> You can't truly be a senior employee until you see your work as subtractive, and until you have an intuitive feel for the set of all the work that needs to get done. Once you think in this way, you can interact with any other leader as a peer, working elbow-to-elbow, of one mind on what needs doing. Until you think in this way, without even realizing it, you are implicitly asking for those above you to insulate you from reality, to build you a little sandbox where you can work.
I think we’ve all known someone on a project that needed to be carefully “contained”, while there are others who “get it” and can be left alone with worrying. To me, there is where product management is valuable, building a shared vision with the team, so everyone stays aligned and sees how their individual work supports a greater goal. Great post.
> You can't truly be a senior employee until you see your work as subtractive, and until you have an intuitive feel for the set of all the work that needs to get done. Once you think in this way, you can interact with any other leader as a peer, working elbow-to-elbow, of one mind on what needs doing. Until you think in this way, without even realizing it, you are implicitly asking for those above you to insulate you from reality, to build you a little sandbox where you can work.
I think we’ve all known someone on a project that needed to be carefully “contained”, while there are others who “get it” and can be left alone with worrying. To me, there is where product management is valuable, building a shared vision with the team, so everyone stays aligned and sees how their individual work supports a greater goal. Great post.