Category: Product Management
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Data-Driven Decision Making for Product Managers: Leveraging AI for Roadmaps and Prioritization
In an increasingly complex and fast-moving business environment, Product Managers (PMs) are expected to make high-impact decisions with limited time and imperfect information. Roadmap planning and prioritization—once driven primarily by intuition, stakeholder influence, and historical precedent—are now being transformed by Artificial Intelligence. AI enables PMs to replace opinion-based debates with evidence-based decisions, improving alignment, predictability,…
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The New Product Discovery: Using AI Tools for Customer Research and Insights
Product discovery has always been at the core of successful product management. Understanding customer needs, validating assumptions, and identifying opportunities are essential to building products that deliver real value. In recent years, Artificial Intelligence has fundamentally transformed this phase of the product lifecycle. What was once a largely manual, time-intensive process is now augmented by…
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How AI Is Transforming the Role of Product Managers
Artificial Intelligence is reshaping the product management discipline at an unprecedented pace. What was once a role dominated by intuition, customer feedback loops, and incremental decision-making is rapidly evolving into a function guided by data-driven intelligence, predictive insights, and automation. As AI becomes embedded in every layer of product development, the expectations from modern Product…
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Grooming great backlogs
Having a prioritised backlog helps to have a solid roadmap for the product. It’s like gardening. Care and grooming is necessary. We will discuss some of the best strategies here. Ensure that the bugs, change requests, and enhancements requests are logged in to a system. Jira is very useful. It’s Ok to keep it in…
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Analytical insights from product documentation
Do you track any analytical data of your product’s user documents? This data can give you some important insight about your users. To reiterate, the need to visit a user doc, is a design issue. Something is not quite obvious. An average user won’t like to complete reading the documentation before starting with product. (I…