For many of our clients, Fall means planning and budgeting activities get serious. For anyone with product responsibility, it is a time to challenge market assumptions and reconsider the future product roadmap. It is also a time to evaluate the teams and individuals associated with each product for fit with personalities, interests, capabilities and core skills. This latter aspect of the annual planning process is especially important. Companies we consider to be leading the pack evaluate and adjust their product teams each year, even if it is not a formal part of the planning process. This year, an additional dimension to that evaluation has emerged: the ability to advance a product in the face of an unexpected crisis AND a major shift in the nature of work.
One of our tenets for optimal product performance is that the team intertwined with the product must evolve in tandem with the product as it moves through its lifecycle. A new, innovative product needs someone who is able to evangelize and succeed with the missionary sale while a mature, cash-generating product needs someone who can tweak the fine details with incremental improvements to extract maximum value. But, new this year, we also need individuals who can flourish in their product roles in a largely, if not entirely, remote environment. This is not a given. Regardless of whether individuals worked from home in the past, moving the needle to a place where meetings are all done in 2 dimensions, on a screen (think Zoom, Teams etc.), can present a major challenge.
The Agile Manifesto emphasizes “individuals and interactions over processes and tools along with face to face conversations with motivated individuals” associated with any given project. On the surface, it seems easy enough to transition to a virtual dialogue since we are still seeing faces in our discussions. But it has proven difficult to do the generative work in a virtual environment where body language is not visible, whiteboards are strictly virtual and conversations are not fluid and impromptu, instead requiring scheduled Zoom meetings. Even as we are grateful for the technology infrastructure that keeps us connected and visible to each other, it is important to acknowledge that driving a product to meet its goals means creating team momentum and aligning activities with objectives, virtually. Therefore, it is incumbent on leaders and managers to recognize who is good at remote work, understand why they are good at it and leverage what is learned to evolve the way product work is done and product teams are configured. So this year, when you take a hard look at your product portfolio and annual plans, assess the teams associated with each product against the backdrop of a remote environment and tune accordingly.
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