $2 billion, with a strong response in the two other segments we identified<br> <br> [11:21] The study identified 31 significant factors that successful product teams exhibit, including five factors that are new this year. Let’s talk about one of those five new factors, connecting activities to business strategy.<br> The study shows that a product team’s ability to connect their daily activities back to the company’s overarching business strategy is highly correlated with financial success. However, only 27% of survey respondents indicated that their product team is able to connect their daily activities directly to the company’s business strategy. Most respondents indicate that their organizations either fail to effectively communicate the company strategy or don’t have an overarching business strategy at all. Sadly, the number of product teams that can connect their daily activities with their company’s business strategy has decreased from 37% seven years ago.<br> To improve their product and financial performance, companies need to shore up communication and transparency about their company strategy and how product teams connect to it. This will give product teams the context to make better short- and longterm decisions, and it will clarify the organization’s strategic priorities.