I’m starting to wonder whether the current focus on Product Operating Models is a distraction from the real opportunity of applying Product Thinking.
The whole conversation is about empowered product teams. There’s minimal conversation about what’s the product. Models inspired by Silicon Valley Big Tech companies focus on tech-heavy products.
But what if the product is the business format?
In E-Myth Revisited, Micael Gerber talks about developing your business as if you’re preparing to make it a franchise (meaning the business format is systemized to the point that it is a product in and of itself).
Melissa Chi, a Product Leader who transitioned into a wider COO role, talks about how her organization realized that the operational side of the business is also worth treating as a product. This makes so much sense, yet it is still uncommon in the product organizations I’ve seen.
Business Leaders at a large FinTech already consider themselves owners and developers of the real business product.
They are somewhat confused by the fact that there’s now an additional product—the technology product (an artifact of a product operating model transformation driven by the technology organization).
Here’s my suggestion:
When considering your product portfolio and where to apply a product operating model…
Think about everything involved in creating the customer experience as the product.