Product Management

Strategy, delivery, analytics, tools, and career guides for product managers building and shipping what users actually need.

About this domain

What This Domain Covers

Product management is the discipline of deciding what to build, getting it shipped, and measuring whether it worked. This domain follows that workflow: Strategy covers discovery, vision, prioritization frameworks like RICE and Kano, and go to market planning. Delivery covers the artifacts that turn strategy into working software: roadmaps, PRDs, user stories, backlogs, MVPs, and release management. Analytics covers the metrics PMs track: NPS, pirate metrics, churn, and retention.

The Tools section reviews software that product teams use alongside or instead of ClickUp, including Productboard, Aha!, Jira Product Discovery, and Airfocus. Roles profiles every PM title from Associate PM to CPO with salary data, skills, and career paths. Certifications covers CSPO, SAFe PO, and Product School credentials. Resources rounds out with books, courses, and podcasts.

How It Is Organized

The seven subcategories follow the PM workflow: what to build (Strategy), how to build it (Delivery), whether it worked (Analytics), what software to use (Tools), career progression (Roles and Certifications), and further learning (Resources). If a concept spans strategy and delivery, it lives where users search for it most.

Every entity passes the ClickUp connection test: the page can naturally show how the concept works in ClickUp without forcing it. Concepts that fail this test, like design thinking or competitive analysis, are deferred rather than rejected. They will be built when the domain has enough authority to rank for higher difficulty keywords.

Boundaries

Sprint planning, Agile, and Gantt charts live in Project Management. Task prioritization lives in Task Management. SWOT analysis and quality assurance live in Operations. Personal productivity techniques like the Eisenhower Matrix live in Productivity. Cross domain metrics like CLV, CAC, and CRO are deferred as marketing and finance concepts, not PM specific ones.

Common Questions About Product Management

What is product management?
Product management is the discipline of deciding what a product should do, aligning teams to build it, and measuring whether it delivers value. PMs sit at the intersection of business strategy, user experience, and engineering, owning the product roadmap and prioritization decisions without directly managing the people who build it.
What is the difference between product management and project management?
Product management decides what to build and why. Project management decides how to deliver it on time and on budget. A product manager owns the roadmap and prioritization. A project manager owns the schedule, resources, and risk. Many organizations need both; some combine them into one role.
What skills do product managers need?
Core skills include user research, data analysis, prioritization, roadmap communication, and stakeholder management. Technical literacy matters more than coding ability. The most effective PMs combine strategic thinking with the ability to write a clear PRD and make trade off decisions under uncertainty.
Do I need a certification to become a product manager?
No. Most PMs break in through adjacent roles like engineering, design, or business analysis. Certifications like CSPO or Product School credentials can help career switchers demonstrate structured knowledge, but hiring managers weight real shipping experience and structured thinking more heavily than any credential.