Archive for the ‘Mark Kromer’ category

The Smartest Guy in the Room Syndrome

August 10th, 2010

by Mark Kromer

Hey, folks, I may only be able to blog here 1-2 times a month it would like at this time, based on my new job, back with Microsoft.

But something came up the other day that I saw a lot from my first role as product manager with Microsoft. I and my colleagues referred to it as “The Smartest Guy in the Room Syndrome”.

What that refers to is that in companies like Microsoft and other very competitive, very strong technology companies, only the best are hired and only the best survive. Most of these employees came from schools or other companies where they were usually the smartest guy in the room. But when they come into Microsoft, Google, Apple, etc., they are now just a dime-a-dozen and end up competing with their peers to be the smartest guy (or gal) in the room.

It is how this manifests itself in the company’s products that I find interesting. Apple does probably the best job of sticking to consumer and customer expectations, requirements and market trends. In fact, Apple tends to lead or make the trends. Microsoft, Oracle, etc. tned to be laggards. And sometimes their products (i.e. Windows Vista) make people scratch their heads and say, “what were they thinking”?

Is ”The Smartest Guy in the Room” syndrome the cause of some of the products we see like operating systems or mobile phones or laptops that make folks with average technical compentencies quickly hit the wall? Is it because the smartest guys in the room had no trouble testing, deploying, configuring and using these products, yet they were not sufficiently measuring these products with the guys & gals who are not on the same technical competency level?

Sorry, but it beats me. But my point is this: this is where the product manager must step in & step up. It is very likely you will not be the most popular person with these technical gurus. But you will the war by winning these battles. Product managers must protect and play the part of the product owner and end-users and shield that persona from the smartest guys in the room.

Ensure that the test cases, use cases and requirements are met without requiring that your target personas have a PhD or can write Java code in their sleep. Without product managers as that buffer,  will we all suffer through many more Windows Vistas?

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Breaking apart product management

July 12th, 2010

by Mark Kromer

I had a few thoughts that I wanted to capture here @ TechProdo about product management, which I did for the past 6 years. As I now move into a field-based role in technology pre-sales, I am struck by how much these activities overlapped, particularly when I was a PM with Microsoft. Except, of course, I am now directly compensated for the pre-sales efforts!

That is, working with customers & prospects to describe roadmap, business value and propose solutions. Perform assessments, requirements analysis and ensure satisfaction with the products.

To me, a main difference is that (beyond the direct revenue responsibilities in sales) the product manager is responsible for the roadmap and must perform the analysis on the requirements and then make the tough decisions on backlogs and release mapping. The rest of the cycle is where I really enjoyed working with development, particularly Agile Scrum teams and bringing the product to market.

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Mark Changing Roles

July 12th, 2010

My apologies for not blogging here for awhile. I am taking a break from my product management ways and have moved into a field-based pre-sales role as a data platform technology specialist with Microsoft. Since I left Oracle, it’s been several weeks of transition and re-learning Microsoft technologies again, so I’ve been very busy, as you can imagine.

Len has recently started a new position, still in product management, with Comcast here in Philly. So I am hopefully that he will be able to start getting back on line to keep our technology product management community alive, well & on-going here @ TechProdo.

I do intend to continue to check-in, post, comment, etc. when I can. But I am also maintaining several other blogs now that take my time away from TechProdo and also moves me away from my concentration on agile product management, which is what I focused on with Oracle and TechProdo previously.

Best regards, Mark Kromer

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Mark is speaking at Oracle’s BIWA Wed meeting

June 20th, 2010

The Oracle special interest group for BI & data warehouse users (BIWA) is having their online session this Wednesday where Karl Prutzer and I will talk about using OBIEE to build Oracle’s P6 Analytics for Primavera. If you are interested, please join us by registering here. Thanks! Mark

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Launch of a BI application pt 2

June 17th, 2010

The past 3-4 weeks have been focused on completing the work with marketing to refine the external messaging for P6 Analytics and to validate the content of the web site and other public-facing collateral that the marketing team is publishing. The product page for the new product is available and you can see it here.

For messaging and positioning, we used the best practices that I thought were successful for BI applications at Microsoft called a messaging framework. The marketing message is for outbound messaging for the launch, but you can use your previous product version messaging for your inbound requirement analysis for the next release.

Release management was a bit of a challenge this time around because Oracle has some complexities involving dependencies from other products that must be made available as part of media packs. Additionally, the licensing model was changed from CPU to application user for this release. But once we worked through those issues, releasing was completed on time. Working in an Agile environment with stable releases after every iteration really helped us in terms of shipping the final product on time.

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Wireframes

June 11th, 2010

A co-worker @ Oracle introduced me to iPlotz (iplotz.com) as a low-cost SaaS wireframe tool. In my role as a technical product manager, working closely with development, I need to be certain that I am getting across the ideas, concepts and market or business requirements to BAs and developers. Some of this crosses over into analysis, but I would rather get it right and be successful as opposed to get too worried about organizational or office politics concerns.

Anyway, getting back to wireframes, I think that they are very effective in requirements and specifications. In fact, my personal top 3 favorite techniques in describing systems & software solutions are (not necessarily in this order) wireframes, UML and BPMN. So to stick with wireframes just for this posting, I wanted to throw some props at iplotz. Especially for iPhone apps, it was pretty cool and easy to use to design a simple UI quickly at no cost. If you want to do more advanced things and more than 1 project, you’ll need to pay per use on a freemium-style subscription basis.

But it’s cheap, really cool interface with a rather powerful RIA interface and below is an example of my simple first project using iplotz:

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Launch of a BI application, pt 1

June 10th, 2010

by Mark Kromer

I have been blogging about this, albeit sparingly, over the past several months and now that we are finalizing the launch activities of the Oracle P6 Analytics product, I have some items I can share. This is a project & portfolio management business intelligence application built on Oracle BI & database technologies. I was the principal product manager leading the efforts to define requirements, understand the market and customer needs & trends, lead JAD sessions and prioritize & track the backglog (we are an Agile Scrum development shop here in this part of the Oracle universe).

After our 1st planning and prioritization iteration (sprint -1), the development team went into a cycle of 6 sprints, ending with a final regression testing sprint where all features and functionality had already been completed. This project was another great example, in my mind, of the advantages that both development and product management enjoy in Agile: measureable deliverables within a set timebox, working software to prototype and test at the end of the iteration and the ability to adjust and make JIT decisions in terms of requirements and backlogs.

To get an idea of what the final product looks like, the value proposition and a demo, sign-up for my upcoming live webinar free here and listen to our joint Oracle BI & Primavera Podcast here.

The next parts of this series will give me an opportunity to talk a little bit about my experiences with handling project risk on this project, requirements analysis & prioritization, marketing and more Agile development results.

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Microsoft Shift on Telecom

June 1st, 2010

The more & more that we get away from the hey-day of the Microsoft Communications Sector in 2007,  before they split up into WW Services and a slimmed-down Communications Sector, the more we realize that Microsoft was not serious about investing in telecom, cable and service provider service offerings. This story is a little old, but Light Reading did a good job of catching us up to what is now, in 2010, Microsoft’s direction in Comm Sector.

Essentially, a focus on Mediaroom as an IPTV platform and focusing on content is the current priority.

This is contrast to the more infrastructure-bound IBM & Oracle. Before joining Oracle from Microsoft, I used to look at Oracle in envy as they bought OSS/BSS companies like MetaSolv and invested heavily in platforms that service providers were looking for from software vendors like 5 9’s of system uptime, VLBD scalability, real-time analytics, workflow capabilities and overall service delivery platform optimizations.

Very likely Microsoft can provide some benefit to this market via Azure as a hosted cloud service. Doubtful, though, based on Microsoft history that they will invest heavily in areas that put too much emphasis in value added services on top of core back-office products. The current strategy seems to be to rely on partners to provide that to different customer market segments.

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Oracle BI with Primavera for MAOAUG

May 19th, 2010

Mark will be speaking in King of Prussia, outside of Philly, for the Mid-Atlantic Oracle Apps Users Group on Oracle BI w/P6 Analytics for IT projects this Friday: http://www.maoaug.org. Stop by and say HI if you are in the area!

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New Oracle Launch Complete, Back to TP!

May 8th, 2010

by Mark Kromer

OK, folks, I’m getting back into the swing of things now starting this weekend. You may have seen some activity last week from Len, and it was great to see him get back on the matrix here @ TP.

I completed the PM work on our new Oracle “soft launch” for Primavera P6 Analytics. We have big plans for some exciting launch events in June for that new BI application @ Oracle. As a product manager, my involvement is going to be more around subject matter expertise and managing the deliverables for the marketing activities. I’ll work with our marketing departments, sales and partners on readiness and awareness while we start new sprint planning for other product releases.

What’s new with everyone else out there in technology product manager land ???

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