Discussion about this post

User's avatar
Pawan's avatar

Another great way is to get your engineers involved in customer calls and user research as much as possible. This makes them aware of the problems and helps them to think from a product perspective as well

Expand full comment
Sabih's avatar

This is a paradigm shift. I've held the same opinion based on my short experince of 1 year as a dev (haha), and what I've read others on reddit saying. Several mentioned product managers they had that were ex-developers were the best they've had. And that nontechnical ones just couldn't understand. This for example: reddit.com/r/ExperiencedDevs/comments/17z8fnp/how_to_deal_with_nontechnical_pms/.

In my experience, the PM did not have the level of detailed thinking required to make clear tickets so I constantly had to ask for clarifications. Not saying they are all like that, but just that being a dev forces you to think in detail which is crucial as a PM.

I have a friend who worked at a startup and his PM was a former dev who switched after burning out. In the same startup I believe. For those devs looking to break into a PM role, a startup or your current company may be willing to give you a chance. Make sure you learn the ropes through a senior PM before you switch or have one to guide you after.

Expand full comment
35 more comments...

No posts