» Product managers exist in part to free up the specialists to do their thing

» Being the point of contact with senior executives and stakeholders tends to also make you accountable to them

» Specialists’ expertise is needed to wield a tool effectively, even if it’s easy to use

» Different cultures communicate with varying directness; context heavily influences interpretation and meaning

» Leadership, trust, and decision-making styles differ widely across cultural backgrounds and must be adapted to the team

» Bridging cultural divides requires empathy, flexibility, and awareness of one’s own cultural lens

» A prototype expresses a product concept far better and quicker than a product requirements document (PRD)

» People good at doing a thing themselves are not always good at building a system to do it

» Work is craft: theoretical knowledge and practical experience combined

» The Spotify Model was only ever a snapshot in time at Spotify

» It existed in the context of a company whose leadership valued trust, self-organisation and change

» As Spotify grew, it failed to strike the right balance between autonomy and collaboration

» Alignment to product strategy remains crucial for autonomous teams to deliver valuable work

» Failure to adapt and iterate on team structures and processes will result in your strongest product people leaving

» Accepting that an employee might thrive in another environment is accepting that you (as their manager) could have done a better job