One Knight in Product
Episodes
Friday Jul 30, 2021
Friday Jul 30, 2021
An interview with Paul Meinshausen. Paul is the co-founder of Aampe, a startup that uses automated, rapid learning to personalise notifications and drive customer engagement. Paul started out in academia before doing a tour in Afghanistan and using data where the stakes couldn't be higher. He then went on to found and invest in multiple startups.
We talk about a lot, including:
The mission behind Aampe, the problems they're trying to solve, and the importance of sticking to solving those problems and not getting bogged down building stuff that's already a commodity
Whether the company is at product/market fit stage or whether product/market fit is even a thing as far as they're concerned
How we need to step away from mobile notifications being a marketing channel, rather a proactive UI and entry point to apps
The impact of Big Tech privacy controls on mobile technology, the impact on engagement, and whether it's a threat or an opportunity
The journey from academia to multiple entrepreneur, and whether it's unfair to label data scientists as primarily academic with no business sense
Some of the ways data scientists can build those business muscles and make sure they are solving real problems in a meaningful way
How a tour in Afghanistan shook Paul out of his academic mindset and made him realise that this stuff needs to work in the real world
Why it's critically important not to just have data, but to know where it comes from and truly understand how it's feeding your models and algorithms
The impact of bad data on your business and how you need to be hypervigilant to make sure you're not caught napping
Check out Aampe
If you want to find out more about Paul's company, check out aampe.com.
Contact Paul
You can catch up with Paul on LinkedIn or Twitter.
Tuesday Jul 27, 2021
Tuesday Jul 27, 2021
An interview with Ramli John. Ramli is the Managing Director of ProductLed, the Robin to Wes Bush's Batman, and the author of "Product-Led Onboarding", a book that aims to shine a light on getting users to value sooner and ensuring you retain them long term.
We speak about a lot, including:
The mission behind ProductLed, and how the pandemic has really focused people's minds on ensuring their tools are seen as valuable
What the Managing Director of ProductLed does, and whether he's really the Robin to Wes Bush's Batman
How Ramli went from studying mathematics & being an analyst for a massive FMCG company into marketing & product-led growth, and why it excites him so much
Why we needed a new book dedicated to Product-Led onboarding given that it was covered in Wes's book originally, and what publishers said when they pitched it
Why he put his personal email address in the front and back of the book for queries, and how much spam he's received since he did that
The importance of first impressions when it comes to product onboarding, and ensuring quick time to value to drive retention
Who owns product-led onboarding, whether it matters, and the importance of true cross-functional teams
Why product-led onboarding is more about free trials and guides, and more to do with an obsessive focus on user success, and why you need to define what that "success" really is
The EUREKA framework the book proposes to help you establish your onboarding team, understand, refine and analyse (and whether he came up with it in the bath)
How time to value can actually be too short and some of the things you can do about this
Whether product-led growth is truly anything new, or just a buzzword to sell attractive yellow books
And much more!
Buy Product-Led Onboarding
"Just like dating, your company's growth depends on first impressions. If their first date with your product is anything but silky-smooth, you risk losing out to the competition. Add to that a few, unfairly poor reviews and you’ll be more than just stuck. In this book, you’ll learn the simple 6-step strategy used by giants like Mixpanel, Ubisoft, and Outsystems that will get you more loyal clients in a fraction of the time."
Visit the book website or check it out on Amazon or Goodreads.
Contact Ramli
You can contact Ramli on Twitter, LinkedIn or productled.com.
More from ProductLed
If you want to hear Wes Bush's interview on this very podcast, why not check out Wes Bush's interview on this very podcast?
Friday Jul 23, 2021
Friday Jul 23, 2021
An interview with Abisoye Falabi. Abisoye is a passionate technologist, community builder and educator who is currently Senior Product Manager at TradeDepot, a Nigerian commerce and fintech platform.
We talk about a lot, including:
His work with TradeDepot, the problems they solve and their plans to go pan-African
Some of the challenges of moving across borders into new territories and how this affects scaling
How he started out in tech and moved to product management after seeing how developers were disconnected from customers & stakeholders
His various roles spanning tech & product, and whether he agrees that having a CPTO is good or not
Why it's important for Africans to make software solutions for Africans, and how they have to be 100x better than established solutions
Some of the challenges in building products for the African market, and how they might be addressed
Some of the common mistakes VC firms make when investing in African tech, and some of the opportunities they are missing
His passion for education, how he teaches to learn, and some of his work with community building and working on courses for Pluralsight
And much more!
Contact Abisoye
You can reach out to Abisoye on LinkedIn or Twitter.
Tuesday Jul 20, 2021
Tuesday Jul 20, 2021
An interview with Teresa Torres. Teresa is a product discovery coach who works with a variety of organisations to help bed in good product discovery practices. Her coaching experience led her to write a book on the same topic, which she hopes will inspire product teams around the world to build fast feedback loops and defeat stakeholder bias.
We talk about a lot, including:
Why she decided to write Continuous Discovery Habits, and the feedback she's received so far
What the concept of continuous discovery means in practical terms, and why it's important to stay on top of shifting customer needs
The target audience for the book, and whether it's for product leaders or the sceptical exec team
How ideological battles are not going to win the war for product discovery, and the importance of showing and not telling
How her history in human-centred design, and disappointment at working practices in the real world, ignited her passion for discovery
How cognitive biases can lead to bad product decisions, but how this isn't just down to stakeholders but also affects product teams themselves
The importance of stakeholder management, addressing their own gaps, and using story mapping to uncover those gaps and assumptions
Why you should follow through with an impact analysis when you're inevitably overruled, and uncover their (or your) gaps in understanding
How continuous discovery can work with any type of addressable market, and how few people is too few
The ideal frequency of customer contact, and why the longer you leave it, the more risky your decisions
The critical importance of getting engineers into discovery early and using their knowledge & experience to get to the right solution
And much more!
Buy Continuous Discovery Habits
"In this book, you'll learn a structured and sustainable approach to continuous discovery that will help you answer each of these questions, giving you the confidence to act while also preparing you to be wrong. You'll learn to balance action with doubt so that you can get started without being blindsided by what you don't get right. "
Visit the book website or check it out on Amazon or Goodreads.
Contact Teresa
You can find out more about Teresa's coaching & education efforts on producttalk.org.
If you want to catch up with Teresa, you can Twitter or on LinkedIn.
Wednesday Jul 14, 2021
Wednesday Jul 14, 2021
An interview with John Zilch. John is Director of Product Management at Upland, adjunct professor at Providence College and founder of Launch Day, a new startup that's aiming to take the pain out of launching new products to market.
We talk about a lot, including:
The pros & cons of working as a platform product manager and integrating various product lines & features into a new platform
When it's appropriate to replatform and when not, and whether a platform product manager gets a lot of customer contact
John's journey into product management from a computer science background and how, like everyone, he kind of fell into it, and how analysts get more love than PMs
How his dissatisfaction with the way software gets launched led him and a former colleague to build their own platform to make it better
Why he's started teaching at Providence College, how teaching is the best way to learn, and how academia is a fertile ground for hiring the best talent
What he thought of Marty Cagan's recent takedown of MBAs, why he's tired of everyone being against them, and what they're good for
Why there's a problem with experimentation culture and why it shouldn't be a replacement for good customer discovery
How's it's OK to do things that don't scale as long as you have a plan to make sure that it can scale in the future
The problem with people concentrating on "Agile" as a method of delivery rather than a way to get close to customers
And much more!
Contact John
You can check out the Launch Day website or connect with John on LinkedIn or Twitter.
Friday Jul 09, 2021
Friday Jul 09, 2021
An interview with Hubert Palan. Hubert is the founder and CEO of Productboard, a company that aims to put the customer at the heart of the product development process and help companies across the globe build truly excellent products.
We talk about a lot, including:
What Productboard does, how it differs from other platforms & how it tries to bring customers to the heart of product development
How his studies & early product career made him realise how difficult it was to have evidence-based discussions with stakeholders, and how this led him to create Productboard
How he still maintains strong ties to the Czech Republic, and how Productboard took advantage of being a big fish in a small pond there
What it was like studying under Steve Blank, the inspiration for the Lean Startup, and some of the lessons Hubert learned there
Whether his MBA helped him become an effective product manager or whether he had a lot to learn after graduating
Some of his problems with Marty Cagan's recent article about MBAs, and why he thinks Marty got it wrong
Some of the mistakes that product teams are making when making product development decisions, and how companies need to build up their product muscles
How some founders stumble into product/market fit and why the Lean Startup is partly to blame
Why founders are overrated, and how to step away from thinking you know it all & letting the company run without your input
How to try to build a diverse & inclusive company, and some of the challenges that Productboard have faced
And much more!
Contact Hubert
You can check out the Productboard website or connect with Hubert on LinkedIn or Twitter.
Sunday Jul 04, 2021
Sunday Jul 04, 2021
An interview with Chris Hull. Chris is a former 7th grade social studies teacher who grew dissatisfied with the tools he had to do his job and decided to create some of his own. He's now the CPO and founder of Otus, an all-in-one learning management, assessment and data system.
We talk about a lot, including:
The vision behind Otus and how a global pandemic has made everyone interested in online learning in a pandemic
How someone goes from teaching into building a company, some of the ways he's learned to do it and some of the mistakes he's made
The different types of stakeholders he has to deal with across education, and how he balances the needs of all of them
The pros & cons of interviewing kids for UX interviews, and how they're both the best and worst people to ask for feedback
Whether there are any challenges selling into schools, and whether they're as stuck in the past as they appear
Bringing agile principles to learning and importance of empiricism and constant learning
How he's set up the teams to deliver value across his product lines and how the film Ratatouille inspired his ideation process
The importance of setting a vision then stepping back & ensuring the teams have autonomy
How teaching kids has primed him for the stresses & strains of foundership & leadership, and whether kids are harder work than adults
Whether he's instinctive or data driven, how to step away from your biases, and when it makes sense to go with your gut
The importance of focus, picking your bets and how "priority" has been, and should remain, singular
And much more!
Contact Chris
If you want to catch up with Chris, you can reach him on LinkedIn, Twitter or check out his company Otus