If time goes back to the autumn two years ago, facing myself at that time, I might say: "Congratulations, your judgment is basically correct, and you are indeed qualified for this job." What kind of person is suitable to be a B-side product manager? To become an excellent B-side product manager, understanding the business and understanding the product are two very important criteria. The B-side track is very segmented, and the speed of product iteration and promotion is also very slow, which creates a large number of job opportunities...View details > However, there are two things you never expected: First, making products can actually cure the "old man's disease".
The other thing is that although you indonesia number details are qualified for the job, you have also entered a cold "freezing period" with the company. 1. The long-tail effect of enterprise demand. In the B product field of the education industry, when the business matures and no structural changes occur, the demand for internal teachers, operations, disciplines and other roles will often decrease significantly. This reduction in demand may result in companies having to invest resources to meet some high-cost but relatively low-value needs, which may be seen as a manifestation of industry involution. Taking our company as an example, we reconstruct a system almost every year, such as R system, business system, customer service system, teacher time system, teacher management platform, teaching and research system, teacher workbench, etc.
The purpose of these reconstructions is to support the development of the business in the next five years (mainly reflected in the scalability of the system), and to improve user experience and work efficiency (mainly reflected in the interaction design). Each such reconstruction project takes at least half a year to complete. In addition, we will continue to deeply optimize the product functions of core modules, such as course product rules, course sales methods, renewal process, scheduling system, etc. These tasks can be regarded as part of refined product operations, although some people may jokingly call it "looking for nothing".