Hot Tech Career: Product Management


Product management is the closest to “owning” anything in a tech company. As a product manager you are responsible for the overall product feature set, development, design as well as the business metrics—competitive landscape, customer acquisition, how to market and sell the product.
It also touches all parts of the organization. Product managers work with engineering, design, sales, marketing and executive management. The product management role as a result is a great career path towards a CEO role—especially with a startup.
It is a highly sought after skill set and hard to find people with the right experience.
I had the great opportunity to interview Larry Cornett a very accomplished product executive. He was most recently VP of consumer products for Yahoo, and has worked with the biggest and best consumer and internet companies such as eBay, Apple and IBM. He is currently the CEO of Brilliant Forge focused on Product and Design advisory services for Fortune 500 companies and startups.
He has hired some of the best product talent and he says most product managers come into this line of work with an MBA. An MBA comes in handy for all the business things that are required with the job (mentioned above). A technology understanding is not necessary but can be very helpful. If you don’t have that technical degree, you will need to “learn enough to be dangerous”.
Here below is my interview with Larry, he address so of the key question such as what are the entry points for product management, skills required, challenges and growth potential.
Want to find out more about this career—Larry recommends:
How To Create Products Customers Love
TED
TechCrunch
Techmeme

Hot Tech Career: User Interface Design


User Interface design or UI design as it is often referred to, involves designing online and offline products in a way that makes them easy to use. It is one of the most in-demand careers in technology, and the demand for it will be growing as more things go on-line. UI design is a vital part of any product development and critical to product success. It can be the interface on your microwave, or the dashboard of your car and of course all online software design involves a UI designer.It’s importance is underlined by an article titled “The $300 million Button“.

UI design is the combination of the arts and analytical thinking; it uses both sides of your brain.

I had the opportunity to interview Mathew Holloway a renowned UI Designer in the Silicon Valley to understand UI design and its future prospects.
According to Matt, UI design involves a study of color, composition, typography, Human factors, psychology and cognitive thinking. He also believes that UI design evolves by the generational needs. For example the Gen-Y are more familiar with technology and devices that previous generation so they will design products with more graphics and gesture based.
He keeps up with UI trends by reading blogs such as boxesandarrows, core77 and stylistically stays in touch with street art and urban fashion in San Francisco mission district.
Matt says a good UI designer comes with an attitude it is about making things easier for the user and design is not “forced” onto the user.
He suggests the must reads on UI design:
Sketching—Bill Buxton
Desgin of Everyday things—Don Norman
Don’t Make me Think—Steve Krug
Design Interactions —Bill Moggridge

Green Jobs Academy


Green Job Academy provides an opportunity for employment for the large segment of unemployed on welfare. I had the pleasure of interviewing Karen Fullerton who is the Co-Creator of Green Jobs Academy and partner at ILM Group focused  on recruiting for the Cleantech industry. Karen says it is truly wonderful that Green jobs unlike other sector jobs cover the entire gamut of jobs for folks with minimum education to the Harvard MBA.

Find Solutions to Humanity’s Hardest Challenges

Singularity University” is where students from multiple disciplines and across the world come together to for a very lofty and delightful goal–finding solutions to humanity’s hardest challenges. Singularity had it’s first set of students last year and each and every one of them went on to do great things after the program.

The kinds of problems we are talking about here are:
Solving the AID epidemic
Creating habitat on another solar system

One of the co-founders put it like this,” attitude and approach to problems is everything” He completely goes against Murphy’s Law and states:

Go-Giver


A recent publication and best seller by Bob Burg and David Mann left me feeling good and empowered! The book takes you through a very engaging story of a “Joe” who is a “go-getter”. Joe is desperate to land a key sale at the end of a bad quarter and he is introduced to “Pindar” a worldly and wise advisor who takes Joe under his wing and introduces him to five “go-givers”. These “go-givers’ are highly successful individuals and built their success of the principle of giving. Joe applies each of their principles and opens himself up to the power of giving.