Agenda 2022

Stay Tuned

Yoav Yechiam || Analytics Specialist and Managing Partner, The Product Alliance
Yoav Yechiam
Analytics Specialist and Managing Partner
The Product Alliance

Why do our Analytics keep failing our Product needs?

DATA-DRIVEN and ANALYTICS are two of the most trending words in todays' PM talk. And yet the transition from discussion and being data-minded, to actually using data to truly influence our work is much harder than thought.

In this talk, Yoav Yechiam, a globally recognized Analytics expert, will share with us his take on why most Analytics implementations fail to serve the Product needs.

It's not due to the platforms, tools or even the technical implementation gone wrong. In most cases it's on us, the PMs. When we define and implement our Analytics 'to cover everything' we're missing its true purpose - to understand user behavior IN ORDER TO TAKE ACTION.

It all starts with PMs needing to ask 'what do I need to understand?' as opposed to 'what do I need to measure?'. After hearing this lecture you'll understand why the difference is so crucial to being truly data-driven and analytics able.

[Panel] From good product pro to product leader: Lesson learned from PM leaders
[Panel] From good product pro to product leader: Lesson learned from PM leaders
Ido Milstein  || SVP product, Hello Heart
Ido Milstein
SVP product
Hello Heart

What’s the path to breakthrough innovation? (hint: it’s not agile)

When we saw that an agile approach pushed our breakthrough innovation further and further away, we realized that sometimes planning into the far future can make that future start happening tomorrow. In other words, we’ve brought innovation much sooner, by roadmapping for much later.So, how far ahead should you plan for?In this talk I’ll show the process we went through, and give some simple tips that helped me grow as a PM in building strategic roadmaps.

Hadas Sheinfeld || Strategic Product Thinker
Hadas Sheinfeld
Strategic Product Thinker

Is Gmail a successful product?

In this talk, Hadas will review Gmail from its launch till today, from a user and a PM perspective.

Some of the questions that will be addressed: Why do users love Gmail? Why do others hate it? What is the future of Email? How should Gmail build for this future?

Jack Ziv || Head of Investigative Analytics, Cellebrite
Jack Ziv
Head of Investigative Analytics
Cellebrite

Better Together

About the difference between vendors and partners, the great value of strategic partnerships, and a few key pointers on your path to partnership execution.

Tal Guttman || Senior Director // Head of Strategic Growth
Tal Guttman
Senior Director // Head of Strategic Growth

Product on a shoestring - The secret and ancient practices of product managers on a tight budget

It seems like there’s never enough. Your company might have the resources for illustrated portraits of all the office dogs, but when you want to test that really cool feature you thought of last night, well—all the resources are already spoken for. Or maybe you don’t have a company or any dev resources. So you don’t even have those pretty dog portraits. But you have this idea you want to validate because you’re pretty sure it could be a billion-dollar product. 

Sounds familiar? Welcome to my world. In “Product on a shoestring”, I’ll talk about my experience as the poorest guy in the richest orgs, explore different techniques on how to push your product forward even when resources are scarce, and how to use the results to get more resources than the dog-portrait illustrator.  

Shahar Markovitch || GM New Products & Strategy, Simply
Shahar Markovitch
GM New Products & Strategy
Simply

Product discovery on steroids: Building things that don’t scale is the fastest way to scale

Simply’s (formerly Joytunes) strategy is creating a single household subscription (similar to Netflix or Spotify) that helps people with their creative hobbies and passions. We started with teaching piano and guitar but are expanding to more and more domains. At the heart of our competitive advantage is the “secret sauce” of building amazing products that users love and discuss. Products that have a deep emotional and magical core, making complex things (like learning to play) simple. The presentation will share key elements of our “secret sauce” through the story of launching Simply Sing: our new singing app, which was done in record time, and is delivering great value. The app helps people who like to sing by adapting songs to their voice and giving them feedback and guidance on how to sing better.

We completed the initial discovery within ~6 weeks and identified a new innovative opening in the market with limited competition.  A team of 5 people launched the app within three months after discovery and then continued to evolve the app at a rapid pace. The app received extremely high user ratings (in the store, through surveys and interviews). It achieved “hot app” status within three months and was featured by apple. We improved our core KPI (D2 retention) by 50% and got 150K downloads with almost no marketing.

Dotan Egozi || Product Lead, Monday
Dotan Egozi
Product Lead
Monday

How we delivered a year-long project in 3 months and doubled our PMO product sales.

When we think of execution, we often think of resources, but it’s not always the case. When we wanted to build our Gantt chart, we had a huge opportunity and a very small team — so it was time for us to get creative. Sound familiar? 

In this lecture, we’ll cover practical tools we picked up that helped us motivate our team, bring real business impact early into the project, and create a culture of fast delivery. 

Uri Nativ || CPO and Co-founder, Torii
Uri Nativ
CPO and Co-founder
Torii

Deadlines are Dead

How can we deliver more value in a shorter time frame? While it sounds counterintuitive, you should stop considering time estimates and deadlines.

With over 20 years of experience both on the development side as well as the product side, I've seen teams spending too much time on time estimations and deadlines. Sprint planning, estimating features, creating Gantt charts, commitments to customers, and building feature-based roadmaps. Too much time is wasted on the planning and less on the actual work.

In this lecture, I'll talk about what we can do as product managers, in collaboration with the dev team, to get value out of the door quicker.  It's not the deadlines; it’s your product thinking. 

Omer Efrat || VP Product, Torq
Omer Efrat
VP Product
Torq

From Inbound to Outbound - The Rise of the Strategic Product Manager

Since 2010, I’ve been practicing product management as a product manager, a leader of PMs, and a VP of Product. Previously, I worked as a developer for seven years. One could say I’ve had a very intimate view of the creation and evolution of the PM role, particularly in Israel.  

Product management initially evolved from various roles, including project managers and system analysts. In fact, for many years, product management positions were part of the engineering organization. Over time, the role evolved beyond an engineering execution role to the business side.

Generally speaking, many organizations divide their product management practice into two types of PMs: Inbound and Outbound. Inbound PMs were responsible for the technical execution, with titles such as Technical PM, Product Owner, Program Manager, etc. In contrast, outbound PMs spent most of their time with sales teams, customers, support, etc. Many companies also adopted hybrid models, such as the Full-Stack Product model, which designates the responsibility of a particular part of a product to a PM but with a more balanced investment of inbound and outbound work.  

The approach we’ve adopted at Torq, which is becoming more commonplace industry-wide, leans heavily towards the outbound approach. Most product management resources are invested in the strategic challenges of building a company and its product, leaving the engineering execution to software engineers. The approach one chooses impacts how to build both product and engineering teams and, more or less, the entire company. In my session, I will demonstrate the essence of this approach, what I call “Strategic Product Management”, and explain how it enabled Torq to quickly reach product-market-fit.

Eyar Zilberman || Chief Product Officer, Datree
Eyar Zilberman
Chief Product Officer
Datree

How working as a PI made me a better CPO

In the past, I worked as a PI (private investigator), and in the last few years, I realized that product management is quite similar in obtaining data about your users/suspects.

In both cases, you must perform out-of-the-box thinking to reach the relevant people and data.
Because it can take time to discover, research, and digest data, there is always a conflict between trying to move fast and making a data-driven decision.
In my talk, I will give practical tips and showcase examples of how I was able to gather data in less time to make the right decisions.

Adi Dagul || Senior Product Manager, Bizzabo
Adi Dagul
Senior Product Manager
Bizzabo

Turning Sales & Product Management Relationship Failures into Growth Opportunities

Product managers & sales relationships may have inherent challenges. In this talk, we'll see why some of the common failures are actually opportunities that we, as product managers, and our product can benefit from. Relevant to any startup/ company with a sales organization, both in B2B and B2B2C products.

Roee Peled || VP Product, 888
Roee Peled
VP Product
888

Adopting a customer 'Closeness' mindset

Being a user of your product can be a huge business upside and a great advantage for Product Managers. The more you can use your product regularly and experience it as a user, the better. But what if this is a hard target to achieve? How can you be in tune with your users and design the best product and journeys when you cannot put yourself in your user’s shoes?

In this case, relying on very close communication with your users is the next best thing.

How do you embed a customer insight approach in your product decision-making processes?

How can you adopt a customer ‘closeness’ mindset within a business?

How can you use customer insight to win in product?

In this session, Roee Peled, 888 VP Product, will take us through the journey towards a customer insight led organization and the tools Product Manager can adopt to become more attentive to their customers’ needs.

Marty Cagan || Partner at Silicon Valley Product Group
Marty Cagan
Partner at Silicon Valley Product Group

10 Major Misconceptions About Product at Startups

Itai Tomer || VP Products, HolistiCyber
Itai Tomer
VP Products
HolistiCyber

Neural Product Management

In the realm of AI and Neural Networks, a new art is born: a product manager that leads stochastic products where features work randomly. Product management of “inconsistent done criteria”; Release dates defined by the “learning AI Model” and not engineers; and delivery of amazing features - as long as customers use the same data that “The Model” used.

Today, almost every product should add AI capabilities, and this is not yet another technology and engineering problem but rather a new way of product management:

From managing teams, people, tasks, requirements, stories, and customer satisfaction – the new product manager now needs to manage an artificial intelligent creature.

In this presentation, we will discuss how to work with our new AI colleague (aka “The Model”), where the solution is probably: to develop an AI (Neural Network) stochastic product management methodology.