AI isn’t breaking work, we are. So what actually needs to change? In this episode of the Product Talk podcast, host Denise Hemke sits down with product leader Sriram Iyer to explore why AI isn’t breaking work, we are. Drawing on decades of experience across platforms, AI products, and scaling organizations, Sriram unpacks how product roles are collapsing, why durable careers now require lifelong learning and generalist skills, and how a growing trust deficit is undermining teams. From the “70/70/70” career framework to practical ways leaders can rebuild trust and clarity, this episode is a must-listen for product managers and leaders navigating change without losing their humanity.
Join us for new conversations with leading product executives every week. Roll through the highlights of this week’s podcast below, then head on over to our Events page to see which product leaders will be joining us next week.
Show Notes:
- AI is accelerating the collapse of rigid job boundaries across product, design, and engineering.
- The traditional “master of one” career model is no longer sufficient.
- Durable careers are built at the intersection of complementary strengths.
- The “70-70-70” approach encourages top-quartile capability across three domains rather than perfection in one.
- Lifelong learning is now a baseline expectation for product leaders.
- AI compresses the distance between idea, prototype, funding, and execution.
- PM success increasingly depends on driving measurable business impact, not just shipping features.
- Functional silos within product (inbound, outbound, technical) are blurring.
- The real workplace crisis is not AI itself, but a growing trust deficit.
- Trust is built during calm periods, not just during moments of crisis.
- Remote work enables efficiency but weakens informal cultural bonding if left unaddressed.
- In-person connection strengthens empathy, collaboration, and long-term trust.
- Many cultural breakdowns stem from a lack of strategic clarity.
- Prioritization requires courage because it forces explicit tradeoffs.
- Leaders often dilute focus by spreading teams across too many initiatives.
- Writing down vision, values, methods, obstacles, and metrics creates shared accountability.
- Transparency around risks and potential failure builds credibility.
- Not every team can work on the top priority, and that hierarchy must be openly acknowledged.
- Listening deeply means hearing emotions and values, not just words.
- In the age of AI, protecting humanity and integrity is what ultimately sustains a product career.
About the speaker
Sriram Iyer is an executive product leader who specializes in the “physics of scale” - platform unification and monetizing emerging technologies. He has helped scale global SaaS platforms from ~$700M to $5B+ in annual recurring revenue and focuses on the AI Control Plane: durable foundations that turn AI hype into enterprise utility.
About the host
As the Chief Product Officer at NEOGOV, Denise leads the strategy for public sector HR and Public Safety software, driving innovation, customer satisfaction, and excellence. Her experience at Checkr as Chief Product Officer saw her delivering customer-focused products and promoting a fairer future. Denise’s notable career spans over two decades, with significant roles including GM for Analytics at Workday, where she launched new products and grew the business to over $200 million in ARR. Her background includes leadership positions at Platfora, Salesforce, HSBC, and AT&T, showcasing her expertise in enterprise product development and a commitment to technological advancement and customer success.