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JUSTANOTHERPM

853 members • Free

42 contributions to JUSTANOTHERPM
The "Almost Right" Problem in Product Management
Ever made a decision that felt right at the time but later turned out to be… just almost right? 🤔 That’s the tricky part of product management—spotting the difference between a great decision and one that’s close, but not quite there. Take Twitter's (Now X) Fleet (source) as an example : - Stories worked on Instagram and Snapchat, so why not here? Logical, right? But it didn’t quite fit how people used the product! So, almost right -launched -fizzled out .... gone! - Think of a UX tweak, that makes sense on paper but confuses users just a little too much. A metric that looks great but doesn’t really drive outcomes. A feature that solves half the problem but introduces two new ones. “Almost right” can be more dangerous than outright wrong—it sneaks in, sticks around, and creates long-term friction. Why do you think Fleets didn’t work for Twitter/X? Was it the audience, the format, or something else?
1 like • Apr 13
@Anantha Padmanabhan S s yes! Spot on :) what works for others, it may not work for X.
Meet Your Community Manager!
Hey there, And a warm welcome to another step in making this community even better. JAPM has always been about learning, growing, and helping each other succeed. And to make that experience smoother, more engaging, and fun, I’m excited to introduce @Sannidhi Pushpey , who’s joining us as our new Community Manager. Sannidhi will be here to keep the conversations going, spark discussions, bring new challenges, and ensure that you get the most out of this community. From insightful product discussions to fun activities, there’s a lot to look forward to. So, take a moment and drop a quick welcome message below. Let’s make Sannidhi feel at home in this amazing community! Excited for what’s ahead. 🚀
Meet Your Community Manager!
2 likes • Mar 28
Welcome @Sannidhi Pushpey
🚀 The PM Skill No One Talks About: Storytelling
Data, roadmaps, and prioritisation frameworks are all great—but can you tell a compelling story about your product? As PMs, we don’t just ship features—we sell a vision to leadership, inspire teams to build, and convince users to adopt. The best product decisions don’t just make sense logically—they feel right because the story behind them resonates. Think about it: - The best PRDs aren’t just specs; they paint a clear picture of the problem and opportunity. - The most impactful dashboards aren’t just charts; they tell a story about user behavior. - The strongest pitches don’t just list features; they connect with pain points and aspirations. Share your story, that helped you drive a decision, get buy-in, or influence a team? Let us know in the comments.
🚀 The PM Skill No One Talks About: Storytelling
0 likes • Feb 26
@Parag P Sure Parag. I will share in detail. But to keep things simple here let's take the PRD example, I personally use a Given-When-Then structure for storytelling in PRD. It helps with two key things: 1. Highlighting the current user pain point and how are they solving their problems without a product/solution 2. Proposing/improving a new system to help user solve that problem One example I can think off is YouTube double tap feature to move ahead/backward in the video. Current User Story (Pain Point - Before the Feature) - Given: The user is watching a long YouTube videos - When: the user had to use the tiny progress bar, often missing their intended point. - Then: Users would often give up on long videos because rewinding and forwarding were too painful, leading to frustration. Add examples and different use cases, like users do this in tutorial videos 70% of times, movies 20% etc. And impact, that users are abandoning videos in between. Proposed Solution acceptance criteria -- - Given: The user is watching a video on their mobile device on YouTube app or web - When: The user double-taps on the right side of the screen - Then: the video jumps 10 seconds forward, and a left-side tap moves it back. Add the impact and outcome that by doing so we expect to video completion rate to increase. Rest you can modify accordingly based on whom are you telling the story to, engineering marketing, other stakeholders based on org type, people and requirements. Will try to structure this better this sometime. Let me know if you have any questions.
Prune. Refine. Focus. – The TVA Way of Product Management
If you’ve watched Loki, you’re familiar with the Time Variance Authority (TVA)—the mysterious organization responsible for maintaining the "Sacred Timeline" by pruning variants that could create chaos. At first, it seems harsh. Why delete an entire timeline just because it doesn’t fit? But dig deeper, and you’ll see a logic every Product Manager can relate to. We love launching new features, adding more options, and giving users everything they could possibly need. But here’s the catch—more isn’t always better. Sometimes, the best way to improve a product is to prune what isn’t working, refine what’s valuable, and focus on what truly matters. The TVA’s Rules for Product Management: 🪓 Prune: Not every feature deserves to stay. If something adds complexity without delivering value, it needs to go. We often hold onto features due to sunk cost bias, but if it’s not contributing to the bigger picture, it’s just noise. 🔄 Refine: Some things don’t need to be removed but need a reset. Like how TVA lets certain variants exist under control, a feature might need tweaking instead of removal. Are users struggling to adopt it? Does the UI need improvement? If it’s worth keeping, make it better. 🎯 Focus: TVA ensures the Sacred Timeline isn’t cluttered with unnecessary branches. Likewise, great products aren’t about doing everything—they’re about doing the right things. Cutting distractions allows the best features to shine. The Hardest Part? Letting Go. Killing a feature isn’t easy. Users may still be attached to it. Internal teams might resist. But just like the TVA doesn’t hesitate to prune when necessary, a PM’s job isn’t just to build—it’s to shape, refine, and sometimes remove. So, what’s one feature you’ve seen get pruned, refined, or refocused for the right reasons?
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Welcome Aboard - Start Here - Introduce Yourself
Hey there, And a warm welcome to our vibrant community. This is where you start the journey towards making your dreams a reality. This community is not just about product management. Instead, it is about sharing your aspirations, your ambitions, your goals. And then learning the things that will help you achieve the same goals. And the best way to give back to those who helped you along the way is to pass it forward. Help others who are in similar situations as you were by guiding them and sharing the lessons that you learned in your journey So without further ado, let's do this. Let's do it together. Let's meet our professional goals and help others meet theirs. A short intro to this community: You will find three major sections: Community: where you can post and read all the posts on all topics (or choose to filter the ones that are of most interest) Classroom: this is where you will find all the courses and challenges. You will automatically have access to all the FREE resources and the paid courses that you've already bought. Events: this is where you can find a calendar of all the upcoming (and past events) you can RSVP, get access to sign up links and recordings. With that said, enough about the community, let's know you a little bit more. Tell us: - Where you’re from - What you do - What you’re looking to learn or achieve here - A fun fact about yourself Excited to grow and learn with you!
0 likes • Jan 28
@Sid Arora well noted! Welcome @Bharath Kumar , let us plan to catch up in Bengaluru soon
0 likes • Jan 28
@Sean O Sullivan welcome 🚀 excited to know your learnings and experiences so far. Feel free to write or ask about anything as a new post
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Priyanshu Priyanshu
4
59points to level up
@priyanshu-priyanshu-5284
I am Priyanshu, working as a Product Manager for a health-tech organisation. Here to learn, contribute and collaborate as much as I can :) Let's go 🚀

Active 57d ago
Joined Jun 1, 2024
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