We’re delighted to welcome Radhika Dutt, product leader, founder, and author of Radical Product Thinking, for a deep dive into her newest work: the OHLA (formerly OHL) Toolkit.
In this episode, Radhika joins Matt and Moshe to challenge how product teams set goals, measure progress, and use frameworks, proposing a puzzle‑driven alternative to traditional OKRs and “framework-following” culture.
Drawing from her journey from electrical engineering and startups at MIT, through painful “product diseases” like Hero Syndrome and Obsessive Sales Disorder, Radhika shares why recipes and templates alone don’t create real progress. Instead, she introduces OHLA as a lightweight but powerful way to cultivate a Jedi mindset, one that keeps teams grounded in first principles, context, and learning rather than chasing vanity metrics and rigid targets.
Join Matt, Moshe, and Radhika as they explore:
Radhika’s path from engineering and founding to Radical Product Thinking and now the OHLA Toolkit
Why classic goal‑setting and OKRs often backfire, creating “alibi progress,” outdated goals, and incentives to hide bad news
OHLA in practice:
Observe – what’s really happening in your product, team, or market
Hypothesize – what might explain it and how you’ll test those ideas
Learn – what the results actually tell you
Adapt – how you’ll change course based on evidence
“Puzzle setting” vs goal setting: defining puzzles with Observation, Open Questions, and an Objective summary to stay longer in the problem space
How OHLA complements design thinking by forcing teams to remain curious and uncomfortable before jumping into solutions
Practical stories, from maritime platforms to enterprise teams, where puzzle thinking led to very different solutions than OKR‑driven targets
How managers can shift conversations from “Did we hit the number?” to “How well did it work? What did we learn? What will we try next?”
A realistic path to transition: starting with your own puzzle, then introducing OHLA within your immediate sphere of influence
And much more!
Want to explore the OHLA Toolkit or connect with Radhika?
We’re delighted to welcome Radhika Dutt, product leader, founder, and author of Radical Product Thinking, for a deep dive into her newest work: the OHLA (formerly OHL) Toolkit.
In this episode, Radhika joins Matt and Moshe to challenge how product teams set goals, measure progress, and use frameworks, proposing a puzzle‑driven alternative to traditional OKRs and “framework-following” culture.
Drawing from her journey from electrical engineering and startups at MIT, through painful “product diseases” like Hero Syndrome and Obsessive Sales Disorder, Radhika shares why recipes and templates alone don’t create real progress. Instead, she introduces OHLA as a lightweight but powerful way to cultivate a Jedi mindset, one that keeps teams grounded in first principles, context, and learning rather than chasing vanity metrics and rigid targets.
Join Matt, Moshe, and Radhika as they explore:
Radhika’s path from engineering and founding to Radical Product Thinking and now the OHLA Toolkit
Why classic goal‑setting and OKRs often backfire, creating “alibi progress,” outdated goals, and incentives to hide bad news
OHLA in practice:
Observe – what’s really happening in your product, team, or market
Hypothesize – what might explain it and how you’ll test those ideas
Learn – what the results actually tell you
Adapt – how you’ll change course based on evidence
“Puzzle setting” vs goal setting: defining puzzles with Observation, Open Questions, and an Objective summary to stay longer in the problem space
How OHLA complements design thinking by forcing teams to remain curious and uncomfortable before jumping into solutions
Practical stories, from maritime platforms to enterprise teams, where puzzle thinking led to very different solutions than OKR‑driven targets
How managers can shift conversations from “Did we hit the number?” to “How well did it work? What did we learn? What will we try next?”
A realistic path to transition: starting with your own puzzle, then introducing OHLA within your immediate sphere of influence
And much more!
Want to explore the OHLA Toolkit or connect with Radhika?