Product Evangelist, Amplitude The Beautiful Mess Newsletter
JAN 15 2023
Core Principle
The Reverse Anna Karenina
"Dysfunctional companies are all the same. High-performing companies can be vastly, vastly different from each other." — John Cutler
Anti-patterns are universal and predictable
Excellence has infinite, context-specific paths
Copying another team's process won't copy their results
Context changes everything — no universal recipe
Framework
5 Traits of the Highest-Performing Product Teams
Key insight
Each trait can be achieved in wildly different ways — humble servant leader OR dominant sparring partner, both produce great teams. There is no single recipe, only coherence between beliefs and actions.
Coherence: Funding, incentives, org structure, and technical architecture must all support strategy — brilliant people fail without this alignment
Strong opinions: Stubborn on core beliefs, flexible on tactics — the Jeff Bezos "today's success was set in motion 3 years ago" mentality
Product craft belief: An almost irrational conviction that the 9-craft product beats the 7-craft product — no spreadsheet can justify this leap of faith, but it defines the best teams
Coherent leadership: Words match actions — the company that says "we empower teams" but doesn't destroys trust faster than anything
Contextual skills: Not just generic B2B SaaS experience, but skills tuned to the specific messy problem at hand
Cutler's meta-observation
After 800+ one-on-ones and 400+ workshops: high performance is not a state you achieve. It's a continuum you navigate — teams rise and fall just like people do in their personal lives.
The Skill FormulaSkill = Knowledge × Practice mediated by environment, habits & motivation
Most product advice delivers knowledge. But knowledge without reps through the loop just beats PMs up. The advice industry creates impostor syndrome faster than capability.
We work in complex adaptive systems: Teams inside companies inside industries — non-linear, interdependent, never closed. A butterfly flap creates a tornado.
Context-free advice backfires: Frameworks applied out of context can be worse than doing nothing at all
Just-in-time learning: Save content for when you need it — you'll absorb it 10x better when you have a live problem to attach it to
Big companies face real inertia: Annual planning cycles, zero execs who've shipped product, an IT industrial complex — this isn't laziness, it's physics
Create bastions for reps: Can't transform the whole company? Create one pod that goes through the full loop: strategy → model → measure → bet → learn
The attribution trap
High-performers underestimate how much luck enabled them. Non-Silicon-Valley teams overestimate their structural drag. Both distortions are costly — challenge your happy place.
Playbook
Get the Loop Going — Even at a Slow Company
When told "just build X," write the one-pager where X is one of five options anyway — build your portfolio regardless
Ask the exec: "What would we observe if this is working vs. not?" — you've introduced metrics without a battle
Document assumptions and risks even when leadership won't look at them — you're practicing the motion and building judgment
Don't wait 2 years then shrug "it was a mess" — that honors neither you nor your work
Use ChatGPT to stress-test your worldview: "Interpret this situation through 5 different worldviews" — instant diverse perspectives on any problem
Interview question to steal
After a candidate answers a behavioral question, ask: "Now answer it from the perspective of the coworker you just mentioned." Self-awareness — and hero complex — revealed instantly.
Book recs from CutlerHow to Measure Anything (Hubbard) · Accelerate (Forsgren, Kim & Humble) · User Story Mapping (Jeff Patton)
Contrarian
Product Team Myths John Cutler Wants Dead
✗High-performing teams all work the same wayINSTEAD →✓ Dysfunction has one face. Excellence has a thousand. Copying Figma's rituals at your 10,000-person bank will not make you Figma.
✗Hiring the best people guarantees successINSTEAD →✓ Geniuses fail when strategy and structure are misaligned. You can fill a room with A-players and still produce nothing — environment mediates talent.
✗Product sense is innate — you have it or you don'tINSTEAD →✓ "Product sense" is just unnamed skills: systems thinking, decision-making under uncertainty, facilitation. Unpack it and you can actually teach it.
✗Only Silicon Valley companies build great productsINSTEAD →✓ Anheuser-Busch's BEES app. AppFolio. Nubank at 15 people. The world is full of humble, excellent teams you've never heard of — seek them out.