Rushing to implement a new strategy in a CPO role can be catastrophic. A structured 90-day plan prioritizes understanding nuance first. Spend the first 30 days on customer and team interviews, the next 30 drafting and aligning on strategy, and only begin executing changes in the final 30 days.

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Don't expect your organization to adopt a new strategy uniformly. Apply the 'Crossing the Chasm' model internally: identify early adopters to champion the change, then methodically win over the early majority and laggards. This manages expectations and improves strategic alignment across the company.

The foundation of a new M&A function is deep internal alignment. Before looking outward, the first month should be dedicated to interviewing internal product leaders and SMEs to understand the business, product roadmap, and strategic direction from the inside out.

A new CEO’s first few months are best spent gathering unfiltered information directly from employees and customers across the business. Avoid the trap of sitting in an office listening to prepared presentations. Instead, actively listen in the field, then act decisively based on those firsthand insights.

Structure a 90-day influencer pilot program with distinct phases. Month one focuses on setup and learning, month two on activation and monitoring, and month three on analysis and adjustment. This methodical approach allows for iteration and proves value before committing to long-term partnerships.

When starting a senior role at a complex company, a new leader should formally contract a 'learning agenda' as part of their onboarding. Prioritize a listening tour focused on frontline operations and culture, rather than headquarters, to understand the business before implementing changes.

The traditional product management skillset is no longer sufficient for executive leadership. Aspiring CPOs must develop deep expertise in either the commercial aspects of the business (GTM, revenue) or the technical underpinnings of the product to provide differentiated value at the C-suite level.

When starting a new partnerships role, resist the pressure to show immediate results. Spend the first 90 days on a listening tour with internal teams and external partners to identify systemic patterns and root causes, rather than applying superficial 'Band-Aid' solutions.

As you move up the product ladder, your strategic time horizon expands. ICs and Directors focus on quarters, VPs on the year, and CPOs must own the 3-5 year vision. Thinking long-term is a core CPO responsibility that no one else in the product organization will own.

A common pitfall for new CPOs is using product-specific jargon with executives and the board. To be effective, they must communicate as business leaders, focusing on financials, succinct points, and simple customer stories that the entire organization can understand.

Pendo's CPO argues that the first 90 days are a critical window for a new leader. You were hired to change things, so you must assess and act quickly on team or strategy adjustments. Delaying beyond this window leads to paralysis, as "no decision is also a decision."