Don't leave your product management career to chance. Sign up for Exponent's PM interview course today: bit.ly/3IWfuP9
@AlisaHaman3 жыл бұрын
Love these interviews. I do feel like this candidate did jump into solutions pretty quickly. I would have liked to hear some more on how this would align with a company strategy (is this a competitive edge? Could this be valuable enough for parents that they would be willing to pay?) I also feel like this skipped a lot of the empathy building - yes, kids are the users, but parents of young kids are the purchasers! I would definitely want to hear how empathy is built - maybe by shadowing parents with kids, interviewing parents of young kids, and maybe even sending out a survey. That would really help define the problem you’re trying to solve, which could guide you in the right direction when you move onto ideation.
@Theartsygalslays3 жыл бұрын
Agree, felt quite scattered and all over the place in terms of logical leaps, and not very empathetic or even aware of concrete real-world needs. What preschooler types messages? I heard very little on goals or prioritization either. The ideas seemed subpar and off topic and mostly an explanation of existing Messenger capabilities. Highly doubt that this would pass the bar.
@Vargish212 жыл бұрын
As a product manager myself. I must say, You guys provide very good quality content. One of the most underrated channel. I hope with time you get the glory you deserve. Hats off to you guys.
@turbulents3 жыл бұрын
Look at how intense these PM interviews have gotten that a guy who literally wrote a book on the topic might be (let's face it) weeded out for not tapping into any one of a million possible things that an interviewer might want to hear from him.
@Christos.Geo.GR12 жыл бұрын
Peter Yang is the man!! I love you seriously.
@sjain443 жыл бұрын
Honest feedback, this is one of the weaker interviews on the channel. Candidate started off with basics on identifying customers (Parents & Preschool kids), identified a minimal product (Parents-controls, Kids-games/messaging) but failed to identify it's VIABILITY in the market (What's the competitive edge for the product). Even the User Journey was more a User Experience, what benefit do Kids gain from this? Candidate mentions he doesn't want his kid to not have too much screen time, so why break that rule for this product? What are kids trying to do that's not there in the market today? One avenue, I would have taken, PreK kids see their younger Cousins/Aunt/Uncles constantly on their phone texting, and want to engage them more but haven't figured out typing yet, how can we bridge that gap? - Technical PM at Fortune 100
@shashankgupta-u7s Жыл бұрын
makes sense
@drayle12313 күн бұрын
I'm thinking text to speech and speech to text. I do that with my son.
@shivalishinde43272 жыл бұрын
Teenagers Since parents are on business travel. Or at office. Less physical presence in their life. It's important to keep a tab on kids career growth. An app where kids could post their school progress or extracurricular progress, also ambitions , future needs, where they can post permission requests for night overs, app can show their total nite overs in the month, major milestones achieved in life. It can be a 2 way process and have a holistic approach. Parents can set certain tasks for the day and kids can mark them as complete with photos.
@MrPrashantbagga3 жыл бұрын
Super high quality videos! Curious whats your gear?
@kareynjeri39823 ай бұрын
Do kids aged 3-5 yrs know how to write a text message on a mobile phone ?
@goddessvibes083 жыл бұрын
I like his ideas. Thanks 👍
@oleksandrromanchykov3133 жыл бұрын
The way he is making this “tsss” sound before saying anything is driving me nuts...