Move beyond AI notetaking: Be the first to see the new features in Fellow 4.5

X

Lenny Rachitsky’s Product Management Meeting Template

Get this template

Run effective product management team meetings with this template curated by 'Lennysan' Rachitsky, PM Lead @ Airbnb, Founder/CEO and Software Engineer.

Desktop Experience
In-meeting Experience
Meetings
Tue, Aug 4
4 Aug
10:30 - 11 AM
Lenny Rachitsky’s Product Management Meeting
10:30 - 11 AM
1 - 2 PM
4 Aug
9:30 - 11 AM
2 - 3 PM
Lenny Rachitsky’s Product Management Meeting
Today @ 10:30 - 11 AM
 Join video call
 Record with AI
Lenny Rachitsky’s Product Management Meeting
AI Recording in progress
Template preview

Magnify Preview template

Lenny Rachitsky’s Product Management Meeting Template
By Lenny Rachitsky
Seamless collaboration
Time-saving automations
AI suggested talking points
Auto transcription
Summarization by AI
  • Pick a template

    Save time with a pre-built template complete with recommended talking points to get you started

  • Customize it

    In Fellow, customize headers, talking points, and more before using it in your next meeting

  • Bring it to life

    Use the template in real-time with your meeting attendees to collaborate on meeting notes

Who is Lenny Rachitsky?

Lenny Rachitsky is a former Product Lead at Airbnb. He joined the online marketplace company as a Product Manager (PM) in 2012 after his company, Localmind was acquired, and quickly transitioned to a Product Lead role, where he led a team of five PMs and 80+ individual contributors.

With years of experience under his belt, Lenny now leads a community of 1000+ product leaders who subscribe to his weekly newsletter to get the latest product management and growth advice. For that reason, we couldn’t think of a better person than Lenny to curate the most effective meeting agenda template for product management teams.

Use this expert-approved template to run product management meetings that drive great results.

What’s inside this Product Management Meeting Template:

1 Manager Updates: What’s happening outside of the team?

Use the first section of your product management meeting to share information and updates that are relevant to your team. 

Include the following talking points in your meeting agenda:

– Things that are top of mind for other leaders in the company

– Potential changes to the roadmap

– Any new and upcoming projects

“Since PMs are often more in the know on what’s happening, this is a critical piece of the puzzle in keeping all teams feeling informed and their voices heard,” says Lenny Rachitsky. 

Product management meetings are better in Fellow

Fellow is the meeting management app that companies like Shopify, Uber, and KeepTruckin use to run effective product management meetings.

Try for free

2 Individual PMs: What’s happening within the team?

According to Lenny Rachitsky, product leaders should make it a habit to ask specific team members to share updates and learnings during product management meetings. 

For this section of your team meeting, make sure to ask individual PMs to prepare interesting updates and information about what’s happening within their teams. Some suggested talking points include:

– Important updates on projects that are about to launch

– New processes that they’re implementing

– Key learnings that other teammates can benefit from

“This is not a status update from each PM,” says Lenny Rachitsky. “This is meant to be engaging and fun, so be selective in who shares and what they share.”

3 Q&A

Last but not least, leave time for questions from the team.

Including a “Q&A” section in your meeting agenda template will encourage people to think about questions in advance and show up prepared to have a productive and impactful discussion.

Lenny Rachitsky’s best practices for effective product management meetings

1 Schedule one or two product management meetings per month

One common question we get asked by product leaders is: how often should product management meetings take place? 

According to Lenny Rachitsky, product leaders should schedule their team meetings with other product managers one or two times per month.  

“The bigger the team, the less frequent,” he says. “A weekly PM team meeting becomes redundant with your one-on-ones. Meeting less than monthly can be valuable for social/bonding purposes, but most of the other benefits go away.”

2 Be crystal clear on the goals of this meeting

Just like with any other meeting, you should make sure that your product management meetings have a clear purpose and takeaways. 

Lenny suggests asking these two questions when preparing for your meetings:

– What problem are we trying to solve? 

– Are there more efficient ways to solve this problem?

Finally, he recommends reminding your team of the three main reasons why you meet on a recurring basis:

1. Understanding: making sure that everyone feels like they know what’s going on inside and outside the team.

2. Alignment: ensuring that everyone on the team is on the same page.

3. Connection: tightening the bonds between everyone on the team.

3 Organize the agenda ahead of time

It’s almost impossible to have a productive conversation when nobody has a plan for what to talk about. That’s why Lenny Rachitsky recommends collaborating on a meeting agenda ahead of time. 

“As new items come throughout the week, add to this doc,” he says. “You want your team to be able to see what’s planned ahead of each meeting.”

According to Lenny, it’s a good practice to let anyone on the team add items directly into your agenda document. However, if you lead a larger team (e.g. bigger than a dozen people), it might be a good idea to have someone be in charge of organizing and curating the meeting agenda.

4 Make it fun

One last tip that Lenny Rachitsky shared with us is that product leaders should always aim to make their team meetings fun. In other words, your team meetings should be a ritual that other PMs look forward to. Here are five tactics and activities that have worked for Lenny in the past:

1. Have each person share something fun they did recently

2. Invite guest speakers

3. Do a book club

4. Have the meeting in an interesting location

5. Go out for drinks or a team bonding activity afterward (when possible)


A special thanks to Lenny Rachitsky for sharing this product management meeting template with our community of leaders.


Listen to this interview with Lenny Rachitsky  (template author):


Get this free template

Template preview
Lenny Rachitsky

Template by

Lenny Rachitsky

Lenny Rachitsky is an expert in product management having been a growth/PM lead at Airbnb, a founder/CEO, and a software engineer. Currently, Lenny shares his wealth of knowledge in a weekly newsletter (Lenny’s Newsletter), angel invests, and runs a job board.

  • Brittany Forsyth
    Brittany Forsyth
    Former Chief Talent Officer, Shopify

    Fellow has been a game changer for us. I love how lightweight and easy it is to use. It intuitively builds into my day-to-day rhythm, and the natural flow of Shopify, making it so much simpler to have valuable conversations.”

  • John Gleeson
    John Gleeson
    VP of Customer Success, Motive

    “I've never seen an app spread so quickly. Within a few weeks, there were hundreds of people using Fellow to follow up on the action items that inevitably come out of every meeting. It's been a game-changer for our team.”

  • Sabrina Leblanc
    Sabrina Leblanc
    Director of Sales, SurveyMonkey

    “Fellow has increased my productivity and has resulted in more collaborative 1:1s & team meetings. My team loves capturing their own agenda items. Getting prompted to add talking points is super handy when jumping from one meeting to the next.”

  • Liam Martin
    Liam Martin
    Co-founder, Time Doctor

    “Fellow has completely changed the way we manage meetings at Time Doctor. With 100+ people in 32 different countries, Fellow was one of the tools that took our remote meetings from confusion to clarity.


Run delightful meetings with Fellow

See why leaders in 100+ countries are using it today.

Try for free Request a demo
Already using Fellow? Log in

You might also be interested in these templates

You might also be interested in these articles