Recent Posts by pmc

04006 Knowledge Transfer: Starting It Out Right

When a new version of the product is in the works, and the Product Manager and the rest of the team is making the checklist of everything that needs completing for the product launch, it’s easy to remember some things. Usually documentation and online help get done on time, as do press releases, maybe some sales training, and perhaps updates to collateral. But there’s one important thing that companies forget to build into their plan time and time again: knowledge transfer.
It seems like a basic thing that after a whole lot of work is done to build great capabilities into the software, there will be an organized and thorough effort to roll out an understanding of those new capabilities to the entire organization. Yet I have rarely seen this to be the case.
It’s as if Development was focusing on existing and future external customers as the only customer, when a major group of customers are those people at your company who serve its external customers: trainers, consultants, custom programmers, customer care reps, and sales engineers.
Read on for tips on putting together an effective knowledge transfer effort for each new release of your software.

04005 Product Road Map: the Real and the Ideal

Like so many of the tools used by Product Managers to make the software product successful – the Requirements documents come to mind – the Product Road Map takes many different forms at different companies, and needs to be customized to suit each company. While it may seem that no two of these are alike, in every case the Product Manager struggles to balance the ideal with the real in putting together a road map.
In addition, the Product Road Map deals with information at different levels of detail. And what looks realistic from 30,000 feet may seem a little idealistic once you get down to ground level.
How do you balance the real and the ideal in your product’s road map? Read on for a look at the types of content to include.

04002 Trade Shows: Measuring ROI

It seems that the necessity to exhibit your product at trade shows is one of those trying truisms in the software industry. Like press releases and advertising, manning a company booth at trade shows is considered de rigueur for a marketing plan. Product Managers are often called upon to man the booth at shows as well ...

04001 Influence: It’s Under Your Control

It seems that one of the quintessential traits of most Product Manager positions is that you are required to manage by influence. You're trying to make things happen through people who don't report to you and don't have to do what you want. Product Managers end up using a combination of charm, psychology and prodding to ...

03043 Sales Support: How Much Is Acceptable?

On www.productmarketing.com, there's a survey of product managers which covers salary and job duties. One interesting section of this survey is called Comments for the VP of Sales. And the very first comment is this: "Product management is not sales support" This is a telling sentence. Specifically, what it's telling us is that Product Managers frequently suspect ...

03042 Sales Calls: Reading Your Prospects

Product Managers often bridge the gap between technical understanding of the product and the ability to present its benefits to non-technical individuals. Therefore the sales force calls upon their assistance to present the product during visits to prospects. If you find yourself a member of a team that is calling on a prospect, you can provide ...

03040 More TLC for the RFP

A recent issue of the newsletter was called TLC for the RFP. It was all about creating materials along with a system and roles that would allow a company to generate high quality RFPs with less effort. A subscriber writes in with an interesting question about the best length for answers to RFP questions. Many questions ...

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