What separates product managers who move fast with clarity from those who stall under pressure? In this webinar, Sabre Corporation Director of Product Management Sushant Mathur explores how great product managers think and decide under uncertainty. Drawing on real-world examples from Airbnb, Uber, and OpenAI’s ChatGPT, he breaks down practical frameworks for defining the right problems, making disciplined trade-offs, and building with intent rather than instinct. The session offers a clear, structured approach to developing product sense as a skill that can be practiced, refined, and applied to everyday decisions.

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Show Notes:

  1. Most real product decisions are made with incomplete data; waiting for certainty leads to missed opportunities.
  2. Product sense is not about eliminating uncertainty but structuring it.
  3. Product failures typically happen because teams solve the wrong problem, not because they cannot build.
  4. Great product managers start with what feels broken, not with feature ideas.
  5. Product sense is a trained judgment, not just intuition.
  6. Strong product thinking shows up in problem selection, not in execution artifacts like roadmaps or PRDs.
  7. Identifying the right problem is more important than generating more solutions.
  8. Depth of user understanding separates average product managers from strong ones.
  9. Every decision carries an opportunity cost; disciplined trade-offs define great products.
  10. Product sense means shipping value incrementally and learning early rather than betting big on assumptions.
  11. When users ask for features, they are often expressing emotional or cognitive pain, not technical requirements.
  12. Designing for emotional outcomes—like confidence, trust, or reduced anxiety—often matters more than speed or efficiency.
  13. More choice does not always create more value; it can increase decision fatigue.
  14. Strong problem statements clearly define who, when, what, why, and impact.
  15. Validation comes from patterns in real conversations, observed behavior, and support signals—not just surveys.
  16. Great products remove emotional risk before optimizing functionality, as seen in trust-building strategies.
  17. First-principles thinking helps avoid inheriting competitors’ assumptions and constraints.
  18. Breaking problems into goals, constraints, frictions, and levers creates clarity in complex situations.
  19. Reversible versus irreversible decisions should guide how bold a trade-off can be.
  20. Great product managers chase clarity, not features; they organize chaos into focused, intentional action.
About the speaker
Sushant Mathur Sabre Corporation, Director, Product Management Member

Sushant Mathur is a product leader with over a decade of experience building technology that solves meaningful customer problems at scale. He currently leads Product Management at Sabre Corporation, where he focuses on lodging distribution, next-generation connectivity, and agentic AI–powered workflows that enable travel partners to deliver seamless, modern experiences. Sushant’s work is centered on translating complex business and technical challenges into simple, intuitive products grounded in customer value, measurable outcomes, and iterative discovery. He is particularly passionate about product frameworks that bring clarity, alignment, and strong decision-making across cross-functional teams. Operating at the intersection of strategy, customer insight, and execution, Sushant believes the best products are built when teams embrace curiosity, humility, and continuous learning. His leadership style emphasizes outcome-driven thinking, rapid experimentation, and building platforms that scale sustainably. Beyond his role at Sabre, Sushant actively contributes to the global product community through mentoring, writing, and speaking. His interests include product sense, AI evaluation practices, and practical approaches to building AI-enabled products responsibly. As a member of the Products That Count Advisory Council, he is committed to advancing modern product leadership and sharing real-world insights that help product teams drive impact.

About the host
The Editorial Desk at Products That Count Products That Count, Editor

Products that Count is a 501(c)3 nonprofit that helps everyone build great products. It celebrates product excellence through coveted Awards that inspire 500,000+ product managers and honor great products and the professionals responsible for their success. It accelerates the career and rise to the C-suite of >30% of all Product Managers globally by providing exceptional programming – including award-winning podcasts and popular newsletters – for free. It acts as a trusted advisor to all CPOs at Fortune 1000, and publishes key insights from innovative companies, like Capgemini, SoFi, and Amplitude, that turn product success into business success.

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