all right hi everyone it's uh thanks for joining us today i'm captain yala i'm excited to have you join us for our work at a startup panel on getting into product we have three pms with us today and will be joined also by yc alumni helena merk and we'll have some time at the end of the panel for questions um but if you have questions throughout i'll be monitoring the chat so feel free to leave them in the chat as well after the panel around 5 pm each panelist will be in separate session rooms where you can meet them you know and ask them more questions um but let's just jump straight into it i'd love to have the speakers join me and we can have them all introduce themselves that sounds good thanks kat so hey everyone i'm sylvia i'm currently a pm at rex leading our identity team which owns everything onboarding both from a user experience standpoint as well as all of the decision making that happens behind the scenes so as you can imagine it's probably a pretty complex space um i've been at brex about eight months now so relatively recent um prior to this i was at facebook for quite a stand so most recently spent a year and a half out in facebook london where i was leading growth on the audience network team and then before that was more on the consumer side of things working on growth across instagram across messenger engagement growth and to some extent across news feed as well so more on the consumer side of things before facebook i actually spent a few years at workday as a product manager more on the technical side so working on platforms and frameworks in the enterprise space and then before that i was at school so i started out more from an engineering background studied engineering in university and then actually moved straight to project management right out of college all right colleen you want to go next happy to you um let me know if you can't hear me i'm not getting a ton of feedback from uh hop in but i will assume it's working uh i'm colley barkoski i am a pm at burbix which is a y combinator company um we are also doing identity verification so sylvia you and i should talk sometime um and i've also been there for about eight months so that's my current home i'm the first pm there so that's its own whole bag of tricks uh prior to burbex i was at another y combinator company called ironclad which does contract lifecycle management um and i was there for about two years in a role called legal engineering where i also got to do a lot of product work and uh was very early there as well so can talk about that ride and before that i did a i didn't study cs actually in undergrad i stayed philosophy but i did a um ruby on rails boot camp and that was kind of my my technical training uh prior to that i was a journalist in dc where i covered the supreme court wow very timely um helena you want to go next yeah i'd love to i love both your background just kind of a cool story how you got to pm i'm excited to hear more about it through this panel um so i got into more of the technical things actually from loving products a lot so i taught myself to code back in middle school mostly because i loved app design building things um and then got more and more involved in in tech and like moving down the stack um and eventually dropped out of college to work at an api company um and that lasted only a few months until i left to start my own company largely driven by you know y combinator accepting glimpse into the match uh and that we uh we just completed actually in march we were in the winter 20 batch um and our platform glimpse matches people for one-on-one speed conversations with with an advanced having system that'll pair you with people that are relevant so that's kind of how i got to here um and i think unlike both of you i am yes product um but also product and engineering and a ceo and all the things so very very excited to learn from both of you in in how to get more into product because i'm new to this um and i'm excited to be here thank you all right and i think we're having some technical difficulties with wild but we'll have her introduce herself as soon as her video pops on um but yeah let's i'd love to talk a little bit more about your experience um you know what is the product manager's role in an organization and what are your key responsibilities and at your current company and um and then we can talk a little bit about how that has changed depending on you know where you're working or um or what type of company you're focused on but but right now um sylvia can you talk a little bit about you know what is the pm's role in your organization yeah so to your point this has varied a little bit depending on the companies and teams that i've worked at but right now the way that rex defines product and what the product manager's role is is essentially there's kind of three parts to this triangle of building product so we have pms who own the why of why are we building a product why are we doing something what is the strategy in the vision and then we work very closely with design who owns the what what is the right product experience to actually then solve for the solution or solve for the problem that we're going after and engineering owns the how of how do we actually build out the solution and so that's typically how we work together as this triangle to be able to launch product and build the right solutions for any problems that we're going after um high level what this translates to is that on the pm side we essentially own defining the vision the strategy we need to be able to work with anyone within the team so design edge but also any xfn partners to figure out how we can collaborate across all of these roles and be able to define and build out the right product experiences and at the end of the day we also just own generally the success of whether or not we can actually solve these problems properly and so anything else that comes up we kind of take on and figure out if we can we can solve for this problem or blocker or if we need to work with someone else to be able to do that and uh you went from you know facebook as a pm to brex right yep and so so how has that changed between working at like a very large company like facebook to an earlier stage company like rex yeah so i would say the biggest thing is around scope and what i mean by that is typically at a larger company and i will caveat this with also i was in more junior positions earlier on in my career so typically they are a little bit more execution focused um but what i have seen is the main difference between larger companies like facebook and workday versus what i'm experiencing here at brooks is around the scope and so a lot of times um at facebook on the teams that i've worked on the strategy at a high level has already been pretty well defined there are already existing products there's kind of a playbook for lack of a better word around how we're going to execute on these strategies or what even is the best strategy so as an example facebook part of the competitive advantage there is scale and so you can kind of just use that to hammer things through even if at a smaller company you can't quite do the same thing and so a lot of this has already been predefined there's a lot of structure and so it's more about how do you execute well within that structure whereas now that we're at brecks where we are trying to solve some very complex problems we don't have a single defined way of doing things you have to figure it out uh and so you're not just thinking about okay here's an existing product and how do i optimize it or how do i kind of execute along a predetermined strategy you are part of the process to figure out what is the right strategy and it's not just necessarily the product strategy it's the company strategy the business strategy and so you have to think about not just what are the right product solutions but really what is the right solution period and then whether that involves your go to market team whether that involves uh other product teams whoever it is you figure out what that solution is even if it's not specifically a product solution cool i think this is a good time to ask khali about so you're the first pm at uh burbex right can you talk about what the role of a pm you know at verbix is um and you know how that you know how that perhaps is different from you know working with other pms in a team sure um well the biggest difference is probably just that you're in in that size of a company we were a seed stage company when i joined for now series a um everybody is wearing a lot of hats so i think the biggest difference is that you're not just kind of the opposite of what sylvia was just saying about having a really limited scope as a junior pm at a big company um like one person contains multitudes as what whitman would say you contain multitudes of functions within yourself um so as a you know i'm helping with support i'm helping with integrations um there's just a much broader swath i would say um and then those things have like great synergies in a lot of ways because you're getting a lot of direct feedback about what you as the company should be focusing on um in terms of your you don't even have to go to somebody else's desk to get input from the market you know like you have that because you're that you're there um so that i'd say that's like one big difference is just that you have um for everything's just in a in one big soup um and then in terms of like the role of product and how that might be different um i think that this is probably consistent but it's at the early stages too like you as sylvia was saying as well like the things that the way that you do things the playbook even kind of your thesis as a business isn't well defined so i think a lot of the work and this is a metaphor that i find helpful just because of my background in journalism but i think if product really is like the editor in a lot of ways of like how do we create focus um what should we cut what should we double down on and uh that's at least my working model for how i aspire to to do product i should say i think that's a that's a great analogy um helena as a founder how do you think about it oh good um so i'll let you i'll let you finish with that and then we'll uh i'll introduce yourself how do you think about practice uh um as an early stage founder yeah so what you uh cauli and sylvia were both saying towards like comparing large companies to small ones we're at the very extreme of small right now it's myself and my co-founder full time uh so product and defining you know what our company is doing and strategy is is all um on both of our minds all the time there is definitely no playbook um and it's definitely not ironed out uh so very much in that you know iterative mvp stage which is so much fun um and part of you know why i love the early stages of a startup um so much of it is just speaking with with our glimpses with our users um and getting feedback from them implementing that and figuring out how do you take quality feedback and turn that into you know a consumer social platform where feedback you get isn't as direct as say in a b2b uh company where you know these are the criteria you need no it's like you know i want the button to jiggle this way it's like is that really what you want i don't know um so it's it's definitely interesting definitely learning curve um but i guess the way we think about products because of us being so early stage is definitely very different um and it's less about like editing and fine tuning it's more just like going full forge on one thing and then trying the next thing until something sticks and then tweaking at that um and doing everything from that initial design to you know scoping it out uh and then actually implementing it as as engineers viola i'd love for you to introduce yourself um tell us a little bit about your story how you became a pm um and you know your uh role as a pm you know currently at uh at airbn airbnb correct yeah cool sorry about all the technical difficulties i started tech um so my name is vile chain i'm currently a product manager at airbnb uh focused on data products um so i started my career as a software engineer and then went to managing engineering teams but i moved into the data space um pretty early on after that um before i'll call like data was sexy um my first role in the data space was as a data engineer so i was building pipelines i then moved into being a data scientist so analyzing all the data that i was creating and then finally ended up as a product manager um which you know kind of straddles the role across all of those um areas so so yeah that's um that's what i do right now um yeah i will let you know you continue moderating sorry this is like very interrupted no no worries and and um can you talk a little bit about your role at airbnb now and how that sort of your role as a pm has sort of changed based on you know the company various companies we work at yeah definitely so i was also on facebook um you know a while ago so i was there for about six years back when um facebook was not public yet um and then i was at lyft uh probably around like three years ago um and then now i'm at airbnb so um you know it's it's really interesting working at a larger company um you take a lot for granted um you know there's a lot of process a lot of tools already set so you know as a product manager when you have an idea you have a vision um it's very easy to actually get something out to market because everything is already there the you know there's grease on the wheels to like you know pave the path there um and what i found when i moved over to lyft was that there was none of that and you know we were reinventing everything like how to test you know like and we had no like qa testers um and so you know definitely flying by the city of your pants which makes it very fun um but also you know a lot goes wrong um and so just you know learning to manage you know all the emergencies and the fires has been uh very interesting to say belief so for all of you um you know what are some of the most common misperceptions of what a pm does like what is basically what does a pm not do um i'll keep that over to you first sylvia okay so i think the number one thing that i've heard is around how like a pm is it's kind of like the ceo of their product and owns all of the decisions and yes that's kind of true but also it's not as easy as everyone makes it out to be like yes you are there to drive the vision and the strategy and the product direction but you also don't really have direct influence over anyone and so your job is more to make sure that everyone else is bought into that before you can actually get anything done kali go ahead yeah i mean i thought that was the one that came to my mind too it's just like you're you're i can't think of a i can't think of an i don't know a cat are there like common perceptions that come to your mind and maybe we can debunk them oh that's a good question uh that's that's actually a really good question and if folks in the audience if you have like general ideas of what you think a pm does we can we can try to correct them but maybe going on that question what is uh so how what is your process in terms of getting that buy-in from all the different stakeholders and the various like groups that you work across like how does that does that end up being the vast majority of your work or or talks through a little bit about that yes so i i'm happy to start and then i'm curious to hear what everyone else like what your guys's process is and i think this actually leads to another um misperception that we can call out which is that there is no single framework to building successful product or being a successful pm it's just it's a toolbox and you you learn um but specifically around driving alignment a lot of this is one starting with doing the groundwork around understanding a problem space being able to understand yourself like why this is important how it aligns with potentially the business vision and mission um and why we would invest in something to begin with and then once you have a good sense of that as a pm then it comes down to making sure that that context is clear to everyone else and this has worked differently across different teams that i've worked with so at brex for example um a lot of the times i'll start with a close collaboration with a smaller group of people but then when it comes to broader communication we have a very written culture especially in the time of coped and so it's a lot of memo writing and then kind of sharing it out um getting feedback uh setting up individual meetings and chats and conversations to make sure that any concerns are kind of closed out or if open questions come up figuring out how you can reconcile any potential problems and then just making sure that there's visibility into these decisions that you're making whether it's managing upwards or managing downwards and outwards yeah i'll actually uh jump in um i think um you know from a pmi actually does everything and it really depends on the situation and then a lot of it depends on the maturity of the product that you're working on um in different stages of where the product is right um you know i think a common misperception is you know a pm is like a project manager you know and you're there to like drive execution and gantt charts which is totally not what we do i'd be fired if i were to do that um but yeah in terms of like the influence um you're right you know nobody actually reports to you and nobody actually needs to listen to you right but um you know one of the things that we're talking about is you know if you do have an engineering background it is very very useful because a lot of times engineers do respect that you know their trade if you will and when you prove to them that you know you can talk their language they are definitely more um open to some of your ideas um and that helps you know just you know influence you know just the rest of the team and driving alignment um to one one vision yeah i like that god um i was just gonna say i think one perception that is probably true is that it's kind of the pm's job to say no to stuff too um like just people are coming to you with at least in my uh sort of more enterprise-y world customers want stuff and it doesn't always make sense for the company and i think that the pm is kind of the linchpin there of um making sure that things that do end up on the roadmap like are things that are going to make sense for the broader strategy so that's one that i would just say is a is an accurate perception i think um helena when you are you know as a founder your own pm how do you prioritize you know feature requests requests from your users and you know and to develop your roadmap it's a great question and kind of relates to what collie was saying with like you know you being the no sayer so i'm the yester and the no sir so it was this internal conflict of like i want this feature built but i know it's not focused enough uh we're in this interesting position where you know we could be building our platform for schools we could also building it for companies and employee kind of happy hours and those are very different products and they have very different end users um but we want to do both i'm going to do everything so i catch myself telling myself no all the time and for us it's easy to get excited about new features and easy to kind of jump into building things especially with backgrounds in engineering so our default is like oh this is cool let me build um but in reality it's like no let me kind of like validate and think about how this fits into a greater puzzle um so in an ideal world you know i i would be scoping things out and figuring out like a longer product of a map and working backwards um which we try to hold ourselves to uh with covet however everything changes so rapidly especially being a video platform um that while making like i don't know three month six-month roadmaps all of that kind of changes on moment's notice as well um so i i don't know if that really answered your question uh but but this idea of like being the pm and then the people who like playing all parts of the puzzle you're like internally trying to take different roles and challenge your own ideas um and really be thoughtful about you know why are these ideas that we should pursue i'm going to go to um one of the questions um from the audience that was also on my list but um the question here from athena is uh what would you say are the crucial skills to becoming a successful pm like if you could name one or two um skills that you you absolutely need to develop um what would you say i think one of the most important things is just being able to tell a story i mean at the end of the day we're all humans and we all love to hear stories and if you can tell a very compelling story and communicate your ideas in that way such that it resonates with people whether it be you know engineers you know designers data scientists or your customers that goes a very very long way um in in terms of getting buy-in and alignment um and you know the other thing is um you know what i look for a lot in interviews is i look for people who are curious which is not exactly a skill but it's more of a trait that you you definitely need to have to practice and you know natural curiosity just you know helps with the whole vision and strategy aspect of product because if you don't question things then you'll never you know get other ideas about you know what you can do so so yeah i was going to say plus 100 to medication and being able to tell the narrative there was a question also um from the audience that's related but do you also have to be a good writer yes you know it's actually kind of funny because um this is also cultural i felt like at facebook i did very little writing um it was mostly bullet points and that was fine for most of the teams at lyft i had to do a little more writing so i felt like i was back in high school like always cramming for like essays writing product specs and then at airbnb i feel like i'm an author because you know the expectation the culture here is that when you write volumes and volumes of documents um which i'm actually trying to change that a little bit because being a good writer absolutely helps yes i would say that it also does depend on the communication style that your team or company has so i've worked on teams where people are a lot more visual and so decks tend to have a lot more impact than writing an entire memo is this something that you guys knew going into where you you know where you're working now or is this sort of something you figured out on the job like did you know what the communication style was did you figure that out prior to it i in my personal experience it was something that you had to figure out like maybe you could guess a little bit so as an example instagram was a very deck heavy uh organization and more specifically they loved keynote not powerpoint but i think you could kind of guess that given some of the culture around instagram being a bit more design um focused uh but sometimes you just have to go into it and figure it out sorry vile yeah um i was going to say something that one of my mentors has said to me too is like there's no such thing as the perfect pm there's only the right pm for the right stage of the company like for the right product so what ends up making you successful will totally depend on so many other factors like even if you're not a great writer today that doesn't mean that you can't be successful as a pm if you ha if you happen to have like subject matter expertise on something or um i think that there's like don't don't put any limitations on yourself i guess is kind of what i would say there like find opportunities that will fit with your strengths the only other thing i would add is like you know another good skill is being able to learn very quickly on the job and knowing um when you've done something that most people are not receptive to and being able to change that like very quickly so very adaptive that actually leads me to um another question that just got asked in the chat but what are the um let me look at it right now um what are uh parts of the job that you know you learn through training and what are aspects that you had to learn by experience or intuition and let's say so maybe framing it in the way that i've seen facebook interviews be structured which is typically there's a product sense interview around just like how do you think about product there's an execution interview that's very much much about how do you define success and drive towards a specific metric and then there's leadership and drive which is just like who you are as a person and your character um the execution piece i think is the one that can be trained the most because it's a lot of understanding data understanding how to apply it or how to get inside out of it and using it almost as a framework for how you prioritize and so that's in my opinion the easiest one to train for um where it's more about experience is around the product sense um so there are there is some training that can be done there and then around the collaboration piece and this is where a lot of this is around like trying trying to build up experience around understanding the situations understanding the people that you're working with um this goes back to the the common misperception where there's a single framework for building autocorrectly or being a great pm there really isn't it's you have an entire set of tools you're constantly adding to that toolbox and trying to figure out what the right tools are to apply at the right time yes totally agree there um at airbnb um we also you know the interview process is also very similar um and execution and goal setting is definitely one of the places where um i would say it's the easiest to get training on um definitely you can learn that by by reading um and uh to a certain degree with experience just from you know launching products and stuff like that um but the product sense the vision and strategy that is definitely very um experience driven and that's where i actually think you know curiosity helps a lot you know you know just just wondering what you could do um with and what you find are deficient in products and you know that's how you generate ideas so so how do you uh define or measure success um of a product manager and how has that changed from being an engineer in your past roles helena do you want to talk about it first from the founder perspective interesting uh i like the question it's i think a lot of how we measure success the question was like how do you measure success from like the pm perspective of a product how do you um like how do you define or measure the success of the pm for us it comes down to like how quickly can we get new products out essentially or or advance i guess our company's goals um and sometimes you know what we build or we suggest isn't gonna isn't gonna be a hit and that's okay uh but how many experiments can we run essentially um how many things can be disproved is just as valuable as how many things can we prove um and then kind of iterating from there um and for being an early stage startup and in most companies i guess it's like the pace at which we do things ends up factoring into things very heavily more so necessarily than quality so we do try to ship things every week uh every kind of spec we have we try to scope it down to what is like a one one week mvp of this grand vision that we have um just so that we can kind of validate things or at least cross them out um and scoping something down to one week isn't easy especially when we have two full-time engineers um but it means that we do have to be very diligent around you know what is the crux of what we're trying to provide here as a value-add um and then being able to execute on that um so i think measuring success um really comes down to uh how how well can you like define the core purpose and then hone in on that so um i will add to that i think that's great that's very a very quantitative way to measure success um you know this has actually a change so i've thought about this a lot um and one of the um things that i've kind of uh concluded on is if engineers want to work for you or they perceive that you are providing some sort of value that is a good sign um i would say that you know most companies most founders are usually engineers with like really good product sense and the fact that if an engineer needs that additional product sense you know person um i think that's a that's a good sign sylvia yeah i would say adding on to that so not just at a high level around like did you solve for the problem that you were aiming to but i've actually noticed that over time the additional measure of success that i've tagged onto that is also are you able to do so while essentially maintaining a healthy team dynamic so kind of to val's point around like would your team be excited to continue working with you um and a lot of this is just it's so integral to your ability to get stuff done that you you can't just launch a product uh with no regard to how you're getting there tell anything dad um i think that yeah i think that that's all basically what i would say too i think the only other nugget that i've maybe noticed is just like making sure that your team knows what to work on is like like if they always know what to work on and they know why they're working on it then i feel like you're you're doing pretty good um to the point of like storytelling and really making sure that people um like engineers as you all know are really putting so so much blood and sweat into something so i feel like there's kind of a more qualitative way of just like making sure that people feel like they're working they're putting all that work in for a reason that they understand what would you say is the biggest challenge of being the pm uh day to day okay i think one of the hardest things to do is to prove that you're actually writing value a lot of what we do is more strategy based and so it's not something that you know an engineer you know you can measure like lines of code or how many pr's you put out there or like you know when did you ship did you ship on time it's very quantitative um as a product manager um you know it's it's super like fuzzy you know if the product is successful that's great but you know what the engineers wrote the code and the designers need to design you know so um it's hard um yeah yeah i think one of the hardest things is actually just managing my own psychology um around like what what i think i have to be doing to feel like i'm being successful um and i think that also kind of influences what work i look because yeah i mean to to vile's point there's just like an inherent difficulty in showing your work when your work is really to like leave a bunch of stuff on the cutting room floor um so i think it's it's it's a lot of just like first satisfying my own sense of like that i am valuable so be anything yeah i would also say another thing that comes to mind for me is probably prioritization of my own time and the reason why i say that is just because there's so much that's going on uh across all of the different sfn members that you might be working with there's always someone coming to you with questions and so it's it's very much around like understanding what is urgent and impactful to figure out now versus what can wait or maybe be delegated and it's okay if it's not the perfect answer because it's not the most urgent impactful thing to figure out now so like where you focus your attention i wanna i was gonna say that makes a lot of sense especially considering a lot of the work doesn't feel like it has concrete um rectangles i find myself when i feel like it's not measurable enough to go back to engineering so when i feel like i'm not being productive i would go code and then i'll be productive again and i'll go back to my pm role and then i can think strategy and i help between the two um and i guess how to measure productivity as a pm is something i'm still kind of figuring out myself jumping into a question from chat um what is your now what is your most favorite part or the most rewarding part in uh a pm i think for me it's uh you know i i get to participate in all parts of the product development life cycle i mean i have a opinion and people actually are forced to listen to my opinion when it comes to like design usability um even like technical architecture so i get my my fill of like you know understanding everything um without having to go like too deep and actually go do it all myself so i mean it keeps things interesting um and i'm never bored for better or worse i would definitely agree with that that's part of the reason why i was drawn to product management in the first place which is you kind of just have these big problem spaces that you get to dive into and you get to think about all of the different components within that product space and problem space and you don't necessarily have to dive super deep into everything but you get a taste of everything and it's fun like it keeps things interesting for sure it keeps you on your toes for me i think it's a little bit like um if anybody's ever gardened there's just an inherent satisfaction in like bringing order to chaos uh and kind of to what to sylvia's point there's just there's just something really fun about starting out with like a really nebulous problem and then slowly bringing more and more clarity until you have something that is working hopefully or not working and that's great too i'd say for me it's definitely the ability to wear all the hats kind of like you were all saying that there's chaos everywhere and hopping between all of them and for me i unfortunately well fortunately as well have to dive into all of them deeply and do them all um one day i will hire to replace myself in those roles uh but wearing all the hats is definitely what drew me to be a founder and if i wasn't a founder than being a pm um 100. so um i'm gonna kind of combine a couple questions that came in through chat but um how would you suggest thinking about a company to work for and you know and maybe a different way to ask that question too is like how do you figure out if a specific startup or product is going to be right for you as a pm so maybe you can even just talk about your own experiences like how did you decide to work at the companies that you're working at now yeah i i can start um i guess maybe because my my search was relatively recent maybe about a year ago um so at the time when i was looking to leave facebook um i was actually looking to move to a much smaller company ended up at rex but when i was interviewing i actually took the time to just talk to a bunch of different companies across different sizes and some of the things that stood out to me so high level what i cared about was is the product that i'm working on does it have some positive social impact um is the leadership good is there a growth opportunity um in terms of like learning new things and diving into new problem spaces um obviously all of this it's really dependent on who you are as a person and what you care about uh but some of the things that stood out to me were as you go as you talk to different size companies you'll find different things right so at a much smaller company maybe c stage or uh series eight uh you might be coming in as like the first or second pm and you get a lot more opportunity around just kind of like diving in and wearing a bunch of different hats and defining the culture etc but what you potentially lose out on is having more um product peers around you to learn from and obviously there are there are ways that you can get that from your community externally but it's a little bit different right and so there there's those trade-offs around like are you looking for a slightly more established culture a little bit more structure uh how how do you want to balance that against learning and growth and the types of problems that you take on vile yeah um i agree with everything that sylvia said um i think you know if you're early in your pm career it's really good to be at a you know large company like a facebook or a google or you know microsoft because there's established frameworks there's processes that um you can just add to your toolbox and they're they're really good foundations to have um one of the reasons i left facebook was i had gotten to the point where you know the products or the space that i was supporting um you know they're fairly mature and you know there's it was just like you know diminishing returns in terms of being a pm and so when i uh interviewed around um i think i went to the most chaotic company um and that was a lot of fun um and it was very tiring too but um you learn a lot just different business models and then you gain more uh things to add to your toolbox um so i think you know just depending on where you are in your career um if you're more in the learning from like very established like you know educational how to be a pm versus like if you want to brave the wild west and learn on the fly on the job um you know you kind of need both and you know for me i've kind of hopped you know in and out um i would say that airbnb is slightly more under control than lyft um but you know probably not as like you know structured as you know facebook was so yeah yeah i would i would second that to you and just say i think so much of it depends on your your own learning style um and also just kind of like how urgently you want to make this transition too um if like if you're already an engineer someplace then there's potentially a way to like lateral into product there um if that's not a game that you're wanting to play then i think you just go wherever he is going to like let you do the thing that you want to do and you hope for the best um and you know it it either works out there or you've learned some things and you can apply them in a place that's going to fit better so i think it from from my own process around this it just comes down to like something along the lines of like risk tolerance learning style and then there's things to wear on top of that as you feel more confident like for me i have seen the kind of super wild west and the next thing that i will want to add to that is like what does this look like uh in a more polished environment um i don't know if that's helpful but i actually had you know one more thought you know just talking to the people and understanding who you'll be working with is very important um as a pm you know i i have my engineering counterparts as like you know we're attached at the hip essentially um and so you know if you're interviewing and you know who your engineering counterparts gonna be and you just you know it's just not vibing um it's gonna be very difficult to you know get anything done so i would say there's a people aspect to that as well going off of that i'd say i've only picked roles or not only but i picked roles with that being like the highest qualifying factor you know if the team is amazing if the founders are amazing um you want to be there kind of regardless of the role um you can figure out i'm talking mostly from like early stage startup experience but regardless of the role you can have take on you can kind of expand that role and take initiatives in various places um you know or you can just become your own vm apply to accommodate or be a founder um that's always an option uh but i i would say kind of like carl was saying of like you know figure out what things you care about and those are the things you should optimize for whether it's team whether it's the mission of the company uh whether it's you know the actual project you're working on the product right so you that's sometimes a very personal question of like what are you optimizing for and maybe it's how fast you get a job maybe it's the salary the compensation that they can offer you so um that is going to vary for everybody it's a great opportunity to come up with a framework yes so if um i'm earlier in my career um what suggestions you know do you have for how i can make this transition um you know to becoming a pm especially if i don't have any prior experience i would say that you know with you know regardless of what role you have you know there's always going to be value in understanding you know whatever you're building who your customers are and what's really uh important to them and truly being like empathetic i know that's probably like an overused term of like having empathy but um you know that is like the first step for any sort of like product idea is you know is there truly a problem and who who are you trying to serve right um and so regardless if you're an engineer if you're a designer a data scientist like that is that should be like the foundation um and once you have mastered that i think it's a lot easier to just show that you are ready to move into product yeah i think that there's a ton of things that you can do just in terms of training your mind too um and like kind of start with the internet there's tons of videos on how to how to just even begin thinking about these things um and reading books like the design of everyday things and just some of the classics that are really foundational for how to think about the ways that we do design the objects and experiences in our lives and just getting those muscles i think um to whatever degree of rigor you want to apply to yourself so doing something like starting a blog and just challenging yourself to like write your own product specs for things that already exist um it's pretty easy to find information on like what the sort of as vile and sylvia were saying like but the pm interview is pretty standard so just like rehearsing different iterations of answers to those questions um eventually like you will get a job if you just keep you know it's like going to the gym just to add on to that i think a lot of this goes back to what i was saying earlier about curiosity being such a big part of being a good pm uh i remember early on when a lot of my friends were asking about getting into pm a lot of the training is asking those questions like why is airbnb's strategy the way that it is why is uber doing things that they're doing why are i don't know even like door knobs designed the way that they are since you've got a design of everything um so it's it's all about asking those questions and then thinking through it thinking about how you would do it thinking about why it's being done the way that it is and and just building that muscle this kind of leads to um you you all talked briefly about pm interviews um a question that lean asks about what's the best way to prepare for a pm in a row and assume you're talking to someone who's never been on one before so i yeah i think um you know building that muscle um there's there's so many resources i think on the web right now in terms of like you know the various skills that um they look for as a pm it's very nerve-wracking i would say because a lot of it is just thinking on the fly because you never know what you're gonna be asked for but there's always you know there's questions that uh come up over and over again you know if you were a product manager in this space what would be the next feature that you would um build and why um and so just really being able to assess a bunch of different products even ones that you use you know every day doesn't have to be tech but like you know kelly and sylvia said you're building that muscle and training yourself to be able to think on the fly um um and yeah and i think also like practicing out loud or with somebody else who can because one of the things that folks are testing for as everyone here i think has mentioned like communication is such a big part of the job so just bearing in mind that you're not really being tested on like whether you get the right answer it's so much more about the delivery and whether you can structure and um articulate your your plan regardless of whether it's a good planner it makes sense how do you show your work how do you structure your thoughts adding on to that um at least for facebook interviews a lot of what we were trying to look for was around how you got to the answer that you did what was that thought process what principles were you working off of to make decisions and so being able to communicate that being able to think deeply and talk out loud those thoughts that's all more important than what the end answer actually is i'm going to combine a couple questions from the audience um but they're essentially around your background so um in what ways did your technical background you know prepare your camera rolls and also if you're not from a technical background can you still break into people like product management and like um and you know what what advice would you have for non-technical folks get trying to get into yeah you know i feel like in silicon valley um it's it's almost like a requirement for a pm to to be an engineer in the past but i don't think that's true for you know any any other area possibly um but you know i would say that you know the pm interview process there's actually really nothing like technical about it um aside from maybe some some questions about how you would analyze data um but you know there's really nothing about coding or like you know how you would build something uh per se so um i i think you know some of the best pms that i've known have had like really interesting backgrounds like musicians or you know just you know really random um but you know it's that drive of like curiosity and being able to think through um what you would improve about things and how you would go about it and having like you know good reasons of why you choose to go that way um so i know that's like very generic but i don't actually think you need to have um a technical background i think when you're on the job it does help you know grease the wheels a little bit with engineers but um you know i don't think it's a prerequisite at all definitely a common misperception that you need an engineering background and let's see i think we have time for one more question and then i want to remind everyone that after this uh each of these speakers um each of the panelists will be in their own rooms and you can go and continue to ask them questions and talk to them um but for our last question um let's see let's see um have there been any big setbacks that you've experienced your you know careers user either as like a pm or founder and you know how did you overcome it or what would it make you do differently uh i would say that setbacks are like very much in the eye of the beholder um there's kind of something that i've tried to live my life by is this idea that the obstacle is the way so if there is something that is getting in in your way or that you're seeing as a setback it might be more useful to see it as something that's like teaching you how to get to the next place that you need to go um so i would say no i've never had any setbacks but i have had lots of obstacles [Laughter] i um if no one wanted to jump in there and answer that i actually have one more question that came in um and you know as you know women in tech as you know women founders as women p.m like are there important challenges that you think need to be addressed or are there things that you see male colleagues get away with that you know that you have you can't um anything to say to you know on that end there's so much to say there you know yeah i i you know so one of the things as a pm uh i think somebody said this to me like a while ago but it's like you basically have to like repeat your story in 10 different ways before people truly get it and i feel like as a woman you actually have to repeat it like 50 times before you will actually get it where i see it's a lot easier usually with men especially you know in tech where you are trying to explain some you know technical details or like engineering concepts or architecture um i don't know it you know i think there's just unconscious bias there where you're not as credible and so you have to keep on repeating um and you know finding a good i would say not necessarily a mentor but you know somebody in the company who's like a sponsor someone who's like very supportive of you um helps if he is male because you know again lens credibility in some like weird way um you know who who has your back i think that's very helpful but um but yeah it's you know broken record over and over again i would add on to that um i think the broader theme is just knowing your worth right and having confidence that the opinions that you're surfacing or the direction that you want to push in has credence and that you know what you're talking about and so don't let um don't let kind of these like different biases bring you down plus one yes i would also say too like don't get in your head about it being a gendered thing and don't assume that if you're if you're having trouble that it's because you're a woman or you're whatever a zebra you know like just don't add that where on it for yourself even because um it's i've been actually having conversations about this with my boyfriend because somebody was like have you ever experienced posture imposter syndrome is a white man and he was like yeah you know so i think too sometimes it's easy and i've definitely been guilty of this to think oh like that's happening to me because i'm a woman and it doesn't it doesn't even have to be true so and and for me too that's like an it's an additional emotional burden that i'm putting on myself um helena anything else the only other thing to add plus um one other thing to add just like the assumption that i'm not technical and the assumption that i don't know what i'm talking about and that like is like blatant face pretty frequently i'm just like oh let me talk to like your technical co-founder or let me talk to like someone on engineering from your company and it's just um i mean they're making assumptions and my role isn't cto uh but just those assumptions just mean that you have to lean into just feeling self-confident and assuming that it's not because of your gender like you were saying would help and i would also say i'm definitely guilty of that you can hear i ran to my co-founder about it a lot but just just be self-confident know your worth um and um i guess don't don't think too much about it and last question i swear just because i got a one uh plus one in the chat um but let's see uh what single thing have you done that has helped you prevent burnout in your career or in your work [Music] that's assuming we're not burnt out oh sorry go ahead go ahead go ahead i was just saying i i frequently like take out an entire weekend and go backpacking this was before the california wildfires uh but like every few weekends just completely disappear uh and go backpacking and that was a good reset even though my days are usually crazy to get up at like 7am and work to like 10 p.m um but then making sure that there are you know hard resets every now and then um has been working for me yeah i would definitely say sticking with your routine yeah sorry go ahead tell no no you first yeah i i was just gonna say sticking with your routine and making sure that you have those things uh to help you reset or refresh and re-energize are extremely important i actually had a couple of years at facebook where i started feeling quite burnt out and i realized part of it was because i was prioritizing work over going to work out or doing other things that were really just for me and investing in myself um because i felt like that was the only way to get the work done and i realized that i was just doing myself a disservice because keeping my energy up was just as important um in terms of like being successful it's more of a marathon than it is sprint and so you need to make sure that you're taking care of yourself yeah that's basically what i was gonna say to is just like knowing your own limits um another thing that i found really useful is this idea of kind of like a pyramid when you're trying to think about how to prioritize your time like is is the thing that you're gonna do that you might be doing going to make it easier to do each subsequent thing so if you get a full night of sleep it's going to be easier for you to do everything else on your list um if you like i don't know obsess over this paragraph is that necessarily going to make it easier for you to do everything else maybe not so um i think for me it's just identifying what those foundational things are for me and then just trusting that if i'm taking care of myself then i'll be able to do good work um so plus went to everything self-care is very important i would say the one last thing that i kind of learned over the years um you know just being a pm i think we're all very um very much overachieving you know very goal-oriented and we tend to want to do everything ourselves but it's absolutely okay you know especially when your execution phase to push things off to the your engineering counterparts or you know you don't have to be involved in every single decision um from a design or usability perspective but you know stay true to like you know the things that you provide value and only you can do which is strategy and vision um and some of the other things that other people can do you know definitely pass those off when you can i would also say just one last night to add on to that i think part of this is understanding what is in your control and what isn't in your control because a lot of that um what i've noticed is that a lot of times because we are over achievers you want to try to fix every problem that's out there and sometimes things just aren't in your control and can't really be fixed by you but you can spend a lot of energy trying to fix it but ends up being wasted energy thank you all right thank you to the four of you who spent your time talking and sharing their stories with us today um so each of the speakers will be in breakout rooms where you can meet them and ask them more questions um and if you're interested in open pm positions at yc startups you can always check out workoutstartup.com and thank you guys for everyone's great questions in the chat and for joining us today it was super enjoyable and i learned so much from you guys thank you thank you so much thank you