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  1. Product Rebels
  2. Building Campfires, Not Caves
Building Campfires, Not Caves

Building Campfires, Not Caves

Product Rebels · Nov 20, 2025

Product leadership is evolution, not revolution. CPO Raji Bhethi shares how to lead with situational awareness and build alignment.

Develop Strategy Around a 'Campfire' of Stakeholders, Not in a 'Cave' of Isolation

Instead of developing a strategy alone and presenting it as a finished product (the 'cave' method), foster co-creation in a disarming, collaborative environment (the 'campfire'). This makes the resulting document a mechanism for alignment, ensuring stakeholders feel ownership and are motivated to implement the plan.

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Building Campfires, Not Caves

Product Rebels·5 months ago

Effective Product Leaders Act as Chameleons or Lead Geese Depending on the Situation

A 'Product Rebel' is not a constant disruptor but is situationally aware. Sometimes they must be a 'chameleon,' blending in with stakeholders to build trust. Other times, they must be the 'lead goose,' stepping out to galvanize the team towards a shared goal. The skill is knowing when to switch personas.

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Building Campfires, Not Caves

Product Rebels·5 months ago

A Blurry Product Roadmap Signals a Vague Company Strategy, Not a Failing Product Team

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.

Building Campfires, Not Caves thumbnail

Building Campfires, Not Caves

Product Rebels·5 months ago

Drive Change 'Inside-Out' by Empowering Middle Managers First

The most effective way to build strategic alignment is not top-down or bottom-up, but 'inside-out.' Engage middle managers (Directors, VPs) first, as they have crucial visibility into both executive strategy and the daily realities of their teams and customers, making them the strongest initial advocates for change.

Building Campfires, Not Caves thumbnail

Building Campfires, Not Caves

Product Rebels·5 months ago

Product Managers Must Be 'Locals' Embedded in the Business, Not 'Tourists' Who Parachute In

To build trust and deliver value, product managers cannot be 'tourists' who drop in on other departments transactionally. They must become 'locals'—deeply integrated, trusted partners who are regulars in cross-functional conversations and are seen as being 'in the battle' together with sales, marketing, and other teams.

Building Campfires, Not Caves thumbnail

Building Campfires, Not Caves

Product Rebels·5 months ago

Increasing a Team's Shipping Cadence Organically Fixes Deeper Process Issues

Instead of over-analyzing and philosophizing about process improvements, simply force the team to increase its cadence and ship faster. This discomfort forces quicker, more natural problem-solving, causing many underlying inefficiencies to self-correct without needing a formal change initiative.

Building Campfires, Not Caves thumbnail

Building Campfires, Not Caves

Product Rebels·5 months ago