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Taking Over an Existing Product: Product Management Lessons Learned

The Product Coalition

Another impetus is when you permanently inherit some of their products or features due to an organizational or strategic change in hierarchy. The weight of life — developers, customers, markets, organizational politics— whatever, has taken the edge off of their initial spark. But you can learn a lot from re-igniting it.

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Make New Product Features Stick

The Product Guy

Users of your product have opted into receiving communications about it if your Terms of Use permit it. Reconsidering your onboarding may also give you ideas for refactoring the UI and the broader UX of your product, so that it becomes easier to learn and use. A healthier organizational mindset for new and existing features.

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Why Product Request SLAs Fail

Mironov Consulting

Instead, I think it’s the combination of three broad organizational challenges: [1] most requestors see the world one account/user at a time and urgently want to solve that one customer’s issue.    It can’t be that 90% of product managers are incompetent or lazy or quietly quitting.

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The ultimate marketing technology stack for 2019

Intercom, Inc.

For example, say someone clicked an ad to learn about landing pages. Here’s a tried and tested formula: Pick a topic/keyword. Which keywords/topics should you be trying to rank for? How many links do you need to build to rank for your chosen keywords? Alternatives: Ghost, Medium, Joomla. Ahrefs – SEO. Promote it.

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A Non-Technical Intro to Natural Language Processing (NLP) and its Applications

Product Management Lessons from the Trenches

allowing people to communicate with one another, across languages. for example, “organize”, “organizes”, and “organizing” will all be reduced to the same root stem “organiz”. This is especially valuable in search use cases where semantic analysis can provide the user with much better results vs. keyword searches alone.