Most Product Goals Are Wrong. Here's a Fix.
- nikitarpatil
- 4 days ago
- 1 min read
Updated: 2 days ago
Fix your goals --> Fix your product
Most product goals sound impressive.
"Increase Engagement"
"Grow Revenue"
"Improve Retention"But here’s a problem:
They don’t tell teams what to actually build.
And that’s why execution breaks down.
The Real Job of a Product Goal
A product goal isn’t a metric. It’s a decision-making tool. It should help teams answer:
What do we prioritize?
What do we ignore?
What does success actually look like?
Use a structure below instead:
The User Problem
Weak: Increase DAU by 20%
Strong: Help new users experience value in their first session
☛ Metrics follow value -- not the other way aroundConnect to Business Outcomes
☛ User Problem --> Product Goal --> Business Impact
- Problem: Users can't discover relevant content
- Goal: Improve personalization
- Outcome: Higher retention + revenueMeasure the Right Things
- Engagement (CTR)
- Depth (time spent)
- Satisfaction (returns, retention)
☛ Prevent Shallow Wins! Define Success and Failure
- What does success look like?
- What are guardrails?
- What would failure look like?
☛ Not all growth is good growthRuthlessly Prioritize
☛ Not 10 Goals. 1-3 Real Priorities
☛ Remove noise
Final Thought
Most teams don’t fail because they lack talent. They fail because:
☛ Their Goals don’t create Clarity
Fix your goals —> Fix your product.
If you found this useful, forward it to one person trying to break into product.


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