Remove Leadership Remove Reporting Tools Remove Technical Advisors Remove UX
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Product Analyst: Responsibilities, Skills, and Requirements

Userpilot

This change has been primarily driven by increased access to analytics tools like Userpilot that help businesses achieve product growth. TL;DR A product analyst is a professional who uses data analysis and insights to evaluate and improve the performance of a product or service. What is a product analyst? What do product analysts do?

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Five Under-Appreciated Aspects of Product Leadership

The Product Coalition

Often we talk more about the technical skills, like, portfolio management, being more strategic, etc but being good at those things mean nothing if you can’t build a culture conducive to good product management practices. As a result, I’ve come to value 5 different aspects of product leadership. and ultimately one day succeed you.

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I’ve abandoned “MVP”

Mironov Consulting

After years of struggle, I’m advising all of my clients and product leader coachees to stop using the term “MVP”. Almost without fail, I find that the “maker” side of software companies (developers, designers, product folks, DevOps, tech writers…) and the “go-to-market” side of software companies (sales, marketing, support, customer success.)

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The Making of Product Managers: Negar’s Story

The Product Coalition

Then she decided to acquire technical skills in web development to get closer to the product development process. She had many ideas about how to improve marketing tactics but did not have the technical skills to either make the necessary changes on the web or create better solutions using technology.

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What Skills Does a Product Manager Need?

BrainStation Product Management

In BrainStation’s survey, Product Managers ranked communication (71 percent), leadership (65 percent), and empathy (58 percent) as the most important skills for a Product Manager, ahead of research and project management, and far ahead of design (selected by only 20 percent of respondents). Technical Skills for Product Management.

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What Skills Does a Product Manager Need?

BrainStation Product Management

Speak to a Learning Advisor. In BrainStation’s survey, Product Managers ranked communication (71 percent), leadership (65 percent), and empathy (58 percent) as the most important skills for a Product Manager, ahead of research and project management, and far ahead of design (selected by only 20 percent of respondents).

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Take Charge Product Management

Product Bookshelf

The book starts with Sean agreeing to be the first product manager at Alpha Technology Ventures. Geracie traces the product manager’s role from developing the product vision, through business planning, to leading cross-functional collaboration to build the product, and finally establishing and reporting on metrics.