Product Manager Interview: Improve Air Travel (with Sr. Google PM)

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  • čas přidán 15. 07. 2024
  • Don't leave your product management career to chance. Sign up for Exponent's PM interview course today: bit.ly/3PRiqAc
    Watch our mock product manager interview with senior Google PM, Ashish Ashok Shah. Ashish breaks down those impacted by the air travel experience into flyers and airline staff. From there, he identifies the biggest pain points felt by each before identifying a solution and how to spend budget.
    Chapters -
    00:00 - Introduction
    00:48 - Question
    01:15 - Clarifying questions
    04:30 - Answer
    05:51 - User segments
    10:07 - Pain points
    20:09 - Possible solutions
    23:47 - Go to market
    28:43 - Success metric
    29:50 - Follow-up questions
    33:01 - Interview analysis
    38:14 - Tips
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Komentáře • 30

  • @tryexponent
    @tryexponent  Před 5 měsíci

    Don't leave your product management career to chance. Sign up for Exponent's PM interview course today: bit.ly/3PRiqAc

  • @himmanshu85
    @himmanshu85 Před rokem +4

    Perception changes with Experience and he is right about changing or enhancing the experience. After hearing the question my instant thought was regarding Airport checkin and luggage experience. He kind of broke it down nicely. Segmentation is done clearly and solutions were like natural answers once you have the problem defined.

  • @jai.mansukhani
    @jai.mansukhani Před rokem +18

    It is difficult to follow.
    More importantly, there were no clarifying questions to understand what is the current perception and why we want to improve it. And what is the end goal for perception to be?

    • @asutosh123
      @asutosh123 Před rokem

      Totally agree. What is the perception now and what caused it and what is the goal of improving perception is totally missing.

  • @chhanditachowdhury5565
    @chhanditachowdhury5565 Před rokem +12

    I would have selected matching co-passengers.I know a lot of passengers hate seats next to kids and like specific kind of co- passengers.So an algorithm to map your seats accordingly probably could have been a solution.

    • @tanmay1306
      @tanmay1306 Před rokem +2

      Interesting but impractical. I wonder why anyone would want to reveal themselves and their characteristics to co-passengers during the booking stage (or at any stage for that matter); especially after knowing that someone (or an algorithm) is going to decide whether to sit next to that person or not basis of who they are.

  • @canakona
    @canakona Před rokem +1

    Should have explored more on solving for the safety and perceptions-
    a. Demo the security checks like baggage check, manual scanning etc
    b. Educational snippet on why turbulence occurs, how to best deal with it.
    c. Walk the users through how crew is trained in dealing with adverse conditions
    Other agencies involved should be FAA and other regulators - completely ignored them

  • @shambhavishinde8914
    @shambhavishinde8914 Před rokem +3

    should have asked what metric are we improving and by how much

  • @sashamuki12
    @sashamuki12 Před rokem +1

    Travelers are unlikely to bring check-in luggage on shorter flights (San Jose to LA, as the speaker suggested), and we have tools like digital check-in and TSA-pre (or CLEAR), which have already solved the two main painpoints he is discussing.
    I would argue the stress levels shoot up long before traveler gets to the check-in counter. One issue is the traffic mess at or near the airport, departures and arrivals are both in the same building, all roads lead to the same place up until it splits into a fork.
    Why even have those designators when it is all in the same building. And it does not make any sense especially when Ride Share is in the garage somewhere outside of the terminal. I am guessing Ride Sharing + Taxi + Airport shuttles = 80%+ of all traffic. With $10m and 1 year, cannot build a new road. But, it buys 40 developers to build a set of features in google maps and provide an API that Ride Share, taxis, shuttle drivers and the rest of the drivers using google maps can navigate much easier and smoother in and around the airport.
    After that, develop the next set of features to help manage traffic in other areas like in waiting/cell lots. At every airport, the cell lots are stuffed, hard to get to, hard to get out of, and as a result people park on the sides of the road, creating traffic jams, etc. Airport does not allow it, but cannot police it either. Its a mess.

  • @gopaltayal8082
    @gopaltayal8082 Před rokem +5

    1 major concern in the solution provided is security and border control, the governments are one of the biggest stakeholder in a solution like this. A lot of the current processes are done so that the travel is secure and consolidated in a single location. The key takeaway here is the user segmenting and narrowing down process. So the focus is correct but the solution is not thought of in depth, considering security has to be the biggest factor to take into picture during air travel, in my opinion.

    • @tryexponent
      @tryexponent  Před rokem +7

      Good point! Interviews like this though aren't actually how things would work in the "real world." Your interviewer is curious about HOW you think through a problem, not necessarily the nuts and bolts of the solution. Security and oversight are definitely concerns in the real world but may be beyond the scope of an interview.

    • @francisugwozo1839
      @francisugwozo1839 Před rokem +1

      I believe more time is required to think through the process, pinpoint the pain points and brainstorm solutions. The industry is highly regulated like you rightly said.

  • @anamikajati7540
    @anamikajati7540 Před rokem +4

    They didn't talk about the budget allocation? So what's the point of having that in the question if we don't incorporate that in the solution?

  • @meili5826
    @meili5826 Před 5 měsíci

    How is perception different from experience? How is the 10mm budget playing a role in the strategy?

  • @abma0482
    @abma0482 Před 8 měsíci

    I am surprised he did not ask "why" you want to do it now? Any reasons why now?

  • @harmikwilkho5520
    @harmikwilkho5520 Před rokem +31

    I was a bit surprised at the quality of this interview. Lot of discussion and but no specific chain of thought..
    Problem Statement : Consortium wants to "improve perception of air travel" over the next 1 year, and have a budget of $10m
    The interview seems to focusing the air travel experience, rather than the perception..
    First few questions :
    - What is the current perception?
    - Is the consortium responding to an event that happened recently leading to perception of air travel dissipating?
    - Analyze - if the current perception is due to which part of the travel experience..
    It could be just as simple as - security checks being too stringent and biased towards some racial identities - in which case, campaigns and trainings for security about these things, and creating a +ve we are being secure for your own good - will just hit the nail on the head...

  • @halwabakery1190
    @halwabakery1190 Před rokem +1

    I thought the question was about Perception and not Experience…

  • @Just_Manny305
    @Just_Manny305 Před 11 měsíci

    I think the interviewer’s frequent questions on his segmentation hints that maybe he took the wrong approach here.
    Segmenting between long and short flights in my opinion is not that effective. At the end of the day, the user journey and pain points are pretty similar if it’s a long flight vs a short flight, only thing that changes is that the pain points are more painful on a long flight. 😅

  • @AbhishekSingh-wi5gj
    @AbhishekSingh-wi5gj Před rokem +3

    What is the name of the interviewer? @exponent

  • @SuperKillaki
    @SuperKillaki Před rokem +12

    These “I’m not giving anything away” interviewer responses are not helpful. In the real world you would have a meaningful dialogue with your client and in fact it’s harder to react to the information they are giving than just having free reign. From a case study perspective I think we should move on from these abstract questions to more realistic client dialogue simulations. That will show real clarity of thinking as well as EQ.

    • @Matveyich
      @Matveyich Před rokem +2

      this is how it is done in faang-style interviews, so, it is about being prepared to deal with it rather than having a good conversation with the interviewer

    • @SuperKillaki
      @SuperKillaki Před rokem +1

      @@Matveyich yep. My comment was just an observation that we need to evolve the faang case study.

  • @FocusTube108
    @FocusTube108 Před 3 měsíci +1

    He got roasted 😂😂😂😂

  • @humansoftech5905
    @humansoftech5905 Před rokem +1

    Another travel challenge 🥲

  • @rahulchowrasia345
    @rahulchowrasia345 Před rokem +3

    Expected better quality given the years of experience the of interviewe. No practical ideas, just lot of words and far beyond reality assumption.

  • @coolwaterz
    @coolwaterz Před 6 měsíci

    sorry but how is this a product manager case study question. this seems textbook consulting. stop blurring the lines.

  • @Youtuber-yu7ki
    @Youtuber-yu7ki Před 3 měsíci

    Didnt ask why do this? Why now? Didnt segment or consider a particular demographic? Entire US market is still too big and would pilot at a selective few travel hubs.
    The interviewee spoke a lot about his own perceptions rather than talking about collecting data to learn or disapprove his own theory.

  • @reshuvarshney3708
    @reshuvarshney3708 Před rokem +2

    very verbose, the interviewer too was largely adding any value till the 13th min when decided to drop off watching this, thanks

  • @zsheikh1234
    @zsheikh1234 Před rokem +1

    All the commenters have Indian names. Has product management been taken over by Indians? Just asking - I am indian myself

  • @VinayVerma5
    @VinayVerma5 Před rokem +3

    How awful how about you tell about other stakeholders are part of this😆?