For senior leaders, career moves should be curated around three pillars: the company culture and its authenticity ('People'), the product's innovation and market fit ('Product'), and the channel's potential for transformation and ecosystem expansion ('Partner').
Go beyond analyzing the founding team by treating the entire employee base as a key asset. By measuring metrics like employee retention rates, hiring velocity, and geographical or role-based growth, investors can build a quantitative picture of a company's health and culture, providing a powerful comparative tool.
Before writing a job description, create an in-depth scorecard with three components: the role's Mission (its purpose), key Outcomes (measurable results), and Competencies (functional and cultural skills). This forces alignment among stakeholders and clarifies what success looks like before the first interview.
A zigzag career path across diverse but adjacent roles (e.g., sales, operations, project management) provides a broader, more holistic business awareness. This cross-functional experience is more valuable for senior strategic roles than a narrow, linear progression up a single ladder.
When hiring for the C-suite, the importance of domain expertise varies by role. For Chief Product Officers, a deep passion and knowledge of the problem space is critical for setting vision. For engineering leaders (CTOs/VPs), specific domain experience is less important than relevant tech stack knowledge and transformation skills.
A product team's effectiveness is not just about skills (competencies). It's equally dependent on the right behaviors (mindsets) and the supportive environment, culture, and leadership backing (resources). A full assessment must cover all three areas.
At the VP or C-level, a leader's primary role shifts from managing their function to driving overall business success. Their focus becomes more external—customers, market, revenue—and their success is measured by their end-to-end impact on the company, not just their team's performance.
A true diagnostic for product maturity requires a 360-degree view. By surveying product leaders, their teams, cross-functional partners (like sales and engineering), and senior leadership, you can uncover critical perception gaps about your team's effectiveness.
To build a truly product-focused company, make the final interview for every role a product management-style assessment. Ask all candidates to suggest product improvements. This filters for a shared value and weeds out those who aren't user-obsessed, regardless of their function.
Great PMs excel by understanding and influencing human behavior. This "people sense" applies to both discerning customer needs to build the right product and to aligning internal teams to bring that vision to life. Every aspect, from product-market fit to go-to-market strategy, ultimately hinges on understanding people.