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This article is posted here with the consent of the author. The views and opinions expressed in this article are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the official policy, position, view, or opinion of Crestron Electronics, Inc., or of any of its employees. Crestron Electronics is not responsible for, and does not verify the accuracy of, any of the information contained in this article. Author: Jason Oster As a Crestron product manager for many years, I wanted to share some of my lessons-learned from Crestron Home™ software and previous projects. Good product managers are constantly learning by listening to customers and colleagues, and by reading everything they can get their hands on. That is how I found the initial “Good Product Manager/Bad Product Manager” essay, written many years ago by Ben Horowitz. A good product manager always builds on a body of knowledge, instead of always starting from scratch. This article is in the same vein as that initial essay, but from the perspective of a Crestron Electronics product manager of 22 years. A good product manager shares what learned and does not hoard information. A good product manager pays attention to every detail because every detail counts. This is especially true when you are making the best products in the world! A good product manager finds the right balance between forest and trees and can zoom in and out quickly, while a bad product manager gets stuck in the weeds and hyper-focuses on low-level things. A good product manager knows failure is not an option and mitigates the risk of failure along the way. If a feature is not as successful as it should have been, a good product manager will solve the issue before it becomes a real failure. A good product manager considers this to be a “bump in the road” and uses it to learn, adjust, and proceed to victory. A good product manager lives with their product and loves it as if it were their own child. Passion for a product and loving it has a funny way of making the product better. A bad product manager only starts thinking about their product at 9am and is in a hurry to stop thinking about it at 5pm. A good product manager trusts their gut. If something doesn’t “feel right,” a good product manager digs in! A bad product manager senses a disaster waiting to happen but doesn’t address it, thinking it is someone else’s problem. A good product manager knows there is no cavalry that is coming to save the product, so they go right to work to solve it themselves. A good product manager loves data and uses it to make their product better. A bad product manager hyper-focuses only on the data that may help prove their opinion is right. A bad product manager believes they are a hero. A good product manager is humble and acknowledges that they do not know everything. Instead, they surround themselves with the best people and know the expert to go to. A good product manager helps guide the team. They support others and never look for glory. A good product manager ships. A bad product manager will let every little obstacle get in the way. A good product manager finds a way over, around, or kicks over that obstacle using every tool in their arsenal. A bad product manager ships a product and then takes their foot off the gas pedal. A good product manager congratulates the team on the successful milestone that was reached and motivates everyone to push harder onto the next victory. A bad product manager spends too much time reading articles on the internet. Now, go ship a great product!
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The latest update to the industry’s most powerful smart home platform includes conditional logic functions, a massive lighting upgrade, better audio and access control options, and much more.
The first tweaks to Crestron Home® OS 4 are here, and they include support for more lighting solutions, a range of great DM NAX® audio-over-IP devices, and improvements to the platform’s configurator.
After Crestron Home® OS 3 went through dozens of smaller improvements, the time’s arrived for a larger update to the most powerful smart home platform in the world: the incredibly intuitive Crestron Home OS® 4.
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