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By Better Product Network
5
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The podcast currently has 196 episodes available.
Product marketing is at the intersection of many teams in a product company. The work of a product marketer supports the wider product team, sales, marketing, executive stakeholders, and most of all, buyers. It’s for this reason product marketers tend to play a quarterback role, says Kimberly Biddings, VP of Product at BIO-key International. As Kim knows from experience, they’re responsible for not just knowing a product in and out—they have to translate its selling points for others to use. Join Kim and Tina to hear more about the opportunities product marketers can bring to your growing organization.
Follow us on LinkedIn and Twitter to see the latest in Better Product, a show part of the Better Product Community powered by Innovatemap. The community is the connection point for product leaders & practitioners to learn and share what it takes to design, build, market, and sell better products. Learn more at betterproduct.community.
Takeaways:
Things To Listen For:
[0:30] Icebreaker: Who is on your dream interview list (aside from the amazing guests we talked to for Unlock Product Marketing)?
[2:00] Why did we create this series?
[4:00] Introducing today's guest, Kimberly Biddings of BIO-key International
[6:00] Takeaway: there are different kinds of product marketers, not just one
[7:00] Intro to Kimberly Biddings and her cybersecurity product marketing career
[8:30] How Tina and Kim met with product marketing and brand work through Innovatemap
[10:00] In the beginning, many people did product marketing in marketing roles
[10:30] What is a regional product manager? And why teams still need PMM advocates.
[12:00] What are the jobs to be done by product marketing?
[14:00] Product marketers are like company quarterbacks
[15:00] If you need product marketing from day one, why is it typically one of the last roles to be hired?
[16:00] The seven stages of product marketing as a company scales
[18:30] You have to market yourself as a product marketer so people understand it
[21:00] Find bite-sized ways to inject product marketing strategy into your interactions
[27:30] Product marketing’s first question: does anyone actually care about this?
[29:00] Don’t start with the what, start with the why
[31:00] Always consider “who are you talking to?” and “what are you saying?”
[38:00] Be your product manager’s best friend
One of the fundamental strategies product marketers must lead is positioning. It’s what determines how you’ll talk about your product, your company, and your brand as you scale. So why do so many people get it wrong? Catherine Spence, VP of Global Marketing at Microblink, joins Leanna to share her best lessons on brand and product positioning, from leading marketing at an international company to her own startup, Pomello. If you’re looking to stay in your comfort zone, this isn’t the episode for you. Catherine shows us why we need to use our positioning to pick a fight and take a stand, especially in B2B SaaS.
Follow us on LinkedIn and Twitter to see the latest in Better Product, a show part of the Better Product Community powered by Innovatemap. The community is the connection point for product leaders & practitioners to learn and share what it takes to design, build, market, and sell better products. Learn more at betterproduct.community.
Takeaways:
Things To Listen For:
In today’s world, building a great product isn’t enough. You have to master your go-to-market strategy by telling a story that will leave a lasting impression on your audience. Product marketing gets you there, according to long-time product marketer and Costanoa Ventures partner Martina Lauchengco.
Martina is the author of the latest book from the esteemed Silicon Valley Product Group, LOVED: How to Rethink Marketing for Tech Products. Alongside Tina and Leanna, she explores how her career start as a product manager equipped her with the product curiosity and technical competence needed to thrive when marketing digital products. She shows us today how to think about product marketing as the discipline it is and how companies should be leveraging it if they want their product to be recognized and adopted.
Follow us on LinkedIn and Twitter to see the latest in Better Product, a show part of the Better Product Community powered by Innovatemap. The community is the connection point for product leaders & practitioners to learn and share what it takes to design, build, market, and sell better products. Learn more at betterproduct.community.
Takeaways
Product marketing is the foundation for better product. It should play a strategic role in your business from day one. It's a product discipline to master and respect—not just a list of jobs to be done.
But product marketers continue to struggle with recognition. Because the discipline is still new, the way product leaders think about product marketing is continuously evolving.
That’s why Innovatemap’s Tina Hafer and Leanna Adeola are taking over the Better Product podcast for a special series on the power of product marketing. Alongside fellow industry experts, they’ll explore why digital products need product marketing to accelerate growth, how company leaders can best equip product marketers, and the potential product marketers have as the translation point between product, sales, marketing, executives, and most of all, your audience.
We're exploring product marketing's past, present, and future with:
Follow us on LinkedIn and Twitter to see the latest in Better Product, a show part of the Better Product Community powered by Innovatemap. The community is the connection point for product leaders & practitioners to learn and share what it takes to design, build, market, and sell better products. Learn more at betterproduct.community.
How you position your product can help you connect with the people who most need it, unlocking rapid growth for your company. But first, you need a solid foundation. Today, Christian and Meghan discuss what product leaders get right vs. wrong when positioning their products. Led by Meghan’s insights in product marketing, we’ll also walk through a process any team can use to find a position that will give you a cutting edge while letting you stay true to who you are.
Follow us on LinkedIn and Twitter to see the latest in Better Product, a show part of the Better Product Community powered by Innovatemap. The community is the connection point for product leaders & practitioners to learn and share what it takes to design, build, market, and sell better products. Learn more at betterproduct.community.
Takeaways:
Things To Listen For:
[1:30] Friday recordings, turning 40, and why smart people have worse memories
[2:30] Icebreaker: if you could debate anyone, real or not, who would it be?
[3:00] Meghan’s hot take: “90% of cars are so much uglier than they have to be”
[4:00] Christian’s defense of minivan designs and the 2014 Toyota Sienna
[9:30] Today’s topic: how we shape perceptions of our product with positioning
[10:00] Positioning says who you are and why you matter
[11:00] “Positioning at its core is your north star; it should set the course”
[12:00] How appreciation for positioning in product has evolved over time
[12:30] Increasingly, product marketers and product designers are working together to bring positioning to life (see our episode on Pinterest)
[13:30] Can you tell if a product is positioned well from an outside perspective?
[14:30] Your positioning works if it’s simple, meaningful, repeatable, and relevant
[15:00] Positioning statements must be factual and true to who you are
[16:30] Positioning explains why your designers are designing, and for whom
[18:00] How to start applying your positioning to a product roadmap
[20:00] What to do about positioning when you’re an in-house product marketer
[24:00] Why to revisit positioning as your company grows and hires new leaders
[25:30] Consider changing your positioning when something foundational shifts
[28:00] Previewing our upcoming series, Unlock Product Marketing
j3UA7CRzZSpZyfw6gjINFor better and for worse, ego follows us all into our work lives. But leaders must pay special attention to what role ego plays in building a product. Sometimes, ego can be the charisma an early-stage founder needs to get attention for what they’re creating. Other times, ego is a roadblock that can lead to ignoring critical perspectives from users and the product team. Using Elon Musk’s Twitter purchase as a case study, today’s show explores what role ego plays in product, when to use it to your advantage, and when to empower others to take charge.
Follow us on LinkedIn and Twitter to see the latest in Better Product, a show part of the Better Product Community powered by Innovatemap. The community is the connection point for product leaders & practitioners to learn and share what it takes to design, build, market, and sell better products. Learn more at betterproduct.community.
Takeaways:
Things To Listen For:
[1:00] A new room for Erica’s new role: “product therapist”
[4:00] Our icebreaker: what company would you buy if you had the money?
[10:00] Twitter’s new features and overall progress in the digital product space
[14:00] Ego can have an outsized influence in spaces that are driven by people, including social networks like Twitter
[16:00] “You can’t scale human behavior the way that you scale battery factories” - and social platforms scale “the best and the worst” of humanity
[20:00] How to think about ego in your own product career
[23:30] Strive to have a “cabinet of rivals” to keep your ego in check
[24:00] You need ego in the early stage to rally people around your product vision
[25:30] You need a little bit of ego to sell a new or unusual idea—because if you don’t believe in it, no one else will
[26:00] How to think about ego when creating your positioning statement
[28:00] Positioning statements about your product can be like “Tinker Bell”
[29:30] Don’t be a dictator; trust your product team to create to the vision
Everything has to start somewhere. But in product and in life, the beginning tends to be awkward. We have room to grow, and glow, up. The real question isn’t about whether we’ll glow up, but when. Christian & Meghan walk us through their answers from working in UX, product marketing, and brand to help us all find the best moment to embrace the “product glow-up” while staying true to our vision.
Follow us on LinkedIn and Twitter to see the latest in Better Product, a show part of the Better Product Community powered by Innovatemap. The community is the connection point for product leaders & practitioners to learn and share what it takes to design, build, market, and sell better products. Learn more at betterproduct.community.
Takeaways:
Things To Listen For:
Product research is a discipline that’s transformed in recent years. The days of waterfall testing are over. Today, research is happening at every stage of a product’s life cycle, and there are more tools than ever before to help. But how do product teams stay focused on what truly matters? How do we single out real insights from an outpouring of data? Christian & Meghan unpack their lessons learned about product research and examine how the field has evolved. They’ll also explain why research isn’t actually about finding answers; it’s about limiting uncertainty.
Follow us on LinkedIn and Twitter to see the latest in Better Product, a show part of the Better Product Community powered by Innovatemap. The community is the connection point for product leaders & practitioners to learn and share what it takes to design, build, market, and sell better products. Learn more at betterproduct.community.
Takeaways:
Things To Listen For:
Today we’re talking about love—but not in the way you think. We’re looking at the intersection of product and a timeless human experience: falling in, and out, of love. Forget couples counseling as you know it. Ours co-founders Liz Earnshaw, Jessica Holton, and Adam Putterman are using their relationship wellness platform to reduce stigma and build “software for love.” In conversation with Christian & Meghan, the Ours founders will help you cherish the couple experience (and building great products) all over again.
For more insights on how product is shaping modern health and wellness, revisit our series on Health Tech.
Follow us on LinkedIn and Twitter to see the latest in Better Product, a show part of the Better Product Community powered by Innovatemap. The community is the connection point for product leaders & practitioners to learn and share what it takes to design, build, market, and sell better products. Learn more at betterproduct.community.
Takeaways
Things To Listen For
Messaging is the story we tell about our product. But how do we know if we’re telling the right story? To talk about your product, you need to learn from the audience you serve, while never losing sight of the bigger picture your market provides. Christian & Meghan will share their observations on product messaging best practices and red flags to avoid; plus, they’ll explain why the best messaging is often the simplest. They’ll also attempt to message their own lives, as inspired by quotes from comment section fights and the great Humphrey Bogart.
Revisit our episode with Peep Laja of Wynter for more insights on product messaging and how to get better, faster feedback on its effectiveness.
Follow us on LinkedIn and Twitter to see the latest in Better Product, a show part of the Better Product Community powered by Innovatemap. The community is the connection point for product leaders & practitioners to learn and share what it takes to design, build, market, and sell better products. Learn more at betterproduct.community.
Takeaways:
Things To Listen For:
The podcast currently has 196 episodes available.