Feb
13

John the Misunderstood Product Marketing Manager

By David Daniels on February 13, 2012

In a previous post I introduced you to John, the product marketing manager. John is very busy and has his share of frustration. Most of John’s frustration is because his role is misunderstood. Product managers think he should do one thing. Marcom another. Sales yet another.

How did John get here?

For many technology companies the job title of product marketing manager is a fairly recent addition. The job was introduced to fill a void between product management, sales, and marcom. It happens when product managers are so consumed with product development issues, they don’t have the bandwidth to work with sales or marcom. The resulting problem is a sales force that is not prepared to sell and marketing that misses the mark.

Why is John frustrated?

He is frustrated because the line between what John should do and what the product manager should do is fuzzy. One time he gets scolded because he did something the product manager felt was her responsibility. Another time he gets scolded because he didn’t do something assuming the product manager is responsible. Finger pointing is not a solution.

What is John’s role?

There are activities in the Pragmatic Marketing Framework that are about using products and there are activities that are about buying products. One way of clarifying responsibilities is to have product managers accountable for activities related to using products, and have product marketing managers accountable for activities related to buying products. Another way of looking at it is product marketing managers are experts on buyers and how they buy, and product managers are experts on products and how they solve problems.

Are you clear about your role as a product marketing manager?

Are you defining the role or waiting for someone to do it for you?

Comments

  1. John Adams says:

    Can you see me? I thought this article was actually about ME, since my name is John and I AM a Product Marketing Manager! Thanks for breaking it down into small, bite-size pieces that we all can understand!

  2. Krissy Fischer says:

    Hi David – wondering who you see as having most contact with the market? The concept I’ve heard is more the PM “listening” and PMM “speaking” to the market. This seems to differ – am I understanding incorrectly?

    • David Daniels says:

      Great question. While product marketing managers tend to spend most of their time interfacing with Marcom and Sales (the speaking to the market part), product managers should be spending time out in the wild listening to the market identifying unresolved problems. When combined this is a powerful combination that is hard to beat. Think of the PMMs as being another source of market data for PMs.

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