Marty Cagan - The Nature of Product

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  • čas přidán 14. 06. 2024
  • During this keynote talk I'll be calling out some of the most important and deeply rooted misconceptions about how great products are created.
    We'll be discussing the difference between an idea and a product; the difference between implementing features and solving problems for our customers in ways that work for our business; the difference between product owners and true product managers; the difference between product teams and feature teams; the difference between scaling with process and scaling with leadership; and more generally, the differences between how the best product companies in the world work, and how the rest work. Finally, we'll be talking about what's involved in truly changing how you work from the rest to the best.
    I know first-hand that France has some of the best technical talent in the world. My hope is to help more companies in France to unleash that talent.
    #product #productmanagement #excellence
    Marty Cagan / Founder of Sillicon Valley Product Group
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Komentáře • 17

  • @claireowen9809
    @claireowen9809 Před rokem

    Excellent keynote. Thank you for sharing.

  • @marvinpesch2313
    @marvinpesch2313 Před rokem

    Thank you for sharing! Very inspiring!

  • @ramyaram
    @ramyaram Před měsícem

    Amazing!!. Thank you so much!!.

  • @kannankalidasan
    @kannankalidasan Před rokem +1

    Great talk ❤ and many learnings

  • @siddeshdhananjaya7180

    Too good, Thank you for sharing

  • @visweshkris
    @visweshkris Před rokem +2

    This is Gold. Thank you.

  • @alexanderharenstam8633
    @alexanderharenstam8633 Před rokem +14

    The ten misconceptions outlined by Marty:
    1. you need to solve a problem nobody has solved before
    2. you need to spend as much time as possible understanding "the problem space"
    3. you need to be an expert in the domain
    4. you need to listen to your customers
    5. you need to commit to your solution, and iterate until success
    6. you need product owners
    7. you need to come up with innovative product ideas
    8. you need your engineers to focus on coding
    9. you need to focus on creating a product your customers love
    10. you need process people to grow your company

  • @fredg4449
    @fredg4449 Před rokem

    Excellent .....as allways !

  • @tombennett6939
    @tombennett6939 Před rokem +3

    I refer to that group of people that want to "productize" a process as the "methodology industrial complex". They can take something very useful and morph it into something that takes it completely away from its original intention and purpose. Every company and product team is different. Every set of customers is different. You have to be more in service to your team and customers and the problems you are solving than a slave to the process...

  • @AlanSpina
    @AlanSpina Před rokem

    Marty you are the best! What happened with your voice???

  • @jenslindgard-paley1178

    At what time did he hold this speach? (Year)

  • @TheAramarmenia
    @TheAramarmenia Před 6 měsíci

    Product Owner part is pure manipulation. The fact is:
    1. You can have a PO and an SM in your team and still deliver continuously
    2. You can have a group of talented engineers that continuously deliver but the end result is not relevant to the market
    3. Managing delivery is nowhere near to 10% for any role, it is more
    4. Many big and successful companies in Valley have very well defined processes
    5. The companies above have POs and PMs in their structure working very effectively
    6. PO role was introduced with/by Agile and the role includes also Product Management responsibilities. It works the best for small teams, that's why PMs come into the play with the scale
    7. PO is just a name, it is all about responsibilities. You can call it PM, or other names, however there are duties that should be covered by someone. In one of my previous companies (30K Valley company) PMs were acting more as Marketing Managers and POs were responsible for for customer relationship and defining features, as well as driving the delivery.
    At lastly, there is no universal recipe for success, you need to inspect and adapt.

  • @mleanca
    @mleanca Před 2 měsíci

    Bookmark 31:57