Episode Description
This episode explores how culture acts as a powerful predictor of long-term product success. I’m talking with product leader Namrta Raghvendra, who has extensive experience at Meta, Salesforce, LinkedIn, and Dell and understands the importance of team culture in building resilient, innovative product organizations. We discuss the relationship between culture and strategy, the evolution of organizational culture as companies scale, practical rituals for reinforcing team culture, and actionable advice for navigating major transitions like reorganizations.
IntroductionHow’s your product team doing? What metrics would you use? Is team culture on your list? In this discussion, we’re exploring why culture isn’t just a nice-to-have but a strong predictor of long-term product success. We’ll explore how to build resilience that survives market shifts, and improve product success by improving team success.
Our guest is product leader Namrta Raghvendra. She has over 15 years of experience building technology products that help connect communities. Previously at Meta, she built digital advertising products to connect billions of users with their favorite businesses. Prior to that, she helped launch AI-powered chatbots at Salesforce to help businesses connect with their customers seamlessly and held product roles at LinkedIn and at Dell.
Summary of Concepts Discussed for Product ManagersNam’s Career Journey:
Nam shares insights from her 15+ years in the tech industry, with highlights from her time scaling LinkedIn Recruiter, launching Salesforce’s first AI chatbot, and leading ads product growth at Meta. Throughout her career, she has gravitated toward roles where she can make high-impact product decisions that solve real user problems.
Culture’s Impact on Product Success:
Culture is the operating system of a team, directly influencing how decisions are made, how teams execute strategy, and how successful products are built. Nam emphasizes that a good strategy is only as effective as the culture that enables its execution and adaptability.
Meta’s Culture Shift: From “Move Fast and Break Things” to Responsibility:
Nam describes the culture shift at Meta, from a scrappy “move fast and break things” culture to a more responsible, process-driven approach. In the early days of Meta, the product teams shipped quickly and continued to iterate on the product after it was shipped. Later, the company focused on foreseeing and preventing avoidable harm early on. The product teams had to have more rigorous guardrails and collaborate more closely with policy and legal teams. While the change added work and delayed timelines initially, the company iterated on the process itself for a year, and eventually it was seen as an enabler for healthier, safer product development and preserving user trust.
Measuring and Building Strong Team Culture:
Nam observes that a good strategy is only as successful as its execution, and execution depends on the company culture. She outlines practical leading indicators of strong culture, such as quality of disagreement, accountability, learning rate, humility, and ownership.
Team Resilience during Reorgs:
During reorgs or periods of uncertainty, Nam recommends leaders provide clarity regarding changes and expectations, restore agency to individual team members, and focus on achieving and celebrating quick wins. Transparent communication and small, shared successes help teams maintain morale and momentum.
Rituals to Reinforce Team Culture:
Nam uses rituals with her team like decision logs, learning reviews, and premortems help teams build shared understanding, learn from failures, and encourage risk taking.
- Connect with Namrta on LinkedIn
“Culture eats strategy for breakfast.” – Peter Drucker
Application Questions- How would you describe the current culture in your product team? What impact does it have on your daily work and decision-making?
- What leading indicators or rituals do you use—or could you use—to measure and reinforce a strong, resilient team culture?
- How has your team’s culture evolved as your organization has grown or changed? What lessons can you draw from any major transitions?
- What role does psychological safety play in your team’s risk-taking and learning processes? How could you improve it?
- Think about the last major organizational change (like a reorg or product pivot) you experienced. What approaches helped your team stay motivated and aligned, and where could you improve?
Thank you for taking the journey to product mastery and learning with me from the successes and failures of product innovators, managers, and developers. If you enjoyed the discussion, help out a fellow product manager by sharing it using the social media buttons you see below.