Marcin Demkowicz

Marcin Demkowicz

Co-founder of ShareTheBoard
117 points

About

I'm a product guy. I've worked in Fortune 50 companies, startups, agencies, and everything in between. After nearly two decades of managing other people's products I've started working on my own. It is much harder. My professional goal is to create as many problem-solving, job-creating, world-improving products and self-propelled services as I can during my time on this planet. I believe that as creators and consumers we've become too quick to accept tech that forces us to change. I think tech needs to adapt more to us. I bemoan how disconnected we're becoming in this Remote Age and do what I can to counteract that. I enjoy problem solving and a good tear-down of my own ideas. Look forward to connecting with like-minded product folk.

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Maker History

  • ShareTheBoard
    Your real whiteboard online - legible, interactive, and secure
    Sep 2022
  • Zoom
    Zoom
    Video communication made simple and easy
    Jun 2022
  • 🎉
    Joined Product HuntMay 28th, 2020

Forums

Janet Gee

3yr ago

Do you prefer online learning or face to face lessons?

Since the way the world works has changed, I would be interested to know if people prefer learning online now or if you're old fashioned like me and prefer a face to face lecture?

Scott Kosmach

3yr ago

Remote teams, how do you stay connected?

Discord has been a great way for my team and I to keep in touch and have quick conversations, just like we would around the office watercooler. We have our own voice channels that we sit in (when we're fine being disturbed), and other team members can pop in and out as they please. This gives us a sense of connectedness that is lost when working remotely. What solutions or hacks are you using to stay connected?

11 product management resources relevant for pre-Product-Market Fit startups

99% of the product management books are not relevant at pre-Product-Market Fit startups. This has disastrous effects on startups. Startups reading the wrong resources waste months with the wrong methods. Time goes by, runway decreases. Eventually they run out of cash and shut down. If only books on #productmanagement had labels that say pre-PMF or post-PMF". Until then, here are 11 great product books in pre-PMF environment! 1. Learn who to listen to: The Mum test (Rob Fitzpatrick) This book will teach you that they re some people you should never listen to, like your mum. It also teaches you the importance to talk to the right niche for your product. 2. How to write a user interview: "Lean startups" chapter 2 only (Eric Ries) The second most important thing is to understand how to ask questions. Questions asked with a bias will bring useless answers. Poor questions yield little value. 3. Competitive analysis: "Blue ocean" (Kim, Mauborgne) Don t get stuck into consulting matrixes. Blue ocean shows you how a circus can be #innovative. It gives you a way to identify your value propositions to differentiate. 4. Build a community: "rosie.land" (Rosie Sherry) Until your product is ready you want your product team to engage with potential users in a valuable way. For that you can start your #community. Rosie is the best. 5. Build a MVP: no readings Airbnb's #MVP was a Google sheet! To build your first product you don t have to read anything. You have to roll up your sleeves and build it. 6.Plan your product: "story mapping" (Nielsen Norman Group) Often teams rely on lengthy requirements documents to move from a vision to a product. No one has the time to read them. User story maps outline the interactions that users need to go through to complete goals in your #product. 7. Design the product: "Don t make me think" (Steve Krug) This book teaches you that great designs are obvious. It s full of examples. 8. Launch: "The 18 Mistakes that Kill Startups" (Paul Graham) If you haven t launched something you're ashamed of yet, then read this article. 9. Work with engineers: "Agile Product Management with Scrum" (Roman Pichler) There are zillions ways to apply #scrum. In this book you ll learn how to build a backlog, organize a sprint, #QA, respect deadlines. 10. Build a great product culture: "ReWork" (Jason Fried, DHH) This book is full of gems to set up a healthy culture that supports your product delivery. 11. Iterate: "Lenny s Newsletter" (Lenny Rachitsky) Lenny shares benchmarks to measure success. This will help you figure out if you're into something or not. Is any book missing? Please let me know in the comments =)

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