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The Product Roast Podcast

Podcast by Metin Arkanoz

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Fresh product management insights, served hot. Candid takes on AI strategy, growth frameworks, and PM career moves that actually matter. Your weekly ritual for building better products. theproductroast.substack.com

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jakson Hold Up! Don’t We Actually Need More PMs, Not Less? 🤔 kansikuva

Hold Up! Don’t We Actually Need More PMs, Not Less? 🤔

Greetings from a another Sunday and I hope you are doing well, all The Product Roast subscribers—if your coffee’s ready, let’s get started to discuss today’s topic. I know many of you, whether early in your product career or feeling passionate about product management in college, are feeling anxious and uncertain about the dawn of AI in our industry. The question of where to start, how to proceed, and whether there’s a place for humans in the product world are more top-of-mind than ever. Today, let’s cut through those worries with a clear-eyed look at the market, and then I’ll share why I believe the future needs more PMs - not less, even if that idea seems unlikely right now. First, Let’s Take A Look into PM Job Market as October 2025 Entry-level product manager job postings have crashed to a five-year low. AI can generate research summaries, draft specs, and manage backlogs faster than ever, sometimes in minutes, not hours. But these are some stats from one of the recent researches: * Global PM job openings actually rose 7.1% last month. * Entry and mid-level PM roles grew by 8.0%, and remote PM postings jumped 15%. The surge is real even as traditional pathways in junior roles are shrinking. (For detailed data, check out the October 2025 PM jobs report at newsletter.jamesgunaca.com [http://newsletter.jamesgunaca.com/]) What are the Root Causes of these Concerns? Honestly, I think the fear comes from what our typical workdays used to look like. Most early and junior PMs spent their time buried in operational tasks: writing docs, running & scheduling status meetings, build reviews, backlog clean-ups. When AI swooped in and started doing these tasks such as writing PRDs, designing prototypes, even generating launch visuals in minutes, the default reaction was: “Well, what’s left for me?” It’s a similar experience for developers, who, with tools like Copilot, are now shipping 55% faster. But speed and automation aren’t the end of the PM story. Actually now, they’re just at the beginning of a transition into what really matters. What the History Tells Us Okay, now hold on because I’ll quickly dive into history and try to describe what could be next based on what we faced at recent decade. A useful lens on today’s AI revolution comes not just from tech, but from medicine. In the article “Why AI Isn’t Replacing Radiologists” by The Works in progress Newsletter (see https://www.worksinprogress.news/p/why-ai-isnt-replacing-radiologists [https://www.worksinprogress.news/p/why-ai-isnt-replacing-radiologists]) the prediction that AI would make radiologist jobs obsolete is debunked by real-world data. The logic is simple: as machines become better at interpreting medical images, the need for radiologists actually increases. Why? Jevons paradox, the idea that when technology makes a resource (in this case, expert analysis and interpretation) cheaper and easier to produce, demand for that resource actually grows. When AI made image analysis dramatically faster, hospitals began to order more scans, doctors requested more second opinions, and new areas of expertise (such as advising on AI errors and guiding treatment based on automated results) blossomed. Instead of shrinking, the radiology profession grew. Tasks multiplied. The bottleneck shifted from old manual work to new forms of judgment, oversight, and high-level decision making. As following image shows; in 2025, demand for human labor is higher than ever & U.S. diagnostic radiology residency positions hit a record 1,208 (up 4% year-over-year) amid all-time-high vacancies, and radiologists earned an average $520,000, 48% more than in 2015. Let’s learn from other professions to see how automation can expand rather than erase human roles. In “When More Automation Means More Human Workers,” Deena Mousa explores how widespread ATM and spreadsheet adoption didn’t decimate bank tellers and accountants, instead, it grew demand. James Bessen’s research shows that as ATMs cut the cost of basic transactions, banks opened more branches, and teller employment rose 2% annually through the 2000s. Similarly, when spreadsheets slashed accountants’ rote work, clients demanded more complex financial analysis, expanding the profession. To see full version of the article, go https://newsletter.deenamousa.com/p/when-more-automation-means-more-human [https://newsletter.deenamousa.com/p/when-more-automation-means-more-human]. This phenomenon reflects elasticity of demand: as technology makes a service cheaper or faster, more people use it, and if that increase outpaces efficiency gains, total labor demand grows. Four conditions must hold: * Efficiency boost without full substitution * Lowered effective cost (e.g., faster turnaround of scans or reports) * Cost reduction drives higher usage * Demand growth outstrips productivity gains But automation can also substitute: if AI achieves extreme productivity or completely replaces a role, the substitution effect overwhelms scale, and employment declines as happened with bank tellers after mobile banking adoption. AI might handle most PM tasks, but if it helps them test more ideas and use data better, human judgment will matter even more. Only when AI fully subsumes every decision-making and strategic function will PM roles truly contract. Just as tellers, accountants, lawyers, and radiologists moved up the value chain into advisory, interpretation, and oversight, PMs must evolve too: from execution and documentation to curation, prioritization, and editorial judgment. To be discussed in the next section; building is easy; deciding what and why to build is where PMs make their biggest, most irreplaceable impact. Wait - Why Do We Actually Need MORE PMs? The same economic forces that drove radiology, banking, and legal services to hire more experts after automation are now at play in product management. AI tools dramatically boost efficiency, accelerating research, spec writing, and backlog prioritization, but they cannot replace the nuanced oversight and strategic vision that PMs provide. As generative models slash time-to-deliver, organizations request more prototypes, experiments, and data analyses, and easier access to insights fuels more product iterations and discovery sprints. Crucially, the surge in experiments and feature launches powered by AI outpaces the initial productivity gains, creating a “slopware” not “software” (as stated by Kapadi at https://substack.com/@makapadia [https://substack.com/@makapadia]) tsunami of really bad features & products that lack focus on customer value. Majority of app & software market is flooding with nonsense functions or services that try to solve non-existing problems. In this environment, deciding what to build and, more importantly, what not to build, becomes the most vital and valuable work. Just as radiologists shifted to interpreting AI outputs and guiding treatment, PMs must evolve from execution and documentation to curation, prioritization, and deep judgement. And more significantly, i believe this whole AI surge is a huge opportunity. Key Takeaways Yes, we definitely accept that AI is able to write specs, create visuals, code things and build prototypes etc. It means that “almost anyone” in the world can create things, because now; it is cheap, and getting better day to day. But in real economy to create real value to touch humanity’s needs, we need more people to do: * Maximizing value while navigating trade-offs * Prioritizing work by extracting genuine pain points from noise * Connecting daily product decisions to long-term business outcomes * Confidently saying “No” or “Yes” at the right moment * Exercising real judgment, never acting like a robot So, building is easier & cheaper than ever, but judgement about what worth to build or proceed with is still expensive and valuable. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit theproductroast.substack.com [https://theproductroast.substack.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]

19. loka 2025 - 10 min
jakson The Biggest Trap and Goldmine Tools for a Product Manager ⚡️ kansikuva

The Biggest Trap and Goldmine Tools for a Product Manager ⚡️

Greetings from a sunny Sunday and I wish you all have a good day, all The Product Roast subscribers—if your coffee’s ready, let’s dive in this week’s topic. During my first few weeks on the job as product manager for 3 different B2B SaaS products, I realized that I’ve spent countless hours context-switching between roadmaps, customer feedback, sales supported demos and campaign decks & many more of these. Frustrated by lost time and fragmented focus, I looked for solutions, and end up with a working solutions which I am still using: some tools to complete mundane tasks & crafting dedicated Perplexity “spaces” that remember every detail so I don’t have to. Here’s how this experiment transformed my daily grind and how it can do the same for you. But first, let me quickly talk about one of the biggest traps for product people. What is the biggest trap for a Product Manager in a random day? The answer varies by company and role, but one obstacle surfaces again and again: context switching. Managing three products means hopping between roadmaps, decks, pre-sales demos, and user-feedback evaluations & each handoff costing you minutes, if not hours, as you re-orient yourself and hunt down files. While note-taking and to-do lists help preserve context, they don’t restore the focus you lose with every switch. How to Minimize Context Switching: The Strategic Foundation Before diving into AI solutions, let’s tackle the underlying problem through proven methodologies. A research shows that context switching costs product managers up to 40% of their daily productivity. The good news? Strategic workflow design can dramatically reduce these costs. These are some methodologies I find useful and use in my routines: Task Batching: Group similar tasks, e.g., schedule all customer-feedback reviews or roadmap meetings consecutively to stay in one cognitive mode. Protected Focus Blocks: Reserve uninterrupted time and silence notifications; even brief alerts can derail focus for nearly 23 minutes. Avoid Open-Ended Meetings: Make sure ever meeting you attend is set with clear agenda and previously determined time box. Avoid running out of these borders. Next Day Quick To-Dos: Keep very simple “to be done” tasks each formed with max 5-6 words to avoid oversight in the next morning. So far; we’ve focused on some ways to reduce inefficiency by minimizing context switching. But even with these habits, there’s a limit to what human workflow optimization can achieve alone. That’s where AI comes in and seamlessly managing shifting contexts to make your productivity smarter and increase efficiency. Why we can no longer accept “wasted” hours, even though many PMs used to work this way? Minutes, above inefficiencies caused, add up, and in today’s landscape, lost time equals lost competitive edge. The AI revolution isn’t optional; it’s the new baseline for PM efficiency. Three forces make rapid adoption essential: * C-Level Mandate: Executive leadership now views AI as the quickest way to cut headcount and boost output. A single mandate “Deploy AI or reduce staff” can derail a team if you haven’t proven its ROI. * Competitive Market Race: Industry peers already use AI to personalize outreach, automate competitive monitoring, and accelerate feature prototyping. Fall behind, and your product risks becoming invisible against faster, smarter rivals. * Data Moat Rush: Most B2B firms sit on untapped CRM logs, support tickets, and usage analytics. AI transforms this mountain of unstructured data into white-space insights, unlocking revenue streams worth millions, opportunities your competition will seize if you don’t. In short, continuing to operate under old school paradigms is like signing up for a Formula 1 race on a skateboard & you’ll never keep pace. Embracing AI to eliminate wasted hours is no longer a “nice to have,” but the difference between leading the pack and getting lapped. So, how can we survive in that race as product people? Do not worry, I’ll be sharing a few use cases about how you can re-shape your workflows in daily basis. This week’s experiment: building product-based spaces in Perplexity that serve as AI co-pilots for every offering. Building Your PM Spaces in Perplexity Seed each space with: * Annual Goals & KPIs: Keeps AI aligned with strategic outcomes. * Feature Specs & Roadmap Milestones: Ensures feasibility and timing accuracy. * GDPR-Compliant Decks & Landing-Page References: Prevents hallucinations and compliance issues. * Customer Personas: Grounds AI outputs in real user needs and contexts. * Competitor Profiles & Pricing Sheets: Powers instant SWOT analyses and feature-gap spotting. * Content Libraries & Style Guides: Guarantees brand-consistent messaging and tone. Once configured, your AI space tirelessly: * Sifts support tickets, survey responses, and meeting notes. * Prioritizes top pain points and feature requests. * Generates campaign copy, roadmap benchmarks, and PRD drafts on demand. Here is a quick sample: You are the AI co-pilot for . Aim: Provide strategic insights, creative drafts, and data-driven recommendations that align with our goals and constraints. Context: Annual goals & KPIs: Feature specs & roadmap milestones: GDPR-compliant decks & landing-page references: Customer personas & journey maps: Competitor profiles & pricing sheets: Content libraries & style guides: Resources: [] [] Instruction: When I ask a question, reference only the assets above and never hallucinate. Always cite sources by name (e.g., “According to our Q3 survey, 42% of users requested…”). Begin each response with a concise summary of the top three insights you see across these materials. Following image shows how you can edit fields for a Perplexity Space: Beyond Perplexity spaces, here’s the toolkit I rely on to simplify routine PM tasks: * Perplexity → Deep market research; PBI, task, or bug creation; campaign content; roadmap benchmarking; and turning customer feedback into feature PRDs. Also used for crafting tailored customer emails. * Lovable → Rapid landing-page and UI mock-ups & ideal for low-complexity feature explorations. * Jitter → Quick marketing asset generation to spark the design team’s creativity. * Zapier → Automated context briefs for demos: pulls relevant customer profile review notes into my inbox, streamlining pre-sales prep. * Canva → Instant creation of images, social-media posts, and templates for PDF feature announcements. * Figma + FigJam AI → Clustering product ideas, mapping roadmaps, building campaign knowledge bases, and assembling quick presentation decks. * MS Teams Meeting Notes → Automated extraction of action items and follow-up prompts. * Notion → Knowledge base for my prompt library. * Google AI Studio → Creating best quality images for any purposes. By combining these tools with purpose-built AI spaces, you’ll transform fragmented tasks into a cohesive, context-rich workflow—and finally reclaim your creative bandwidth. So, start today by crafting your AI co-pilots. Master your workflows, reclaim the hours you’ve lost, and invest that time in strategic initiatives that delight your users like never before. That’s this week’s roast. Remember that there’s no better moment than now to build something people truly want. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit theproductroast.substack.com [https://theproductroast.substack.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]

12. loka 2025 - 9 min
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