As companies scale, roadmaps become a list of stakeholder commitments. To maintain focus, leaders must relentlessly communicate the "why" behind every initiative and tie it to a clear investment ROI. This ensures all teams are running in the same direction, not just checking boxes.
Combat strategic complexity by creating a one-page plan. This document connects your highest-level vision and values to tactical quarterly goals in a clear cascade (Vision -> Strategy/KPIs -> Annual Goals -> Quarterly Goals). This simple, accessible artifact ensures universal alignment and clarity on how individual work ladders up.
When planning, differentiate the 'roadmap' from a simple to-do list. The roadmap should outline 5-7 major strategic shifts or capabilities you need to acquire—such as building a personal brand or mastering paid ads—not just the daily tasks required to get there.
A product roadmap's value is in the planning process and aligning the team on a vision, not in rigidly adhering to a delivery schedule. The co-founder of Artist argues that becoming a feature factory focused on checking boxes off a roadmap is a dangerous trap that distracts from solving real customer problems.
When a product team is busy but their impact is minimal or hard to quantify, the root cause is often not poor execution but a lack of clarity in the overarching company strategy. Fixing the high-level strategy provides the focus necessary for product work to create meaningful value.
Don't just tweak last year's product plan. Start from a blank slate by defining business goals first, then allocate resources to the value propositions needed to win. This avoids getting stuck in maintenance mode and forces a focus on strategic priorities.
Instead of relying solely on one-on-one meetings for alignment, PMs should craft a compelling vision. This vision motivates engineers by showing how even small, tactical tasks contribute to a larger, exciting goal. It drives alignment, clarity, and motivation more effectively than just a roadmap.
Contrary to the popular bottoms-up startup ethos, a top-down approach is crucial for speed in a large organization. It prevents fragmentation that arises from hundreds of teams pursuing separate initiatives, aligning everyone towards unified missions for faster, more coherent progress.
Go beyond visual roadmaps. Create a monthly written document for executives that explains *why* the roadmap changed, details priorities, and includes data from recent launches. This forces intentionality, builds trust, and fosters deeper, more accountable conversations with leadership.
Robinhood is shifting its planning process to focus on what will be announced at its next public product keynote. Instead of setting abstract internal goals, this aligns the entire company around concrete, customer-facing deliverables and creates a powerful, immovable deadline for shipping.
To bridge the gap between a product's long-term vision and its current state, focus on "progress, not perfection." Deliver a quick, meaningful win for the customer—like a single workflow or integration—to build the trust and momentum needed for them to stay invested in the unfolding roadmap.