106 articles in Product Strategy
Al Ries and Jack Trout's positioning theory, first published in 1981, remains the foundation of modern marketing strategy. Positioning is not what you do to a product — it is what you do to the mind of the prospect. This article distills the core principles: owning a word in the customer's mind, the power of being first, the ladder of categories, and repositioning the competition. It updates these principles for the digital age where attention is scarcer than ever and demonstrates how startups and incumbents alike can win the positioning game.
Network effects — where a product becomes more valuable as more people use it — have created the most valuable companies of the digital age. This article provides a taxonomy of network effects: direct (telephone), indirect (operating systems), two-sided (marketplaces), and data network effects (machine learning). It examines the dynamics of network effect businesses including tipping points, winner-take-most markets, multi-homing, and defensive moats. Case studies span from Metcalfe's original law to modern platform businesses.
A strong brand is not a logo or a tagline — it is a promise consistently kept that creates emotional resonance with customers. This article explores the strategic foundations of brand building: brand positioning, brand architecture, brand personality, and brand equity measurement. It draws on examples from Patagonia, Nike, Apple, and Muji to show how brands become cultural forces. The framework covers the full brand strategy process from customer insight through brand expression to brand management over time.
Pricing is not a financial exercise — it is a psychological one. This article explores the cognitive mechanisms that shape how customers perceive prices: anchoring (the first number sets the frame), charm pricing (why $9.99 feels much cheaper than $10), decoy pricing (how a third option changes the choice between two), and the price-quality heuristic (why higher prices can increase perceived quality). It covers pricing strategies for SaaS, marketplaces, and consumer products, with guidance on price testing methodology and common pricing mistakes that leave revenue on the table.
Netflix attributes over 80% of content watched to its recommendation system. This case study traces the evolution from the Netflix Prize competition to modern deep learning approaches, examining how product and engineering teams collaborate to personalize content for 230 million subscribers across diverse global markets.
Slack's journey from a failed gaming company called Tiny Speck to a $27.7 billion acquisition by Salesforce is one of the most instructive product-market fit stories in tech. This case study examines how Stewart Butterfield's team identified an internal communication tool as the real product, and the deliberate strategies they used to validate and grow it.
TikTok's recommendation algorithm is widely considered the most sophisticated content discovery system ever built for consumer social media. This case study examines how the For You Page works, how the product team balances engagement metrics with user wellbeing, and what the algorithmic feed model means for the future of content platforms.
Basecamp's Shape Up methodology rejected both waterfall and traditional agile in favor of six-week cycles with fixed time and variable scope. This case study examines how Jason Fried and DHH built a profitable, calm company by making strong product bets, avoiding feature bloat, and choosing profitability over growth at all costs.
Tesla fundamentally changed the automotive industry by treating cars as software platforms. This case study examines how over-the-air updates, vertically integrated software, and a direct-to-consumer model allowed Tesla to iterate faster than traditional automakers, and the product management challenges of building software for safety-critical hardware.
Miro grew from a niche whiteboarding tool into the default visual collaboration platform for distributed teams. This case study examines how the company expanded from design workshops to a horizontal platform serving product, engineering, and business teams, and how strategic integrations and an extensibility model drove enterprise adoption during the remote work revolution.
Canva made professional design accessible to non-designers by reimagining the creation interface. This case study explores how the team developed drag-and-drop interactions, smart templates, and AI-powered features that lower the skill barrier while still providing enough depth for professional use, growing to over 130 million monthly active users.
WhatsApp reached two billion users with a remarkably small team and an almost ascetic approach to features. This case study examines how the product philosophy of 'no ads, no games, no gimmicks' guided every decision, how the team prioritized reliability and speed over feature richness, and why restraint became the company's greatest competitive advantage.
Instagram's 2016 shift from chronological to algorithmic feed was one of the most controversial product decisions in social media history. This case study examines the data behind the decision, how the team iterated on ranking signals, managed user backlash, and ultimately increased engagement while setting a template that every social platform would follow.
A guide to the key metrics every startup should track, organized by stage, with explanations of why vanity metrics are dangerous and how to focus on what drives the business.
Airtable created a new product category between spreadsheets and databases by making relational data accessible to non-technical users. This case study examines how the team identified the gap, designed an interface that feels familiar yet powerful, built a template marketplace that accelerated adoption, and navigated the challenge of being a horizontal platform.
Loom embedded virality into its core product loop: every video shared introduced a new potential user to the platform. This case study examines how the team designed sharing mechanics, optimized the viewer-to-creator conversion funnel, and positioned async video as a productivity tool rather than a social feature, leading to acquisition by Atlassian.
Twilio became the standard for communications APIs by organizing its entire product development process around developer needs. This case study examines how the company hires product managers who can code, runs internal hackathons that become real products, and uses developer evangelism not just for marketing but as a core product feedback mechanism.
Revolut grew to over 30 million customers by shipping features at a pace unheard of in banking. This case study examines how the fintech challenger built an experimentation culture, used feature flags and gradual rollouts to manage risk in a regulated industry, and applied product-led growth principles to financial services.
Calendly turned the simple act of scheduling a meeting into a billion-dollar product category. This case study examines how founder Tope Awotona identified a universal pain point, designed an interface that eliminated scheduling friction, and grew primarily through product-led virality where every meeting invitation doubled as a marketing touchpoint.
Vercel built a billion-dollar business around developer experience, making deployment as simple as a git push. This case study examines how the company created a tight feedback loop between its open-source framework (Next.js) and its commercial platform, and how the DX-first approach to product development attracted a massive developer community.