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Honoring President Carter’s Legacy

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President Carter with Admiral Rickover in the White House

I was very sad to hear about President Carter’s passing. When he was president, I was 6 to 10 years old, so he was the first serving president that I learned about firsthand. I remember watching him on television, and he always struck me as a very honest and kind person. As I grew older, I learned more about Carter and his strong efforts to drive peace around the world, which rightly earned him the Nobel Peace Prize.

A Connection with Carter

Carter and I share a connection to a small, relatively unknown but special organization called Naval Reactors. The easiest way I’ve found to succinctly describe Naval Reactors is “NASA for submarines.” After graduating from Northwestern, I spent five wonderful years at Naval Reactors working on nuclear submarine design.

Why Not The Best?

In 1975 when Carter was running for president, he wrote a campaign autobiography book entitled Why Not the Best? This title came directly from a haunting question that Admiral Hyman Rickover, the head of Naval Reactors, asked Carter in a job interview in 1952.

Book Cover - Why Not The Best? by Jimmy Carter

The Admiral’s Interview

After graduating from the US Naval Academy and serving as an officer aboard diesel submarines, Carter wanted to apply for Rickover’s new nuclear-powered submarine program. In the interview, Rickover asked Carter about his class standing at the Naval Academy. Carter proudly answered, “Sir, I stood fifty-ninth in a class of 820”.

Unimpressed, Rickover then asked, “Did you do your best?” Carter started to answer “Yes, sir,” but then recalled times he could have done better. Carter finally gulped and said, “No, sir, I didn’t always do my best.” Rickover looked at Carter for a long time and then asked him a question he would never forget: “Why not?” Then Rickover turned his chair around to end the interview and began working on some papers on a table behind his desk. Carter sat there several minutes as Rickover ignored him, and then Carter slowly left the room.

Every officer who wants to work in the Navy’s nuclear program has to interview with the four-star admiral in charge of Naval Reactors. After I learned that Carter had served in the nuclear Navy, I bought a copy of his book and read it, excited to learn the details of his interactions with Rickover. Carter was a very thoughtful person, as he demonstrated in the 30 plus books that he wrote, which include a novel and a book of poetry.

Admiral Rickover and President Carter

Many people aren’t familiar with Admiral Rickover, but his accomplishments are on par with tech luminaries like Steve Jobs and Elon Musk. Very early on, Rickover saw the significant potential of harnessing nuclear energy to power submarines and ships. Through his sharp intellect, technical excellence, strong leadership, hard work, and tremendous grit, he turned his vision into reality. Rickover, known as the “Father of the Nuclear Navy” created Naval Reactors and led it for over 35 years.

Rickover retired several years before I arrived at Naval Reactors, but the organization and culture he created carried on in his image. My interview with one of Rickover’s successors, Admiral DeMars, was as memorable and stressful as Carter’s interview with Rickover was, and I too left it shaken and unsure (but that is a story for another day).

Returning to Carter’s story: After his interview, despite how poorly he felt it had gone, he was selected to join Rickover’s nuclear program. Carter was on track to assume a critical position: the engineering officer for the USS Seawolf (SSN-575), one of the first two submarines that was going to operate on nuclear power, when his father died in 1953. After his father’s death, Carter’s Navy career came to an abrupt end: He chose to leave the service to take over his family’s business.

Fast forward 23 years later to 1976, and Carter was elected president of the United States. President Carter became Commander in Chief, with Admiral Rickover now ostensibly reporting up to him. The two men had a wonderful relationship of mutual respect. In fact Carter said, “Second to my own father, Rickover had more effect on my life than any other man.”

The Navy has a hard rule that no one can serve more than 30 years. Because of his great work and unique talents, the Congress routinely passed special laws to allow Rickover’s time in the Navy to be extended so he could continue serving in his post. Rickover was in the Navy for an astounding 63 years, serving under 13 different presidents. Rickover would have liked to stay in his role even longer, but he was finally forced to retire at the age of 82 by President Reagan’s administration. Jimmy Carter was the last president that supported the continued extension of Rickover’s naval career, as you can see in the tongue-in-cheek note he wrote to Rickover when he signed this photo.

A note from President Carter to Admiral Rickover

The Rickover Effect

While I never had the opportunity to meet Rickover, I feel like I know him – or at least know how his mind worked – through the strong imprint he left at Naval Reactors, which was a very special place to work. Many people involved with the Nuclear Navy have commented how Rickover impacted their lives.

Several books have been written about the amazing Rickover. I’ve made it a point to read them all and the best is probably The Rickover Effect, written by Theodore Rockwell, who worked closely with Rickover since the early days of Naval Reactors. If you want to learn more about Rickover without reading a book, you should check out this 2014 documentary about him. The main actor’s portrayal of Rickover is a bit campy, but it’s an informative and entertaining video.

The Rickover Effect Documentary

The division I worked in at Naval Reactors (called 08E) was responsible for the design of the propulsion plants for the latest fast attack submarines. One group in our division was responsible for the Los Angeles Class submarines.

Each submarine class is named after the first sub of that class. The USS Los Angeles (SSN-688), the first of its class, was commissioned in November 1976, shortly after Carter won his election. In 1977, President Carter and his wife Rosalynn joined Rickover to visit the USS Los Angeles.

President and Rosalynn Carter on the sail of the USS Los Angeles (SSN-688) in 1977

By the time I joined Naval Reactors, many Los Angeles class submarines had been built and they accounted for a large portion of our fast attack submarine fleet. The US sub featured in Tom Clancy’s The Hunt for Red October – the USS Dallas (SSN-700) – is a Los Angeles class sub.

Another group in our division, where my friends Ken Fine and Rich Shank worked, was responsible for designing the Seawolf class submarine, meant to replace the Los Angeles class submarines, whose design from the early 1970s had grown outdated.

Design of the Seawolf class started during the Cold War, and these submarines were going to be the fastest, quietest, and most capable subs the world had ever seen. When the Cold War ended, however, funding for the Seawolf Class dried up. The Navy had originally planned to build 29 Seawolf Class submarines. But due to their high cost, after the Cold War ended, only 3 Seawolf Class submarines were funded and built. The Navy’s plans were suddenly upended and it needed a new capable but lower-cost replacement for the Los Angeles Class subs. That is the submarine that I helped design, which would become the Virginia Class, starting with the USS Virginia (SSN-774). The Navy has commissioned 25 Virginia Class submarines to date, with plans to build over 60.

The five years I spent working at Naval Reactors were very formative for my career. There, I learned the art and science of how to design a technically complex product with cross functional teams. Although, I wouldn’t officially have the job title “Product Manager” until two years after I left Naval Reactors when I joined Intuit after business school, my job at Naval Reactors was basically highly technical product management.

Last summer, Naval Reactors held its 75-year reunion, which I attended. I had also attended the previous 50-year reunion a few years after I left. Yes, the organization is so long-lived that they only celebrate reunions every 25 years 😃. Turnout for the reunion was amazing, a testament to how strongly connected most people who worked at Naval Reactors feel to the organization even many years later.

At the 75-year reunion, it was an honor for me to meet the recently appointed head of Naval Reactors, Admiral Bill Houston. Admiral Houston’s distinguished Navy career started at Notre Dame’s Naval Reserve Officer Training Corps (NROTC). I have several friends from Notre Dame NROTC who knew Bill during college, so it was a special treat to attend the reunion with some of them.

The USS Jimmy Carter

Back to the Seawolf Class: Those three Seawolf subs are a rare breed of special submarine with unique capabilities. The first submarine of the class, USS Seawolf (SSN-21) bears the same name as the second nuclear powered submarine (SSN-575) – the one that Jimmy Carter was slated to be the engineering officer of before his father died.

The second submarine of the Seawolf Class is the USS Connecticut (SSN-22). Many submarines have been named after states, and Connecticut has a special place in US submarine history because it is the home of Electric Boat Division, which is one of the two remaining nuclear submarine shipyards and has a long tradition of constructing submarines for the Navy.

The third Seawolf Class submarine is the USS Jimmy Carter (SSN-23). I think it is very fitting that President Carter was honored by having one of the world’s most powerful submarines named after him. While other US presidents also served in the Navy, Carter was the only president to have qualified on submarines.

The USS Jimmy Carter was commissioned in 2005 with President Carter and his wife Rosalynn speaking at the ceremony. Carter began his speech by asking the large audience, “How many of you have had your personal life affected by Admiral Hyman Rickover? Raise your hand”. He then said, “Let me correct those who did not raise their hand.”

The USS Jimmy Carter is unique among the Seawolf subs: it is 100 feet longer than the other two due to the inclusion of an additional section – the Multi-Mission Platform. It also has special thrusters that allow it to quietly hover in place. While additional details of its unique capabilities are classified, the USS Jimmy Carter is known to be our country’s best submarine for undersea spy missions.

Here is a photo of the USS Jimmy Carter (fyi, it’s often be hard to find a good photo of a submarine since they are so long and most of the sub is usually under water).

The USS Jimmy Carter (SSN-23)

The motto of the USS Jimmy Carter is “Semper Optima” (“Always the Best”), which I think is a wonderful homage to President Carter and his life.

USS Jimmy Carter Patch

President Carter: Thank you for giving us your best. Thank you for all your service to the Navy, to the United States, and to the world. Fair winds and following seas. We will miss you.

Announcing My Second Public Workshop of 2022: May 10-12

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A group of workshop attendees raising their hands to participate and engage with Dan.I am very excited to announce my second Lean Product Management Workshop of 2022 May 10-12 from 9:00 AM to 1:00 PM PT. With covid, I have adapted my workshops to be online.

This workshop is spread out across 3 consecutive days. Each session is 3.5 to 4 hours long so that you don’t get Zoom fatigue and so you can take care of your work. Plus, this schedule promotes better absorption of the material and gives attendees time to reflect between sessions.

I’ll be sharing product management and Lean Startup advice from my book The Lean Product Playbook.
I’ll explain my Product-Market Pyramid framework, which is the foundation of my 6-step Lean Product Process for achieving product-market fit.

The Lean Product Process consists of six steps:
1. Determine your target customer
2. Identify underserved customer needs
3. Define your value proposition
4. Specify your Minimum Viable Product (MVP) feature set
5. Create your MVP prototype
6. Test your MVP with customers

I always make my workshops highly interactive with lots of discussions and Q&A. I also use real-world case studies to illustrate points. And the group exercises make it highly interactive and give you hands-on experience applying the frameworks and techniques.
Learn more and RSVP on Eventbrite.

Who should attend
Anyone involved in creating or improving a product will find this workshop valuable, including:
• Product managers
• Designers
• Developers
• Executives
• Entrepreneurs
• Marketers
• Analysts

Look forward to seeing you there!

Dan

Want to learn more about the workshop? Check out these testimonials from past attendees and hear about their experiences.

 

 

Announcing My First Public Workshop of 2022: Feb 15-17

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A group of workshop attendees raising their hands to participate and engage with Dan.I am very excited to announce my first Lean Product Management Workshop of 2022 February 15-17 from 9:00 AM to 1:00 PM PT. With covid, I have adapted my workshops to be online.

This workshop is spread out across 3 consecutive days. Each session is 3.5 to 4 hours long so that you don’t get Zoom fatigue and so you can take care of your work. Plus, this schedule promotes better absorption of the material and gives attendees time to reflect between sessions.

I’ll be sharing product management and Lean Startup advice from my book The Lean Product Playbook.
I’ll explain my Product-Market Pyramid framework, which is the foundation of my 6-step Lean Product Process for achieving product-market fit.

The Lean Product Process consists of six steps:
1. Determine your target customer
2. Identify underserved customer needs
3. Define your value proposition
4. Specify your Minimum Viable Product (MVP) feature set
5. Create your MVP prototype
6. Test your MVP with customers

I always make my workshops highly interactive with lots of discussions and Q&A. I also use real-world case studies to illustrate points. And the group exercises make it highly interactive and give you hands-on experience applying the frameworks and techniques.
Learn more and RSVP on Eventbrite.

Who should attend
Anyone involved in creating or improving a product will find this workshop valuable, including:
• Product managers
• Designers
• Developers
• Executives
• Entrepreneurs
• Marketers
• Analysts

Look forward to seeing you there!

Dan

Want to learn more about the workshop? Check out these testimonials from past attendees and hear about their experiences.

 

 

Announcing My Next Public Online Workshop: Nov 2-4

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A group of workshop attendees raising their hands to participate and engage with Dan.I am very excited to announce my next Lean Product Management workshop on November 2-4 from 9:30 AM to 1:30 PM PT. With covid, I have adapted my workshops to be online.

This workshop is spread out across 3 consecutive days. Each session is around 3.5 hours long so that you don’t get Zoom fatigue and so you can take care of your work. Plus, this schedule promotes better absorption of the material and gives attendees time to reflect between sessions.

I always make my workshops highly interactive with lots of discussions and Q&A. I also use real-world case studies to illustrate points. And the group exercises make it highly interactive and give you hands-on experience applying the frameworks and techniques. Learn more and RSVP on Eventbrite.

Look forward to seeing you there!

Dan

Want to learn more about the workshop? Check out these testimonials from past attendees and hear about their experiences.

 

 

Announcing My Next Public Online Workshop: Aug 17-19

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A group of workshop attendees raising their hands to participate and engage with Dan.

I am very excited to announce my next Lean Product Management workshop on Aug 17-19. With covid, I have adapted my workshops to be online.

This workshop is spread out across 3 consecutive days. Each session is around 3.5 hours long so that you don’t get Zoom fatigue and so you can take care of your work. Plus, this schedule promotes better absorption of the material and gives attendees time to reflect between sessions.

I always make my workshops highly interactive with lots of discussions and Q&A. I also use real-world case studies to illustrate points. And the group exercises make it highly interactive and give you hands-on experience applying the frameworks and techniques. Learn more and RSVP at https://pmworkshop.eventbrite.com.

Look forward to seeing you there!

Dan

Announcing My Next Public Online Workshop: May 11 – 13

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A group of workshop attendees raising their hands to participate and engage with Dan.

I am very excited to announce my next Lean Product Management workshop on May 11 – 13 (rescheduled from Apr 20-22). With covid, I have adapted my workshops to be online.

This workshop is spread out across 3 consecutive days. Each session is around 3 to 3.5 hours long so that you don’t get Zoom fatigue and so you can take care of your work. Plus, this schedule promotes better absorption of the material and gives attendees time to reflect between sessions.

I always make my workshops highly interactive with lots of discussions and Q&A. I also use real-world case studies to illustrate points. And the group exercises make it highly interactive and give you hands-on experience applying the frameworks and techniques.Learn more and RSVP at https://prod-mgmt.eventbrite.com

Look forward to seeing you there!

Dan

Excited to Announce My First Public Online Workshop of 2021: Feb 9 – 11

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I am very excited to announce my next Lean Product Management workshop on Feb 9 – 11. With covid, I have adapted my workshops to be online.

This workshop is spread out across 3 consecutive days. Each session is around 3 to 3.5 hours long so that you don’t get Zoom fatigue and so you can take care of your work. Plus, this schedule promotes better absorption of the material and gives attendees time to reflect between sessions.

I always make my workshops highly interactive with lots of discussions and Q&A. I also use real-world case studies to illustrate points. And the group exercises make it highly interactive and give you hands-on experience applying the frameworks and techniques.

Early bird pricing is currently available.
Learn more and RSVP at https://lean-pm.eventbrite.com

Look forward to seeing you there!

Dan

Announcing My Next Public Online Workshop: Nov 9 – 12

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I am very excited to announce my next Lean Product Management workshop on Nov 9 – 12. With covid, I have adapted my workshops to be online.

Based on feedback from attendees, this workshop is 12 hours long spread out across 4 consecutive days. Each session is around 3 hours long so that you don’t get Zoom fatigue and so you can take care of your work. Plus, this schedule promotes better absorption of the material and gives attendees time to reflect between sessions.

I always make my workshops highly interactive with lots of discussions and Q&A. I also use real-world case studies to illustrate points. And the group exercises make it highly interactive and give you hands-on experience applying the frameworks and techniques.

Learn more and RSVP at https://pmfit.eventbrite.com

Look forward to seeing you there!

Dan

Happy World Book Day! Join me in Reddit’s Product Management Book Club

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Happy World Book Day!

I recently learned on Reddit that the Product Management subreddit just started a PM Book Club. In case you didn’t already know, the first rule of PM Book Club is: You DO NOT talk about PM Book Club. Just kidding 🙂

I’m excited that the PM Book Club voted to select my book The Lean Product Playbook as their first book to read and review together. I plan to do some events with them and they’ve set up a Slack channel you can join.

Learn more and join the Reddit’s Product Management Book Club.
See you there?

The Top Product Conferences of 2019

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It’s an exciting time to work in product management. Product management continues to be one of the hottest jobs. It seems like everyone wants to become a product manager these days (even some of our developer and designer friends).

If you’re a product manager, you know how rewarding the job can be – and how challenging. To stay on top of your PM game, you need to invest time to sharpen your skills. Conferences are a great way to do that by learning from thought leaders and your peers.

As a conference speaker, I make it a point to keep track of the product conferences that are happening. Wait, what’s that? You’re too busy product managing to research them all? Don’t worry, I got your back. So just take a break from that Jira board, sit back, and relax.

Now, conference season doesn’t usually start until the spring, so I usually publish my list before any of them start. But this year some people just couldn’t wait to have their conferences. And I was very busy the first part of the year, so I’m publishing my list a bit later than usual this time around.

Each year, there are more product conferences than the year before, which is very exciting. Would you believe my list this year has 30 conferences on it? That’s up from 21 from my list last year, which is over 40% growth!

Here’s your guide to the top product conferences of 2019 (in chronological order):

February 7 – 8: Mind the Product Engage, Manchester – Mind the Product has expanded beyond their two large annual conferences to offer additional events (lucky for us!). See Singapore and Hamburg below. Learn more at https://www.mindtheproduct.com/mtpengage/manchester/

March 25 – 26: Mind the Product, Singapore – It’s great to see Mind the Product expand into Asia for the first time. Learn more at https://www.mindtheproduct.com/mtpcon/singapore/

April 10-12: Atlassian Summit, Las Vegas – Product people around the world all use Jira, Trello, and Confluence from Atlassian every day. The Atlassian Summit is a great conference to compare notes and improve how you use those tools. I had a great time speaking there this year. Learn more at https://www.atlassian.com/company/events/summit.

April 15 – 17: Industry Europe, Dublin – Industry is a great conference organized by Product Collective. They’ve consistently grown their main conference in Cleveland. Last year, they decided to expand to Europe for the first time, so this will be their second conference in Dublin. Half-day workshops are offered on the first day (I’ll be teaching one), followed by 2 days of conference. I’m excited to speak there. Learn more at http://europe.industryconference.com.

April 23: ProductCon, San Francisco – Product School entered the product conference circuit last year with 4 events in San Francisco, Silicon Valley, Los Angeles, and New York (I had a great time speaking at 2 of them). They’re back again with 4 conferences this year, and their first conference is in San Francisco. Learn more at https://www.productschool.com/productcon/san-francisco/

May 9: ProductCraft, San Francisco – Pendo hosted a new all-day product conference at the Palace of Fine Arts. The crowd was very engaged, and I had a great time speaking there. Learn more at https://events.productcraft.com/conference/

May 22 – 24: Gainsight’s Pulse Conference, San Francisco – Gainsight’s Pulse conference has grown over the years and was over 5,000 people this year (in the Moscone Center). It was great to speak there (brought back fond memories of O’Reilly’s Web 2.0 Expo that used to be held there).

May 22 – 24: Mind the Product Engage, Hamburg – This was the third time Mind the Product has held their Engage event in Hamburg. Learn more at https://www.mindtheproduct.com/mtpengage/hamburg/

March 25: Product Camp Silicon Valley, Santa Clara – Organized by SVPMA, Product Camp Silicon Valley is the longest-running Product Camp. I always enjoy speaking there. There are volunteer-driven Product Camps all over the world. To find Product Camps near you, check out http://www.productcamp.org/schedule.html.

June 6 – 7: Front Case Study Conference, Salt Lake City – Front has been hosting product & UX conferences that look pretty good twice a year for a few years now (more on their annual Workshop event below). Learn more at https://www.frontutah.com/conference/

June 17 – 18: PM Festival Singapore – Another product conference in Asia. Learn more at https://apac.productmanagementfestival.com.

June 25: ProductCon, Seattle – Product School entered the product conference circuit last year with 4 events in San Francisco, Silicon Valley, Los Angeles, and New York. They’re back again with 4 conferences this year, and their first conference is in San Francisco. Learn more at https://www.productschool.com/productcon/seattle/

July 15 – 16: Mind The Product, San Francisco – MTP San Francisco is always a fantastic event, put on by Martin Eriksson, James Mayes, Simon Cast, Janna Bastow and the rest of the awesome MTP team. The organizers curate the world’s top product speakers for a 1-day, single track conference. The venue, Davies Symphony Hall, is impressive (and the seats are comfy). And they throw a rockin’ afterparty to boot. Don’t miss the chance to hang out with 1,600 of your soon-to-be closest product pals. I had a great time giving a talk there last year. The day before the main conference, Mind the Product offers great all-day workshops (I’ll be teaching one) and a special invite-only all-day event for product leaders. Learn more at http://mtpcon.com/sf/.

August 7 – 8: Traction, Vancouver – The Traction conference may not be on your radar, but it should be, especially if your product is transitioning to the growth stage. This is their seventh year in a row, and they’re adding a Product track the day before the main conference that I’m hosting. Organizers Lloyed Lobo and Ray Walia always plan a great conference with fun networking events. Plus, Vancouver is gorgeous in August. Learn more at https://www.tractionconf.io.

August 15 – 16: ConveyUX, Boston – The ConveyUX conference has been held in Seattle for a few years now and is expanding to Boston for the first time. I look forward to speaking there. Learn more at https://boston.conveyux.com

September 9 – 11: Pendomonium, Raleigh, North Carolina – Pendo’s product helps product managers better understand their users. Pendo threw their first Pendomonium conference 2 years ago. They’re back again this year with a two-day conference. In talking with the organizers, it sounds like they try to give attendees a taste of Raleigh plus a dose of southern hospitality. Learn more at https://www.pendo.io/pendomonium/.

September 10: ProductCon New York – Product School is back in NYC again this year. Learn more at https://www.productschool.com/productcon/new-york/

September 19: Product Leader Summit, Silicon Valley – I am one of the organizers of the Product Leader Summit, which has featured top speakers like Reid Hoffman, Aaron Levie, and product execs from Facebook, Slack, and Tesla. This year’s summit, hosted by Spero Ventures, will be a similar event with top speakers and a curated audience of around 120 product leaders (the event is by invitation only; everyone has to apply to attend). View talks from past summits and learn more at https://www.productleadersummit.com.

September 23 – 25: Industry Global, Cleveland – Organized by Product Collective, this 2-day conference has been growing every year. In fact, they expanded to Dublin, Irelend, this year (see above). Organizers Mike Belsito, Paul McAvinchey, and Rebecca Feliciano do a great job bringing together lots of awesome speakers and PMs from all over. There is also an optional workshop day. Learn more at http://global.industryconference.com.

September 28: Product Camp Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania – It’s great to see a new Product Camp emerge! This will be their 2nd year in a row at Carnegie Mellon University, which offers a new MS in Product Management degree. I’ve enjoyed getting to know organizer Greg Coticchia, and it promises to be a good event. I’m excited to give the keynote talk. See yinz there? Learn more at https://www.pghpcamp.com

October 7 – 8: Amplify by Amplitude, San Francisco – Leading analytics company Amplitude hosted their first all-day product conference last year and they’re back again this year. Amplitude knows how to throw high-quality product events, so it should be good. Learn more at https://amplify.amplitude.com

October 17 – 18: MTP London – The Big Kahuna of product conferences. Mix and mingle with 1,600 other product people at London’s Barbican Centre as you learn from world-class product speakers at this single-track conference. As they would say in Hollywood, this conference has high production value. There is also an optional workshop day beforehand. Keep calm, carry on, and be sure to RSVP quickly when tickets go on sale: they usually sell out in less time than your average stand-up. Learn more at http://mtpcon.com/london/.

October 17: Leading the Product, Melbourne, & Oct 22 Sydney – Do you like product conferences? Have you been looking for a good reason to visit Australia? Brainmates puts on a great set of Leading the Product conferences in Melbourne and Sydney. I had a great time speaking there. The Brainmates team knows how to put on a great event that creates a sense of community with top speakers, enthusiastic attendees, and great venues. Learn more at https://www.leadingtheproduct.com.

October 23 – 25: Lean Startup Conference, San Francisco – If you’ve never been to the Lean Startup Conference in San Francisco, you may not know that it’s largely a product management conference. As a Lean Startup Co. Senior Faculty member, I’ve spoken at this conference several times. Most of the people I meet there are product managers, which makes sense because we’re the ones responsible for achieving product-market fit (those hypotheses aren’t going to test themselves). Learn more at https://leanstartup.co/2019-conference/.

November 5: ProductCon Los Angeles – Product School is back in Los Angeles again this year. Learn more at https://www.productschool.com/productcon/los-angeles/

November 6 – 7: Front Workshop Series, Salt Lake City – Front has been hosting product and UX conferences that look pretty good twice a year for a few years now. This Workshop event lets you choose your own 6 workshops out of 20 total over 2 days. I’m excited to check it out as I’ll be speaking there for the first time. Learn more at https://www.frontutah.com/workshops/

November 12 – 13: Women in Product, Burlingame – Last year, Women in Product grew their annual conference to over 1,000 attendees. I plan to teach a workshop there. Learn more about this year’s event at https://www.womenpm.org.

November 13 – 14: PM Festival Zurich, Switzerland – This conference in Zurich, Switzerland, has been running for several years. I’ve never been, but you can learn more at https://productmanagementfestival.com/zurich/.

November 21 – 22: Productized, Lisbon – André Marquet and his team put on a wonderful conference. I had a great time speaking there. The 2-day conference is chock full of great product speakers from around the world, and there’s an optional workshop day. Plus, Lisbon is an awesome city: do you really need an excuse to visit? Learn more at http://www.productized.co.

So, what do you think? Is that a lot of product conferences or what? Hopefully you found one or more from my list that you’re excited to attend.

Wait, what’s that? You’re still looking for more great product events? Okay, okay, I’ve got one more product event for you.

Lean Product (monthly in Silicon Valley) – If you live in the San Francisco Bay Area or are visiting, I invite you to check out my monthly Lean Product event in Mountain View. I founded it over 5 years ago and we’ve grown to over 8,000 members.

One evening a month, I host the same world-class speakers who speak at the conferences I listed above. My speakers are experts in product management, Lean Startup, UX design, analytics, growth, and marketing, and many of them have written leading books on those subjects. Past speakers include Marty Cagan, Jake Knapp, Geoffrey Moore, Ken Norton, Josh Elman, Laura Klein, Ash Maurya, Nir Eyal, Teresa Torres, Amy Jo Kim, Tony Ulwick, Hiten Shah, and Steve Portigal. Learn more at https://meetup.com/lean-product/.

You’re still here? Your thirst for knowledge is insatiable! You should definitely check out the Product Decoded podcast, then. Produced by 3 of the same folks that bring you the Product Leader Summit (Ha Nguyen, Gib Biddle, and me), Product Decoded features interviews with top product leaders: Aaron Levie from Box, Deb Liu from Facebook, Todd Yellin from Netflix, Michael Sippey from Medium, Chris Abad from UserTesting, Amanda Richardson from HotelTonight, and Justin Bauer from Amplitude. Check out Product Decoded on iTunes.

I hope you found my article helpful. I look forward to seeing you at one or more of these events!

Dan Olsen