Lenny's Newsletter

Lenny's Newsletter

Share this post

Lenny's Newsletter
Lenny's Newsletter
What is product management
Copy link
Facebook
Email
Notes
More

What is product management

My take on the PM role

Lenny Rachitsky's avatar
Lenny Rachitsky
Nov 16, 2021
∙ Paid
74

Share this post

Lenny's Newsletter
Lenny's Newsletter
What is product management
Copy link
Facebook
Email
Notes
More
6
Share

👋 Hey, Lenny here! Welcome to a 🔒 subscriber-only edition 🔒 of my weekly newsletter. Each week I tackle reader questions about product, growth, working with humans, and anything else that’s stressing you out about work. Send me your questions and in return I’ll humbly offer actionable real-talk advice.


Q: What exactly is the job of a product manager?

I generally avoid meta questions like this, since they’re rarely actionable or useful. But because this is such a common PM interview question and because I’ve gotten this question from readers enough times and never found a definition that I like elsewhere, I’m going to tackle it this week.

The job of a product manager

I like this baseline definition:

Your job as a PM is to deliver business impact by marshaling the resources of your team to identify and solve the most impactful customer problems.

There are three parts to this, each essential:

1. Deliver business impact

Fundamentally, you are responsible for delivering business impact. If your team drives positive impact—hitting important goals, reducing costs, shipping an important project, etc.—you’re doing your job.

2. Marshaling the resources of your team

Your job isn’t to do the building yourself but instead to increase the leverage of your cross-functional teammates—designers, engineers, data scientists, researchers—to deliver impact. To paraphrase Andy Grove, a product manager’s output = the output of their team.

3. Identify and solve the most impactful customer problems

Business impact comes from solving customer problems. Thus, it’s your job to lead your team to correctly identify, prioritize, and solve the most impactful customer problems.

PMs are the ultimate business lever.

Give me a lever long enough and a fulcrum on which to place it, and I shall move the world.

—Archimedes

The three core jobs of a product manager

Another way to define the role of a PM is to break out the day-to-day jobs of a product manager:

  1. Shape the product: Harness insights from customers, stakeholders, and data to prioritize and build a product that will have the most impact on the business.

  2. Ship the product: Ship high-quality product on time and free of surprises.

  3. Synchronize the people: Align all stakeholders around one vision, strategy, goal, roadmap, and timeline to avoid wasted time and effort.

All of that is a means to delivering impact.

The attributes of successful product managers

A different approach to understanding the PM job is to look at how PMs are evaluated. Earlier this year, I collected and analyzed dozens of career ladders from companies big and small, and out of this emerged 10 common attributes of successful product managers:

This post is for paid subscribers

Already a paid subscriber? Sign in
© 2025 Substack Inc
Privacy ∙ Terms ∙ Collection notice
Start writingGet the app
Substack is the home for great culture

Share

Copy link
Facebook
Email
Notes
More