Popcorn and Pints

"Beer & popcorn" by nadja robot via Flickr
“Beer & popcorn” by nadja robot via Flickr

Over the last month I’ve found a delicious new recipe for continuous learning – popcorn and pints! Each week a couple Product Owners and I get together for 30-60 minutes to watch product videos and discuss. We’ve started by checking out the Mind the Product video archive. It’s been a fantastic way to stress forever learning, have a chance to learn from some of the industry’s best, and bond as a Product Owner group.

If you want to try it out yourself, here’s some tips:

  • If you don’t have beer on tap at work, just call it ‘Product & Popcorn’
  • Schedule it for a regular time. We do Tuesdays from 3-4pm (that way folks can leave early or talk to their Team afterwards before the end of the day)
  • Get a variety of fun popcorns! I’ve had the best luck with Trader Joe’s popcorns which are all great and unusual. We rotate who buys the popcorn each week.
  • Have each person pick a drinking word before the video starts.
  • Take frequent breaks to discuss/laugh/cry about what you’re hearing.

Hopefully you and your Product team learn a lot from Popcorn & Pints. I hope to be sharing some of the best videos and thoughts here soon. If you have any suggestions for great places for Product Management videos, please let me know in the comments.

Hallway Testing – How Sweet it is

Chocolates by Kevin Grosvenor via Flickr
Chocolates by Kevin Grosvenor via Flickr

There’s always so much to test. From business models to user experiences, getting feedback early and often leads to the best designs. When you’re onboarding a new PM, you’ll surely have something that can be tested, and hallway testing is not only a way to test cheaply but also a fantastic way to have your new PM meet the organization. Hallway testing is doing quick tests, mainly for user experience designs, with your co-workers in the hall or at their desks. I love to use it for lightweight decisions, such as button placement or text. I’ll walk around with some screens, either digitally or on paper, going up to co-workers who seem to have a moment to get their feedback.

For a new PM, this is also a perfect way to start meeting others in the organization. It’s a great excuse to go say hi and have a productive conversation. They can also learn a lot about what others do by asking them about the application they have open on their computer. The co-workers also love getting to be a part of the design process, and get a peek at upcoming product ideas.

Recently I tried a new trick to make hallway testing even sweeter – candy! I bought two bags of candy, one milk chocolate and one dark chocolate, and began each test like this:

Me: Hi, I’m William, Product Manager for Team X, and if you have 5 minutes I’d love to get your feedback on some future product designs. Can I ask you a couple questions?

Tester: Sure!

Me: Awesome! First question, do you prefer milk or dark chocolate? Why?

Tester: Milk chocolate because I hate the bitter taste…

This opening has several benefits. First, the unexpected chocolate question gets them surprised and excited, and helps transition them from whatever they had been doing to the test with an open mind. Second, it gets them talking, especially with the question of ‘why’. It warms them up to think critically and answer ‘why’ a lot. Lastly, I get to give them candy after they answer, which not only gets a smile but makes the session fun. Especially for a new PM, these hallway testers will be sure to remember the PM who came and gave them surprise candy, and gets the PM off on the right foot.

Make new friends, but keep the old

Thank YouLately I’ve had many blessings to be thankful for. I just welcomed my new son to the world and I’ve been enjoying my new job at CA Technologies (CA) tremendously. I’m now one of the Product Owners/Sr. Product Managers for CA Agile Central!

With new changes come new learnings, and one of my favorites so far is in the CA onboarding plan. In it, there’s explicitly a step to say thanks to the folks who helped you get your new job. I think it’s a great to call out this important step in the journey of taking a new role. Although there will be many new friends and colleagues in a Product Manager’s new position, it’s vital to maintain the older relationships for future networking and growth opportunities. So, if you’re building an onboarding plan for a new Product Manager, think about making an action to have them send thanks to those who gave references, advice, and encouragement for their journey. It’s also a great time to get stable ways to contact them, like their personal email, LinkedIn connection, or Twitter handle.

Thanks to you for reading this blog too! Hopefully you’ve enjoyed reading it as much as I have writing it over the last year. I look forward to sharing more thoughts and learnings as I begin my career with CA.

Hamburger Heaven – For the youngest PMs

 

Hamburger Heaven book cover by Wong Herbert Yee
Hamburger Heaven book cover by Wong Herbert Yee

“Daddy, what do you do at work?” can finally be an easy question to answer: “I’m Pinky Pig!” If you have little ones, and want to help them know what a Product Manager does, my family has been having a lot of fun with Hamburger Heaven by Wong Herbert Yee. I got it on a fluke at the library, and was surprised to read about the hero, Pinky Pig, saving the restaurant she works at by doing market research, creating a communications plan, and ultimately helping to deliver winning products. The book is also very cute and rhymes, making it great for read-aloud time. So, if you’re looking for ways to help start training the next generation of Product Managers, give it a go the next time you’re looking for a read. You may even get inspired to do even more market research yourself.

 

Make Your Call Notes Sing

Every customer call, no matter how mundane, can be a powerful opportunity to reconnect yourself and your development team to your customer. Outside of research calls where we get to show exciting new products, there can be many customer calls for things like hearing feedback from a frustrated customer to assisting with a tough sale. The bias may be to treat these as functional meetings, with the goal to end the call with as few action items as possible and get back to work. However, even though these calls aren’t exciting research calls, they still have a lot of value. By using some tricks to make exciting notes from these calls, we can make the call more informative and virtually bring the customer back with us to share with stakeholders and our Team. For a new Product Manager learning to take engaging notes is an important skill, and hopefully these techniques make it easier. Taking enhanced notes like this leads to a great first impression as well, especially if your development team typically has little customer interaction.

First, make your notes pop with visual elements. I like to include two main ones. First, if you’re a B2B product, grab a copy of the customer’s company’s logo off Google and include it at the top of the notes. This helps you and your Team remember that you’re working with real brands, and it’s very exciting when the logo is well-known. The second image I include is the customer’s face from LinkedIn. By inserting their profile picture, you reinforce that your customers are real people. It especially makes it more engaging for your Team or stakeholders who read your notes, and is an easy and unexpected addition. It seems like magic to them when you somehow got the customer’s picture from a phone call.

For the notes, they can be simple, but focus on a couple aspects. First, record any action items, to ensure you don’t forget to do any follow-up. The second is to capture the customer emotion and feedback. I like to be profuse in my note-taking, and later go back and highlight a couple items in particular that either have actionable feedback or are particularly powerful statements. Like an executive summary, they’re the two or three things I’d want my Team to read. It may be an emotional statement about the product, or a neat idea, or a workaround they’ve come up with. I look for items that will spark creativity in the Team and inspire compassion for the customer.

Be sure to save your notes in a searchable place. Google Drive is great, and you can make a folder that’s shared with your whole Team. I also like to put the date and customer name in the file name to identify them later. Be sure to notify the Team of the new notes too, as they will rarely proactively check Google Drive.

If you’re training a Product Manager or may be in the future, these notes will be a great resource for building their customer empathy and for reference when talking about why a feature was built.

How to Feel Performance

I’ve been doing some research on performance testing, and found the excellent blog Web Performance Today. In particular, the post “You are the worst judge of your site’s performance. Here’s why.” was a great read. Product Managers are biased in judging performance, for the reasons explained in the article:

  1. We have great tools, like Mac computers and the newest iPhones, that do better with poor product performance.
  2. We’re too sympathetic to what it takes to make a fast site, and are willing to accept slow performance as we know how hard it is to make it fast.
  3. We know how to work around slow performance by refreshing sites, closing other browser tabs, blocking ads, and other tricks.

Given the unsettling bias in our own judgement, there are ways to gain empathy and awareness of slow performance. With a new Product Manager, first it is important to make them aware of their bias. As users, we’re a small segment for most of our products, being early adopters and lovers of technology. We’re not the majority that will make our products cross the chasm. We must avoid letting personal bias substitute real user experience and feedback in our judgement of performance.

To help avoid our bias, here are some tricks to get a truer feel for your site’s performance:

  1. Use a bad laptop for a day. Most Product Managers I’ve worked with use the latest Macs, which do a great job with websites and apps. Instead, leave your laptop at home one day, and get a loaner laptop from IT. You’ll likely get a PC several years old; the same type of PC your users have, that you can use to try your product.
  2. Use a VM to access older browsers. Your dev team is likely already using VMs, and they or your IT team may be able to create an older Windows instance for you to use. It should have older IE, with the default privacy/performance settings, to give you a great taste for how the site feels. VMs typically also have bare-bones specs, or you can ask your team to make it lean by not provisioning many resources. If you’re feeling daring, you could even demo off the VM.
  3. Use a slow connection. Go to a Starbucks, library, or public Wifi to avoid the speed from your work and home’s network. You may even be able to join one from your office depending on if you’re located next to stores.
  4. Don’t multitask. Use your product, and don’t let yourself get distracted or look away while it loads. On one product I owned, a joke got started to sing “Loading Loading Loading” to the tune of Rawhide’s theme song whenever the loading spinner was shown. If you make yourself think or sing an annoying song while your product loads, you’ll feel the pain.

Of course, you should also have performance tracking and monitoring on your site, (Web Performance Today can tell you a lot more), but I’ve found numbers don’t make you really feel the pain. By making yourself see what it’s like for your customers, you gain empathy and remove your bias.

Getting Enough Sleep

Sleep is extremely important, yet often not given the time it deserves. I’m often surprised when I talk to Product Managers about how little sleep they’re getting. The rule of thumb I like to use for a day is “8 hours for work, 8 hours for play, and 8 hours for sleep.” If you want to do more in any of these categories, you have to take time from one of the others. And yes, commuting to/from work is part of the 8 hours for play.

When mentoring a new Product Manager, it’s important to talk about sleep. Find out how much they’re getting, and if it’s less than 8 hours, ask if it’s due to work. Asking about sleep shows that you care about their health and well-being, and questions some of the common stereotypes that sleep must be sacrificed to be successful. If it does turn out that sleep is being lost due to too much work, it may be worth talking about how to say “no” more often to work requests and deprioritize tasks of little value.

If you’re not getting enough sleep, try getting at least 8 hours for a week and see how you feel. Be careful that you may feel great after one or two nights, and be tempted to get little sleep on the third night. Stick with the 8 hours for a week, and note how your health, energy, motivation, and creativity improve. If you think there’s no way you could try such an experiment, do an assessment of your work tasks, and stop doing the least important items. You’ll be surprised about how you’ll get creative about delegation and delay to make it happen, leading to better energy to focus on those items that are the most important on your list.

If you’d like to read about the origins of the 8/8/8 rule of thumb I use and where the 8-hour workday comes from, as well as why rest is so important, check out “The Origins of the 8 Hour Workday and Why We Should Rethink It.” It may also inspire a different experiment you want to run for approaching your days.

Reference Checks

If you are hiring a new Product Manager, you may be tempted to skip what once was a venerable part of the interview process – the reference check. The popular rationale is that candidates will “stack the deck” by only giving references for people that will put them in a positive light, and thus it’s not worth the time to make the calls. However, there are several excellent reasons to do the reference checks. I’ve taken some of these from TopGrading and some from my own experience. They all come down to setting the goal for reference checks differently. Reference checks aren’t just about validating your assessment of a candidate’s interview. Reference checks also help:

Weed out C-Players: When choosing a candidate, it’s all about hiring A-Players. The common rationale for avoiding reference checks is based on a fact: hiring takes a lot of time. To get to one A-Player, the top 10% of candidates, there are at least 9 candidates that must be screened out. This takes time with no positive outcome. By being clear that there are reference checks as part of the interview process, you can help weed out C-Players with no work. State that you will be contacting former managers, not just the references that the candidate chooses, and C-Players will likely not apply or choose to not continue the process. An A-Player, however, will not see this as a obstacle and be happy to arrange these references if they are truly excited in your position.

Begin the mentoring process: A reference check isn’t just about making the hiring decision. References are also an invaluable jump start to mentoring your (hopefully) new Product Manager. By talking to former managers about a candidates strengths and weaknesses, you can learn where they need coaching and how you can leverage their strengths. You can even do these reference checks after the offer has been accepted. This can help you set the tone with the reference more clearly as one manager talking to another about how to best ensure their former A-Player is a star at your company.

Show the candidate you care: A-Players enjoy a challenge, and will rise to exceed your expectations. By doing reference checks, you are showing the candidate that you value getting the best talent, and spend the effort to ensure only top players work for you. They will thus have better impressions of their co-workers knowing that they all went through the same challenge and hiring rigor.Reference checks aren’t just the last gate in your interview process. They can set the tone for all the interviews and be the bridge between a great interview process and a great onboarding process.

Collaboration Overload

The Harvard Business Review recently published a very interesting article on collaboration overload – https://hbr.org/2016/01/collaborative-overload The article states that 25-30% of value-added collaboration comes from only 3-5% of employees. These top-collaborators often experience burn-out as they receive more and more requests for their time in collaboration.

Product Managers can easily find themselves as these hubs of collaboration. It’s natural given the role of Product Management as we must be experts not only in our product functionality but also in how our products are used by customers. For a new Product Manager, it’s powerful to acknowledge that collaboration is not always a good thing. Often collaboration and helping others is presented as a virtue, and it’s very hard to say ‘no’ to requests for help. However, a Product Manager needs to understand that burnout from collaboration is real, and that collaboration can be distributed throughout an organization instead of only focused on Product Managers. Inefficient collaboration can be a major time cost for a new Product Manager, resulting in less time spent on critical activities.

I recommend you read the article and see if the issue of collaboration overload is familiar to you. If so, the article provides several tips and strategies to keep effective collaboration without overloading key players, like Product Managers.

 

Resolve to Work Less

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As 2015 comes to a close, I’ve got New Year’s resolutions on the mind. There are many articles the days talking about setting Product Management resolutions, like keeping a neater inbox or setting goals. Personally I found this article from Slate the most inspiring – Leave It At The Office.

The article challenges us to make a resolution to avoid the temptation of an ever-connected work environment and put boundaries on work. Give work the time it deserves, and make sure you give yourself the time you need too. The author lists a couple great reasons, such as the power of having more time for hobbies and better health. There are many others too, such as setting a good example for co-workers who are also tempted to work late.

For me, it’s especially important to not work outside normal hours because it’s too easy to say yes to unimportant requests otherwise. If someone asks for a favor or a meeting, it often can mean that it pushes important items into after-hours work if I say yes. If I let this happen, I easily get into a habit of working later and later to keep up with all the little favors and requests that come in over a day. I like to use the phrase “death by a thousand paper cuts” when this happens. Instead, if I keep the 8 hours a day at work precious, it makes prioritization of time all the more pressing leading to nos to requests that really aren’t important. This limit on time cascades down to me focusing only a small number of items a day or week, and doing them really well.

For yourself or a new product manager, I encourage you to make the resolution to work less in 2016. Either as a skilled PM or a new one, it is very easy to get into a habit of working late and not having a boundary on your precious time to recharge and grow personally. Use the New Year as a time to reset your work/life balance to start the year off at your best both at work and at home.