And make every team write down how they do things: Whatâs the marketing process? Whatâs the engineering process? What are the phases for how we make a product? How do we work together? It canât just be left in peopleâs brains. People leave. New people join. If youâre growing geometricallyâin all directions at onceâthen you need a strong, stable core at the center. Your experienced employees have to be able to walk new employees through how you do what you do, or else everyone gets lost.
Related Quotes
You should talk to people and make connections because youâre naturally curious. You want to know how other teams at your company work and what people do. You want to talk to your competitors because youâre all working to solve the same problems and theyâre taking a different approach. You want your projects to be successful, so you donât just talk to your immediate teammates at lunchâyou grab lunch with your partners, your customers, their
customers, their partners. You talk to everyone: get their ideas and their perspectives. In doing so you may be able to help someone or make a friend or strike up an interesting conversation.
Every Monday morning at Nest, thatâs how my management meetings started: Who are the great people we want to hire? Are we making our hiring goals or retention metrics? If not, whatâs the problem? What are the roadblocks? And how is the team doing? What issues do people have? How are performance reviews going? Who needs a bonus? How are we going to celebrate these accomplishments so the team feels valued? And, most importantly, are people leaving? Why? How are we going to make this job more meaningful and fulfilling and exciting than anything else out there? How are we going to help our people grow?
Only after we got through this important subject could we move on to anything elseâlike what the hell we were building.
The managers on the team saw it was important to me, so thatâs how they started structuring their weekly meetings with their teams. It became the Nest way. People first. Always.
What youâre building never matters as much as who youâre building it with.
5.4. A Method to the Marketing
â1. Marketing cannot just be figured out at the very end. When building a product, product management and the marketing team should be working together from the very beginning. As you build, you should continue to use marketing to evolve the story and ensure they have a voice in what the product becomes.
- Use marketing to prototype your product narrative. The creative team can help you make the product narrative tangible. This should happen in parallel with product developmentâone should feed the other.
- The product is the brand. The actual experience a customer has with your product will do far more to cement your brand in their heads than any advertising you can show them. Marketing is part of every customer touchpoint whether you realize it or not.
- Nothing exists in a vacuum. You canât just make an ad and think youâre done. The ad leads to a website that sends you to a store where you purchase a box that contains a guide that helps you with installation, after which youâre greeted by a welcome email. The entire experience has to be designed together, with different touchpoints explaining different parts of your messaging to create a consistent, cohesive experience.
- The best marketing is just telling the truth. The ultimate job of marketing is to find the very best way to tell the true story of your product.
Itâs an issue I see at a lot of startups and project teams at larger companiesâthe founder or team lead often plays the role of the product manager in the beginning. They define the vision and work with all parts of the business to make it a reality. The trouble comes when the team growsâto 40, 50, 100 people. [See also: Chapter 5.2: Breakpoints.] Thatâs when the leader has to step away from the day-to-day business of building the product and hand over the reins to someone else.
But they canât imagine handing over their baby. How could anyone understand it or love it or help it grow as well as they could? And how would that function even work? Where would it live? How could the founder retain influence over the product if theyâre no longer the manager of that product? And then what would the founderâs job even be? [See also: Chapter 6.1: Becoming CEO.]
In summary, growing a business is a dynamic process as the leadership team navigates the evolutions and revolutions of growth. And like the growth stages of a child, they are predictable and unavoidable. To deal with these challenges, the company must grow the capabilities of the leadership team throughout the organization; install scalable infrastructure to manage the increasing complexities that come with growth; and stay on top of the
market dynamics that affect the business.
To do this, there are 4 Decisions that leaders must address: People, Strategy,
Execution, and Cash.