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How Product Management Can Save Saas

Blog Author: Productside Marketing

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With the shift to Software as a Service for many applications the need for strong product management is more apparent than ever. Here at the Productside we use several SaaS applications, and to be frank most of them are poorly implemented and remind me of the early days of desktop applications.

 

Here are just a few of the places where product managers can add tremendous value in a SaaS environment:

Why Product Management Must Own the Whole SaaS Product

No one understands the product, customer and business better than the product manager. And no one has a better holistic view. Each department (sales, support, etc.) has their own agenda that is perfectly logical from their point of view. But the if unchecked when decisions are made it can result in a terrible experience for the customer.

 

How Product Management Can Avoid the Vocal Minority Trap

Many SaaS companies are using built-in surveys and discussion forums to gather information as the basis for prioritizing features in their releases. This is a valuable source of data, but by definition the customers who are contributing are self-selected and most likely won’t reflect what your average user really cares about. If you don’t bring in additional data you run the risk of building a product that makes your power users happy but leaves the other 97% of your customers scratching their heads.

 

Product Management Must Manage Change in Rapid SaaS Environments

I am sure that each individual decision to add new features rapidly and change menus, etc. is well-justified within each SaaS company. The problem is that at the Productside we run multiple SaaS applications. Between all of them at least one changes every week or so. As a small business owner I don’t have the time or desire to re-learn how to do tasks or to absorb new features and functionality constantly – I have a business to run. Imagine if every time you opened up Microsoft Word the menus had changed. Product Managers need to specify the most important use cases and ensure that new releases don’t interrupt their customer’s work flows. And they need to understand the environment of their customers and how often customers can really digest new changes. Just because your team is doing one month sprints doesn’t mean you should necessarily provide a new release every month.

 

Product Management Insights from SaaS Usage Data

Since you can monitor what features are being used in a SaaS environment it can be valuable to aggregate the data and use it in product decisions. However, you have to balance this with the fact that there may be features in the product (or that need to be added to the product) that users can’t find and/or don’t know about. When Microsoft did a survey to see what should be added to MS Word in Office 2007 8 out of 10 of the top requests were features that were already in the product that users didn’t know about or couldn’t find! Product managers need to combine usage data with common support questions, queries in the help system and customer research to determine what the right mix is rather than relying only on usage data.

 

Product Management Should Lead Long-Term SaaS Strategy

With the increasing use of Agile and the short development cycles of SaaS it is easy for a team to become far too focused on the short-term list of features to implement. The danger in this is that you won’t necessarily build a product that will be competitive a few years out. Tacking features on based on what seems the most important thing this month can lead you to both an architecture that can’t support large-scale necessary changes and a product that starts to look like a swiss army knife.

 

Product Management Should Prevent Risky Beta Features in Paid SaaS

When we are paying a premium for a SaaS applications nothing pisses us off more than seeing a feature listed as “Beta”. What does that mean? Can we count on it? Does it work correctly? Product Managers need to make the call as to whether a feature is implemented and tested to the point where customers can rely on it. If not, don’t release it. As SaaS matures I am hopeful that the quality of the applications will improve and that there will be more of a focus on the user.

 

Get trained and up-to-speed on how to work more effectively with your team if they are doing Agile development. Agile environments require different skill sets than waterfall, so make sure you learn about effective product management in that environment. You might want to read Agile Excellence for Product Managers or take a course on Agile for Product Managers and Product Owners

 

As SaaS matures I am hopeful that the quality of the applications will improve and that there will be more of a focus on the user. Product managers will be key to making this happen.

 

Good luck, and get a seat at that table! 

About The Author

Productside Marketing

We’re the team behind the headlines, webinars, and memes that make product management sound as fun as it actually is.

Frequently Asked Questions

How can product management save SaaS companies from poor user experiences?

Product management can save SaaS companies by owning the end-to-end product experience and balancing customer needs, business goals, and technical constraints. Without strong product management, SaaS products often suffer from feature overload, constant UI changes, and fragmented decisions that frustrate users and increase churn.

Why must product management own the entire SaaS product lifecycle?

Product management must own the full SaaS product lifecycle because no other role has a holistic view of customers, usage data, and business outcomes. When sales, support, or engineering drive decisions independently, SaaS products become inconsistent, short-sighted, and misaligned with real customer value.

How can product managers avoid the “vocal minority” trap in SaaS prioritization?

Product managers avoid the vocal minority trap by combining SaaS usage data with customer research, support insights, and market analysis. Relying only on surveys or forums risks over-optimizing for power users while neglecting the majority of customers who drive long-term SaaS growth and retention.

How should product management manage change in fast-moving SaaS environments?

Product management should manage SaaS change by protecting core workflows and releasing updates at a pace customers can absorb. In modern SaaS, frequent releases without context disrupt productivity, so product managers must prioritize stability, usability, and customer readiness over sprint-driven feature velocity.

Why is long-term strategy critical for product management in SaaS?

Long-term SaaS success depends on product management leading strategy beyond short-term Agile backlogs. Without a clear product vision, SaaS products risk becoming bloated, fragile, and uncompetitive. Product managers must guide architecture, roadmap direction, and quality standards to ensure sustainable growth.

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