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Being a Product Manager at an Early Stage Startup In my previous article , I reflected on a few things that I would tell myself if I could travel back in time and the concept of “three waves of changes.” She has worked for Amazon in its Alexa group and with Harvard Business Review and the university’s Future of Work Initiative.
This is a guest post from Dillon Forest, cofounder, CTO & product manager at RankScience. But when you’re building a product with lots of technical or business unknowns—something many startups and product teams are doing—this process breaks down. The uncertainty of technical products. Make some mockups.
Let’s time travel back 15 years ago, when there were no smartphones and the internet was accessed only through desktop computers. NPR sells ads on its podcasts and has teams of designers, planners, and strategists, but is technically a non-profit media organization. But what to call it? Audioblogging? Podcasting?
Let’s time travel back 15 years ago, when there were no smartphones and the internet was accessed only through desktop computers. NPR sells ads on its podcasts and has teams of designers, planners, and strategists, but is technically a non-profit media organization. But what to call it? Audioblogging? Podcasting?
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