Leveraging the Product Mindset for Leadership by Lisa Schneider

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Leveraging the Product Mindset for Successful Leadership

Lisa Schneider, a product expert with two decades of experience, explores how adopting a product mindset can enhance strategic leadership. Schneider describes this approach as the key to her leadership strategy and success. Here's how you could start fostering one too!

The Rise of Product and the CPO Role

In the last few years, there has been a five-fold increase in worldwide listings for Chief Product Officers (CPO) on LinkedIn. The explanation? Companies are realizing the value of having a senior executive who brings the product approach to leadership. Originally, the CPO role was limited to tech companies and primarily collaborated with the VP of Engineering or the CTO. However, in recent years, the role has expanded, placing the CPO as part of the strategy team along with other executives and the CEO.

The Key Skills of the Product Mindset

Schneider identifies several key skills that form the foundation of a product mindset:

  • Asking "why" to problem-solve and understand situations.
  • Being problem-focused rather than solution-focused.
  • Being outcome-focused, considering what success looks like and how it will be measured.
  • User-centricity, putting the user first and understanding their needs.
  • Adopting a test and learn mindset, which includes challenging assumptions and not being afraid to experiment.
  • Working cross-functionally with other team departments like marketing, sales, and customer service.
  • Practicing transparency, especially as a senior leader, to build trust with your team and stakeholders.
  • Having empathy, which is closely tied to the user-focus approach but also extends to understanding the experiences and challenges of others in your team.

Implementing the Product Mindset: From the C-Suite Down

Considering your board, CEO, and fellow C-suite members as your users can shift your approach to meetings and conversations. This perspective encourages providing excellent user experiences to your fellow executives, turning the product mindset into an effective leadership strategy.

Schneider also suggests using the product planning hierarchy to align stakeholders around impact strategy. Here, the mission, vision, objectives, strategy, product roadmap, and specific product plans and features are lined up in a deliberate order, avoiding pitfalls like jumping to feature ideas before strategic alignment.

Bridging the Product-Sales Gap

Schneider describes the interaction between product and sales as like a game of volleyball where one team lobs requests or demands over to the other and then waits for the request or demand to be fulfilled. Adopting product thinking can reframe this dynamic, treating clients as users and shifting the conversation towards problem-solving.

Key Takeaways

  • Approach your fellow C-suite members, the CEO, and the board as your "users".
  • Use the product planning hierarchy to align stakeholders around impact strategy instead of individual feature requests.
  • Reframe the dialogue with clients and sales teams from feature requests to problem-solving discussions.

By adopting a product mindset, leaders can drive more strategic, outcome-focused discussions and enhance collaboration across their organizations.


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