What if the strategy you just shipped is already obsolete? In this episode of Product Talk hosted by Digitalzone CPO Sonjoy Ganguly, Syntheseed CPO Sam Somashekar speaks on rethinking product leadership in real time, AI is generating strategies that all sound the same, and the pressure to experiment is pulling leaders further from the strategic thinking they were hired to do. Sam and Sanjay explore why the human element is more important than ever, how shared KPIs across functions unlock real alignment, and what product leaders need to stop doing right now.
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:
- Strategy now has a half-life. The era of setting annual strategy and regrouping a year later is over. By the time you regroup, it is already obsolete. Keeping a constant pulse on customers, markets, and KPIs and adjusting continuously is the new baseline expectation.
- Asking AI to generate your strategy will make your strategy look like everyone else’s. When every product leader feeds the same inputs into the same tools, the outputs converge. Strategy requires human judgment, context, and vision that AI cannot replicate from a prompt.
- AI whiplash is real, and it is pulling leaders away from strategy. CEOs and boards are reading about new tools and demanding experiments before anyone has had time to think strategically. The pressure to try everything is quietly destroying the focus that good strategy requires.
- The human element in product management is non-negotiable. You are still selling to a human. You are still building for a human. The individuals making purchasing decisions have personal motivations, career goals, and emotional needs that no data set fully captures. Forgetting that is the fastest way to fail.
- Product leaders who firefight have failed at empowerment. If a senior product leader is constantly in firefighting mode, it means they have not empowered their product managers effectively, and they have not built the cross-functional relationships that surface problems before they become fires.
- Separating product owner from product manager has introduced a new silo. Agile created this divide, and while there are legitimate reasons for it, if the two roles are not joined at the hip, you end up with product managers who are detached from customers and product owners running without full context. In many organizations, the model is broken.
- If you do not talk directly to customers, the chain of insight breaks. Hearing what a customer said secondhand through a go-to-market team is not the same as being in the room. Junior PMs especially need direct customer exposure. The ability to ask a follow-up question in real time is where the real insight lives.
- The client hero strategy is what modern product management is really about. Making your customers look good, helping them advance their careers, and giving them something they can champion internally drives both emotional commitment and purchasing decisions. That is the strategic layer most roadmaps never address.
- Product leaders need to stop treating their OKRs as separate from the rest of the company. KPIs siloed by function create teams that optimize for their own metric at the expense of the broader goal. The unlock is a shared organizational KPI that everyone understands, with functional metrics that ladder up to it.
- Context is the product manager’s most important deliverable to the engineering team. Not features, not tickets, not specs in isolation. Why are we building this? What user pattern does it address? What will this do for the customer? When teams understand the context, the work they do is qualitatively different.
- A roadmap is a story, not a list. Unifying deliverables into a small number of clear objectives and showing how every feature ladders up to those objectives is what gives a roadmap meaning. A three by three grid of objectives and initiatives can communicate what years of feature lists never could.
- Shared KPIs are the alignment mechanism that actually works. When sales, marketing, product, and engineering all rally around a common goal, the organization moves as one. Individual metrics still matter. They just need to serve the common goal.
- Platform thinking means you are already a portfolio manager. A product that is actually a platform with capabilities that turn on and off at different price tiers is a portfolio whether you call it that or not. Product leaders operating in that model need to think and measure accordingly.
- AI tools are volatile, and their consolidation is accelerating. A tool you build your workflow around today may be acquired or shut down within months. The dependency risk is real. The solution is not to avoid tools but to develop judgment that is portable across whatever tools exist at any given time.
- AI may contain a bubble-like element, and the tipping point will be the accumulation of human errors it generates. When a company spends a week tracking down a bug written by AI with no human review, those costs start to add up. The realization that human oversight is essential will come, and it will bring some of the roles that were eliminated back into the picture.
- Hypotheses need to get to market faster, even in larger organizations. The corporate instinct to protect brand by waiting for perfection is at odds with the speed the market now demands. Finding ways to put early ideas in front of users and collect real signal is a discipline that every size of company needs to build.
- Strategy evolution is better than strategy replacement. If every strategic review requires a dramatic pivot, the strategy was wrong from the start. The goal is continuous small course corrections driven by real feedback, not a break-and-recreate cycle that exhausts organizations and confuses customers.
- There is an ongoing shift back toward engineering, UX, and systems thinking in product leadership. The last decade was about strategy and revenue ownership. The tools available now are pulling leaders back toward understanding how things are built and how interfaces align with actual user journeys. Both are necessary.
- AI becoming part of the fabric is inevitable, just like cloud did. Nobody talks about needing a cloud feature anymore. They just talk about what the business needs and build it on cloud as a given. AI will reach the same point. The organizations that position for that future now will have a significant advantage.
- The best product leaders are the ones who help the entire organization make sense of what is happening. In a world of competing voices, AI-generated insights, and constant pressure to pivot, the product leader who can bring clarity, communicate context, and connect execution to strategy becomes the most valuable person in the room.
About the speaker
AI-first product executive with 20+ years leading enterprise SaaS and AI-driven platforms in fintech, healthcare, and high-tech industries. Proven track record scaling product organizations, defining AI strategy, and translating emerging technologies into measurable business outcomes. Known for building high-performing teams, establishing product operating discipline, and driving growth across complex portfolios, including $100M+ ARR businesses. Passionate about turning AI innovation into real-world impact through strong product, GTM, and governance practices.
About the host
Sonjoy Ganguly is a seasoned product and growth executive with 30+ years of experience building, scaling, and transforming technology-driven businesses. He has played pivotal roles in multiple acquisitions and successful company exits, consistently helping organizations increase revenue, improve operational efficiency, and accelerate enterprise value. As Chief Product Officer at Digitalzone, Sonjoy leads product strategy and innovation across data, insights, and activation platforms serving global B2B marketers. He is known for turning complex market challenges into scalable, customer-centric products that deliver measurable growth, stronger unit economics, and durable competitive advantage. Throughout his career, Sonjoy has partnered closely with executive teams, private equity stakeholders, and cross-functional leaders to drive repeatable growth playbooks—optimizing product portfolios, modernizing go-to-market strategies, and aligning product investment to business outcomes. His work has contributed directly to increased valuations through disciplined execution, data-driven decision-making, and operational rigor. As an advisor, Sonjoy brings a pragmatic, operator-first perspective to product leadership, helping teams define strategy and connect to innovation, execution, and value creation, to sustain business impact. A frequent speaker and contributor on innovation in B2B marketing, Sonjoy excels at helping companies navigate complexity, embrace change, and unlock new opportunities for growth. Based in New York, he is passionate about connecting people, technology, and ideas to drive real business impact.