Finding My Fit

Earlier this year, I was laid off, and it was honestly one of the lowest points of my life. After only 1.5 years of mostly unhappy experiences in product management, I was forced to ask the hard question: was this role a good fit at all? In this thread, I will explain the 6 things I did to regain my confidence and find the right fit.

  1. Get Back to Basics
    In my desperate flurry of job applications, I lost myself. Every job listing was an opportunity to fantasize about how it would be a perfect fit. I tweaked my resume every time to include key words to the point where I forgot what my strengths actually were.

    To get past this, I took personality/strengths quizzes (StrengthsFinder and StandOut are 2 good ones), talked to people in my network who I trusted to give me actionable feedback, and reflected on experiences I had where I felt really good about the work I was doing.

    This reminded me that I was great at (and enjoyed!) driving teams to achieve outcomes, crafting and improving processes, and paying attention to detail and quality.

  2. Scrutinize My Resume
    With the renewed knowledge that I do have unique strengths, I stopped editing my resume for every job. I looked at each line and asked “what skill is this trying to show.” From there, I removed unnecessary duplicates, added any commonly-required PM skills that were under-represented, and ensured my top strengths were highlighted first.

  3. Brand Myself Consistently
    After that exercise with my resume, I went through my various profiles and ensured they were consistent with my resume and highlighted my top, unique strengths.

  4. Realize Not Every Job is a “Dream Job”
    I started paying more attention to job listings instead of just applying to anything that called itself “product management.” From my negative experiences, I knew I didn’t want to work on a product that was highly strategic for the company, because I did not enjoy that level of stakeholder management. I knew I needed more mentoring/coaching, so I wanted to join a strong product org, not be a company’s first product manager. I knew I needed a good work-life balance because I have lots of hobbies, so I asked interview questions to watch out for a “hustle” culture.

  5. Know My Values
    I had spent 4 months working on a product I didn’t care about at a company who existed just to sell a thing and make money. I knew I needed to work at a company with a strong mission that was in it to make the world better.

    I was sending out fewer applications, which was scary, but I had a much better return on landing interviews and felt like I was actually living my strengths and values.

  6. Know I Can’t Do This Alone
    My success here was forged from leaning heavily on my network and relying on guidance from others. I’m terrible at asking for help but I’m glad I did.

At the end of the day, I landed a role as a Technical Product Manager for infrastructure at a company whose mission is to increase transparency and equality in equity. My 3 months here have been the best I’ve had since making the move to product 2 years ago. Hoping for many more!