Discover the importance of monetization when introducing new features, when you should consider expanding your monetization strategy, and the difference between vertical and horizontal expansion.
Product managers can extract valuable lessons from Bing’s shift in product strategy and the (significantly, but decreasingly so) one-sided battle for search supremacy.
Time to value (TTV) measures how quickly your customers expect to benefit from the value your product provides.
Cynefin is a decision support framework to help understand the nature of your problem domain and make guided decisions.
The iterative process is a set of actions consisting of analysis, planning, design, implementation, testing, and review.
All in all, an action plan (especially when finely tuned and strategic) complements your product strategy by providing an actionable roadmap to success.
Without a proper product information management strategy, you’ll end up with several disparate channels of manual control, increasing dependencies and potential for human error.
Product ops helps to scale the product team, improves feature adoption, and accelerates feedback loops between product, engineering, and customer success teams.
Site reliability engineering (SRE) is a software management approach that seeks to bridge the gap between development and operations teams.
Nowadays, AI is incredibly efficient — so much so that members of product management teams might believe they can wholly depend on it for their work.
Explore some user acquisition strategies to help your product make a lasting impact in the hearts and minds of your target audience, from organic growth to paid advertising, viral campaigns to influencer partnerships, and more.
A user flow diagram is a visual representation of a user’s journey through your product that shows the sequence of actions that a user takes.