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So I think that makes, that would make me feel better. I think the other, like, I don't know the good again, just to remind people like this, you know, there's a, it sucks to have to change
the good as you shared earlier, comp has never been higher.
There's a lot of open roles,
people that are embracing this are having a lot of fun,
like you're, like most PMs are sitting there all day waiting for stuff to happen, waiting for meetings and approvals, and all this alignment, and all this PR reviews, and now it's like, you can ship stuff so often, Like, there's so much good
that is happening. Maybe just remind us again of anything else there just to inspire people to, like, okay. This is worth it. I think you're glad let's go to the individual you're describing. There's someone who's sitting who's really
afraid,
who's a builder,
who's like, man, my job
is changing so rapidly, and I'm so nervous.
And I have to think through what's my career gonna look like.
But I tend to ask the question, like, do you really love your day?
Like, if you put green, yellow, and red next to the meetings you had
and did that for a week and then we looked at the color chart,
I'll bet you the vast majority of of PMs that are in a product organization,
they show mostly yellow and red.
And I'm telling you,
the ones that are moving into more of this build mode, it's mostly green and yellow.
And and and that yet
yet most of them are sitting very,
very afraid,
feeling stuck.
So what I'm suggesting
is
how do you then transition
mentally and then physically into a moment of going from
this moment of fear and being on the sidelines to being in the game.
What I have noticed,
and this is sort of a big kind of surprise to me, is there is a moment where they experience
the first joy
in using the new tools.
Everyone has a story,
and it's always different, but it's super personal.
It's gonna be like, oh, I was doing it a certain way, and then all of a sudden I built this thing.
And oftentimes,
it's like my partner and I use this app that I built,
or I built a chief of staff app to keep track of my inbox,
or I now manage,
you know, the lights in my house using this thing. And it's some silly thing.
And, usually, it accompanies with a story like, and I stayed up all night,
or I spent a bunch of time talking to my friends or or or or or hacking away, or I just spent time talking to Claude about it. You know, even my wife has a story about how she has this business that she's thinking through. And she went from using the AIs to, you know, do business plan to actually do test market.
And
everyone has this moment of joy, and then they're like hooked. It's like, they're they've caught a bug.
And at that moment is when they cross the threshold
between
fear to joy.
And joy
is the biggest antidote to burnout, and it creates opportunity because the moment you have joy, the moment it doesn't feel like work.
And I think most product management
feels like work if you're not building.
And we are now moving into a world where product management will be building and joy,
not work.
So you just need to find a path to get there. And the moment you do, your the rest of your human psyche creates time,
doesn't feel like you're disappointing others, and builds energy.
Because people have more energy than they realize. They're just so exhausted by the monotony of what was defined as product management.
And so that is the number one piece of advice is have you found joy? Now there's a class of person who's like, none of this is joyful.
Like, I find the whole thing to be kind of boring, nauseating. I don't really like it. I'm like, well, then you're probably not in for the next version of our industry.
You know? And and you should be respectful of that, and you should be honest with yourself.
But there's a lot of product people that are right now very anxious that actually are going to be happier once they cross the chasm.
And all they need to do
is find a way to create that moment of joy, you know, whether that's an app on their side or the app at your work. And if you're a leader listening to this, you should find those moments of joy in your staff
because that's contagious, and it gets people excited. And that's what you know, that's why I like doing what I do. It's like I like building stuff, and I caught the bug. And, you know, I'm all there all the time. And, you know, I I I try to find TV shows that I can vibe code in parallel to because I wanna watch TV, but I wanna be vibe coding at the same time. What's a good show? What's a good show for vibe coding? I think well, I I a lot of the Amazon Prime shows are good. That's not a knock on Amazon Prime, but they're built on books. You know? These books are like they're, like, structured and all that. So, you know, Alex Cross or, you know, Jack Ryan.
You know, what's hilarious is,
and, you know, when you get older, you stop you you remember shows that you love, but you don't remember the plot. So
one time, I just binge watched a season of twenty four, the show that I loved when back in the day.
But frankly, I watched it, and I kinda knew what was going on. But I vibe coded the whole time because it was like, hey. I'm paying attention here, but I'm staying engaged. Wait. Let's actually follow this thread. Just like what's what's what's your AI stack? What are you using to build? And what what are something what what's something you built and something you vibe coded? I kind of am pretty all in on Claude these last three months.
I was,
for a month, pretty aggressive on Codex,
because I found some of their newer stuff to be, especially the with with sort of the highest level of reasoning to be to be quite advanced. I find it hard to switch between tools. I try to standardize to be to be direct. Like, the things that I build,
I build a bunch of web properties for my community.
So, you know, anytime
I see something that I can obsolete in code, I try to build code around it. So if you had a 100 people,
one natural thing you want people to do is to meet each other.
And, you know, a 100 people can't meet 99 other.
So it's it's you have to be thoughtful around who's the best person to meet and how do you match people up. How do you make sure that you match people with people they haven't met before? You know, what are their haves or their wants? That entire thing used to be me sitting down and thinking like, oh, you know, Jay Z would really appreciate meeting Annie, but I don't know if they've met before. Now I write software to do that. I write an agent that goes in and actually does matching.
I write an agent to figure out, hey. What are all the jobs that my head of products are hiring? How do we make sure that we make those available, but then build a mailing list of folks who I think when they're interested in work can get matched up automatically.
So like the next generation of recruiting.
I I think a lot about using AI for content.
So when I sit down,
I have an AI that takes questions
from people, and then it's trained on my content like yours, and it gives answers.
But then I read those questions,
evaluate the answers, and I'm like, hey. This is a theme I'm hearing.
And then I sit down, and I write down, when do the LLMs and I disagree?
I go through. And so all of these things are are
anything that I'm doing that I think I can, you know, replicate,
I try to obsolete myself.
You know, when I first started my first job,
I asked the best engineer that I worked with, who still is one of the best engineers I've ever met,
what what's the what's the definition of a great engineer?
And,
you know, I thought it would be like, oh, someone who's got this degree or is well versed in this technology stack. He's like, well, the best engineer I know is my dad.
And and, of course, this is before tech in that case. And he's like, and my dad's
definition is still my favorite, which is an engineer is someone who obsoletes themselves from everything they do.
That's the definition of a great engineer.
I've taken that
to every job that I've worked at.
It's funny because you'll run into people that are like, I don't know. I don't wanna obsolete myself. That's my job. And I was like, ah, I think if I obsolete, there'll be a better job for me.
What AI has done
has basically
put an APOL on that. If you can, if you can obsolete by just asking the AIs to do this for you. So why I'm saying that is I'm my stack is what can I do to obsolete anything and everything I do on a daily basis? That is super cool. I love hearing these stories. Like, what I find is the best
tactic here is just solve your own problem.