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D

Deb Liu

CEO of Ancestry

Ancestry

🚀 Career & Leadership (1)🎯 Product Strategy (1) Execution (1)👥 Team & Culture (1)

Key Takeaways

  • 1.Prioritize the slope of learning over current mastery; the best PMs are constant students, not static experts.
  • 2.Treat your career like a product: write a spec, define success metrics, and audit your trajectory against a 5-year vision rather than drifting between roles.
  • 3.When building 0-to-1 products inside large companies, avoid the limelight early on to escape premature scrutiny and 'loving a product to death' before it iterates.
  • 4.Reframe 'self-promotion' as 'educating stakeholders to secure resources for your team' to overcome the reluctance to speak up.
  • 5.Growth is often a 'game of inches' rather than silver bullets; success comes from relentless optimization of core loops rather than just step-function changes.
  • 6.During onboarding, diagnose before you treat: spend the first 30 days listening to 50+ people before proposing solutions.
  • 7.The most critical career decision you make is who you marry; ensure your partner is a 'yin to your yang' who lifts your career rather than adding drag.

Methodologies(4)

🚀 Career & Leadership

A strategic framework that applies product management rigor to career planning. Instead of reacting to job offers serially, you proactively define a 'spec' for your career to evaluate opportunities against long-term goals.

Core Principles

  • 1.Define the 5-Year Vision: specific outcomes (e.g., 'Serve on a Fortune 100 board') rather than vague titles.
  • 2.Write the Spec: Document the specific skills, experiences ('features'), and milestones needed to reach the vision.
  • 3.Audit Trajectory: Evaluate every potential role not by salary or prestige, but by whether it moves you closer to the spec's destination.
  • +1 more...

"If I said you had to write a spec for your career, what does success look like? How are you going to get there? You have metrics for your product, and yet you don't have metrics for your career."

#career#product#specification
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🎯 Product Strategy

A strategy for incubating new products in big tech by minimizing attention and resources to maximize iteration speed. It prioritizes patience and shielding the team from executive 'love' that can kill early-stage fragility.

Core Principles

  • 1.Avoid the Limelight: Intentionally keep the project low-profile to avoid the pressure of weekly executive progress checks.
  • 2.Resource Constraint as Feature: Operate with minimal resources to force focus and allow for quiet pivoting without massive sunk cost fallacy.
  • 3.The Portfolio Approach: Accept a 50% failure rate; view specific products as bets within a portfolio rather than existential must-wins.
  • +1 more...

"The thing that I think a lot of large companies don't realize is that you can love something to death. I'd rather do it out of the limelight, do it with the minimal resources and have the freedom to fail."

#stealth#innovation#protocol
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A structured 30-60-90 day framework that prioritizes deep listening and trust-building before shifting into execution mode. It prevents the 'new person' from tripping over cultural wires.

Core Principles

  • 1.Days 0-30 (The Listening Tour): Interview 50-60 stakeholders. Ask 'What are the challenges?' and 'What is on your wishlist?'. Do not solve yet.
  • 2.The Reciprocity Trigger: Ask every engineering/product team: 'What is ONE thing I can do to help you this week?' to build immediate trust capital.
  • 3.Days 31-60 (Alignment): Synthesize the listening tour into a 'State of the Union' playback. Confirm with the org: 'This is what I heard, is this the right problem set?'
  • +1 more...

"You're part of a dance that's going around... if you actually make a mistake, you could trip other people up. Finding your place in the dance is really important."

#listen-align-execute#onboarding#cycle
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👥 Team & Culture

A set of tactical behavioral changes and structural adjustments to ensure introverts' work is recognized and they can influence decisions without changing their core personality.

Core Principles

  • 1.Reframe Self-Promotion: View sharing your work not as bragging, but as 'educating the business' on what the team is achieving to secure necessary resources.
  • 2.The 'Write to Speak' Contract: Commit to a schedule of writing (e.g., one blog post or internal note per month) to force externalization of ideas.
  • 3.Pre-Meeting Processing: Prepare answers and comments before meetings to avoid the 'processing lag' that causes introverts to miss the conversation window.
  • +1 more...

"You make a light bulb, but you're selling light... She was making amazing number of light bulbs... but she was not marketing the light."

#introvert's#visibility#team
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