| name | product-lead |
| description | Product management skills: strategy, prioritization, stakeholder management, problem framing, outcome definition. Use when: defining product scope, setting priorities, coordinating teams. |
Product Lead Skills
Core Competencies
1. Problem Framing & Outcome Definition
Best Practices:
- Start with the problem, not the solution
- Define clear, measurable outcomes (not outputs)
- Use the "Jobs to be Done" framework to understand user needs
- Frame problems from the user's perspective, not the business's
Frameworks:
Anti-patterns to avoid:
- Defining solutions before understanding problems
- Focusing on features instead of outcomes
- Vanity metrics (metrics that look good but don't drive value)
2. Prioritization
Frameworks:
-
RICE Scoring:
- Reach: how many users affected
- Impact: how much impact (0.25 to 3.0)
- Confidence: how confident are we (0% to 100%)
- Effort: person-months
- Score = (Reach × Impact × Confidence) / Effort
-
ICE Scoring:
- Impact: how much impact
- Confidence: how confident
- Ease: how easy to implement
- Score = (Impact + Confidence + Ease) / 3
-
Value vs Effort Matrix:
- Quick wins: high value, low effort
- Major projects: high value, high effort
- Fill-ins: low value, low effort
- Time sinks: low value, high effort (avoid)
Best Practices:
- Always include rationale for prioritization
- Consider dependencies and risks
- Revisit priorities regularly (weekly/monthly)
- Balance short-term wins with long-term strategy
3. Stakeholder Management
Best Practices:
- Identify all stakeholders early
- Understand their goals and concerns
- Communicate clearly and regularly
- Build trust through transparency
- Manage expectations (under-promise, over-deliver)
Stakeholder Map:
- High power, high interest: Manage closely (key stakeholders)
- High power, low interest: Keep satisfied (executives)
- Low power, high interest: Keep informed (users, support)
- Low power, low interest: Monitor (minimal effort)
Communication:
- Use the right format for the audience
- Provide context, not just updates
- Make decisions visible and explain rationale
- Create feedback loops
4. Product Strategy & Vision
Best Practices:
- Align product strategy with business goals
- Create a clear product vision (where we're going)
- Define product principles (how we make decisions)
- Balance user needs with business needs
Vision Statement Template:
- For [target users]
- Who [have this problem]
- [Product name] is a [category]
- That [key benefit]
- Unlike [competitors]
- Our product [unique differentiator]
5. Decision Making
Best Practices:
- Make decisions with available information (don't wait for perfect data)
- Document decisions and rationale (ADRs)
- Revisit decisions when context changes
- Accept that some decisions will be wrong (learn and adjust)
Decision Framework:
- Define the decision clearly
- Gather relevant information
- Identify options
- Evaluate options (pros/cons, risks)
- Make decision
- Document decision (ADR)
- Communicate decision
- Monitor and adjust
Output Quality Checklist
When producing artifacts, ensure:
- ✅ Problem clearly defined (not solution)
- ✅ Outcome metrics specified (North Star + supporting)
- ✅ Prioritization rationale provided
- ✅ Stakeholders identified and mapped
- ✅ Dependencies and risks noted
- ✅ Assumptions explicitly stated
- ✅ Scope boundaries clear (IN/OUT)
Common Pitfalls
- Solution-first thinking: Starting with features instead of problems
- Feature factory: Shipping features without measuring outcomes
- Analysis paralysis: Waiting for perfect data before deciding
- Stakeholder misalignment: Not getting buy-in early
- Scope creep: Not saying "no" to good ideas that don't fit