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Lenny's Knowledge Sketch · Product Vision

Crafting a Compelling
Product Vision

Ebi Atawodi
Director of Product, YouTube Studio
(ex-Uber, Netflix)
DEC 3 2023
Core Concept

Clarity & Conviction:
The PM's Craft

CLARITY see the problem CONVICTION own the answer PM CRAFT = CLARITY + CONVICTION
"Product management is clarity and conviction. You find the problem, you own the answer. Everything else is just execution."
  • Clarity = sifting out the noise to expose the core problem
  • Conviction = a felt sense of how the world should be
  • Conviction without clarity is wishful thinking
  • Clarity without conviction is analysis paralysis
Framework

The Vision Trifecta: Empathize → Create → Evangelize

EMPATHIZE understand CREATE the vision (the big bet) EVANGELIZE align & sell
4 Elements of a Good Vision
  • 1.Lofty — exciting enough to get out of bed for
  • 2.Realistic — within reach, not sci-fi
  • 3.Tech-agnostic — free from today's limitations
  • 4.Problem-grounded — rooted in a real, potent user pain
3 Ways to Tell the Vision Story
  • Mad Libs: "Once upon a time… one day… as a result…" — hero's journey for products. End with how you left the world changed.
  • Future Article: Write the TechCrunch headline as if it already shipped. Forces you to name the actual impact — not a press release, a headline.
  • Visualize It: App store screenshots, post-it sketches, designer mocks — a picture beats a thousand words. No designer is not an excuse.
Vision vs Mission Vision = the picture of the destination (a city without parking). Mission = the purpose for the journey (make transport reliable for everyone). Don't confuse them — and every PM at every level needs both.
Deep Dive

The Empathize Playbook & The Narrative Structure

  • Dog food + cat food: Use your own product AND your competitors' products — both are non-negotiable. Most PMs skip one.
  • Top 10 Things You Should Know: A living doc every PM maintains — the 10 most painful user + product problems, stack-ranked, updated quarterly. Not a roadmap: a problem inventory.
  • Bring stakeholders in early: Give marketing, ops, and support the same "10 things" template before strategy. They surface reality you'll never see from a dashboard.
  • 3-Day Strategy Sessions: Day 1 = insights only (understand work); Day 2 = strategy (which problems, which order); Day 3 = big rocks (3–5 things that unlock the vision).
  • Infrastructure IS the product: Tech debt is product debt. If you can't build a skyscraper on a shaky foundation, own the foundation.
"The clarity of the problem is your north star. It doesn't move while everything else can."
The Narrative Structure (Living 2-Pager)

Every PM's evergreen strategy doc has three parts:

  • 1.Insights — the top problems (why we exist). The "why."
  • 2.Strategy / Approach — which problems to focus on and in what order. The "how."
  • 3.Big Rocks — 3–5 deliverables that move the needle. Everything else is sand around the rocks.
3 Concentric Circles of Evangelism
  • Core team first — they're sailing the boat with you. Present multiple times; let the tea bag steep.
  • Stakeholders next — they contributed insights; now they see the vision built on their input. Humans love being heard.
  • Leadership last — go as big as possible; let them pull you back. Don't pre-censor.
Tactics

PM Tactics from Uber, Netflix & YouTube

  • Know your EM's birthday, work anniversary, and career goal — the human behind the role is the relationship
  • When someone brings "Option A vs B" without a recommendation, send them back — your job is conviction, not consensus-making for others
  • Never peanut-butter resources across 20 things — pick 3–5 big rocks; everything else is sand that fills in around them
  • Use "How might we…" as the fertile question — it opens brainstorm, not debate
  • A vision that needs rewriting every year was never a real vision — true visions last 3–5 years minimum
  • Write, don't deck. Two-page written docs beat 50-slide presentations for forcing clarity
Product sense vs product logic There are four pillars of PM: product sense, leadership, execution, and technical ability. It is not product logic — it is product sense. A feeling refined by exposure to great products and relentless curiosity.
Contrarian

Vision & PM Myths Ebi Rejects

Vision is a senior leadership exercise INSTEAD → Every PM at every level needs a vision. A pilot without a destination is just burning fuel. If you're an L4, you still need to know where you're going.
Let data and research tell you what to build INSTEAD → If an AI could read your research and write the PRD, you haven't done your job. Research updates your mental model — your judgment makes the call. That's the irreplaceable PM skill.
Great PMs are liked by everyone on the team INSTEAD → "I don't optimize to be liked. I optimize to be loved." Love means extending yourself for someone's growth — hard feedback, hard truths, real care. Liked is comfortable. Loved builds great products.
Skip the sketch — get a designer to mock it up INSTEAD → "No designer" is not an excuse. Start with post-it notes and rectangles. The act of sketching forces clarity. Designers see the rough version and make it better — but you have to start.
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