How No-Code Tools are Democratizing Software Development and Empowering Non-Technical Team Members

How No-Code Tools are Democratizing Software Development and Empowering Non-Technical Team Members
Blueprint by COHO
Having been a Software Engineer, automation engineer, consultant, and founder for over eight years, I’ve had the opportunity to witness the incredible evolution of technology in the workplace.

A lot of great designers think that the only way to move up in their career is to give up their individual contributor status and transition into management. Other designers may make great managers, but are hesitant to make the transition of how they perceive the practice or don’t feel ready yet. The management track is often conveyed as a paved road you must take with no turning back. In reality, it’s an odyssey from designer to leader of people.

Throughout my career, I’ve made the switch from design leader to individual contributor based on the company I was at and the impact I wanted to make. After I left Black Pixel, I joined One Medical as a Product Design lead with no managerial responsibilities. During year two of my tenure at One Medical, there was a management need and I happily took the mantle again.

The goal of this article is to help you decide if design management is the right choice for you, and if it is, to help you start that journey. It will cover:

  • The qualities that make a great manager
  • The skills you will need to hone to develop those qualities
  • Rebuttals to widely-believed myths about the transition from designer to manager

Afterward, I will provide you with key frameworks and reflection questions to help you decide if a design management career is right for you and if so, how to set yourself up for success.

Design manager as strategist, operator, and coach

The first thing to understand is that there’s no one formula for leadership . It’ll vary based on the company you work on, its scale, and situational aspects of what your team needs.

That said, being a designer manager boils down to three core areas:

  1. Leading design as a strategist
  2. Ensuring your team runs well and is happy as an operator
  3. Growing your team members as a coach

As a strategist, your chief concern is whether or not the team is meeting business goals. The  main priority should be understanding customer problems end-to-end and researching new opportunities to create an inspiring design vision.

As designers, it is important to connect all of the work we do as a team to key business outcomes. In your role as strategist you will be responsible for developing and tracking Objectives and Key Results (OKRs) for your team. This can get a little tricky due to the nature of design work being dependent on the work OKRs of other teams.

More often than not, design team OKRs will be more lateral than vertical. Design is not only a practice, but a capability that can be a force multiplier for outcomes for the customer and company.

This could show up in many ways. For example, brand design helping marketing increase signups due to awareness campaigns that drive traffic to the site, or product design improving a feature customers have been asking for, keeping them retained as a happy customer.

In your capacity as “operator”, you’re responsible for the team running effectively. This is the most traditional aspect of management, stemming from production line managers overseeing the work. The operator’s role is to implement effective processes to build team culture and engagement, recruit and hire quality designers, and manage team performance.

The operator is responsible for setting the design cadence and the pace and frequency of feedback. One of the most important processes to engineer is the design critique (Noah Levin, Director of Product Design at Figma has a great article about how to run great critiques), and ensuring that it is a good fit for how the team operates.

A happy team is an effective team. As managers, you’re also responsible for the team’s well-being and create the most safe and positive environment possible.

You’re not going to be able to make everyone happy and will need to balance the needs of each individual as the collective team with what needs to get done at the company level. They’ll need to know when to make the call if a team member needs a break due to burnout or when things need to slow down. An offsite that recharges someone could be the reason they decide to stay when facing burnout.

Lastly, as a coach you’re responsible for providing growth and development opportunities to team members. This can be done through providing funding for workshops and classes or  through coaching team members  yourself.

The 1:1 is a manager’s secret weapon and the most important meeting you’ll have with their team members. It’s a way to build relationships and ensure your team members are happy, check on what barriers you can remove, and discuss career development.

During my first 1:1 with a direct report, I ask them where they want to go professionally, not only in their current role but over the course of their entire career. My belief is you want designers to thrive in their career, beyond their tenure with you and exceeding you in every way.  If there is no career ladder, that is something to put in place immediately and continue to refine. From the first 1:1 together to the last, coaching is a daily activity.

Finding the Right Balance

One of the chief challenges of being a design manager is fluidly moving between these three roles. A manager's responsibilities will change based on what the company needs at that moment.

For instance, if a company’s goals are well-defined and growth is one of them then a manager may find themselves in the operator facet more than the other two.Then when company growth stabilizes and it is time to define new goals, the manager will move into the strategist facet.

The trick is to balance these three responsibilities as they fluctuate as the company grows and evolves. For example, in my career I’ve had various design leadership levels based on specific needs:

  • As a Design Director at Black Pixel, the majority of our work was client services. I was very involved as a strategist and doing the work while I mentored other designers
  • My time at One Medical was growing the Product Design team in its scaling stage. As I led in strategy, I hired more designers and increased more of my time operating the team and being a coach
  • At Webflow, I don’t even edit Figma files, and the majority of my time is operating the team and working with the management team
How my roles as designer manager changed between companies
How my roles as design managers changed between companies

Management is a point of no return”

(and other myths about becoming a design manager)

A great manager needs to be a strategist, an operator, and a coach, but what does a great manager not need to be?

There are some widespread misconceptions about what it means to be a design manager. I am going to cover the five myths that I believe are the most problematic.

Myth #1: Becoming a design manager is a point of no return

One very common myth is that once you become a manager, you can’t go back to an IC. This is untrue and can be counterproductive.

Management in tech is littered with people in the role who didn’t receive enough training and support or felt forced to step into the role. I have switched between being a manager and IC throughout my career. It might feel like an ego hit at first when you go from a manager to an IC, but it should not.

Myth #2: Design management is only about supporting people.

While the best managers go into management because they care deeply about people, supporting others is just the tip of the iceberg. Design management is also operations, administration, and accountability. Coaching is not the only aspect of the job.

Myth #3: You need to become a design manager to move up in your career

This might be true for some companies — but not all.

In fact, the industry is evolving separate parallel career paths for both managers and individual contributors. Many companies have ways for designers to remain individual contributors as they level up, while also being able to receive compensation and exercise influence on the same level as a senior manager.

For instance, at Webflow, the Principal Designer role is leveled the same as a Senior Manager role and allows for a similar compensation and similar level of influence within the company. Leadership and management, while often tied together, are not mutually exclusive.

So in deciding which path to choose, ask yourself:

  • Where would you like to have the most impact?
  • Do you want to contribute to specific projects or do you want to have an impact at the company level?
  • What gives you the most gratitude?

Myth #4: Design managers are the best designers on their team

Not only is it not true that designer managers must be the best designers on the team — they also shouldn’t be.

While there is a certain level of skill and comprehension that you should have as a design manager to lead your team, the goal is to make every designer on your team their best — not to be better than them at what they do.

Some of the best coaches in NBA history, for example, were not hall-of-fame players; but they were knowledgeable, they knew how to motivate talent, and they had enough experience to lead.

Similarly, while you will need to draw from your core skill set as a designer in order to evaluate and critique your employees’ work, that doesn’t mean you need to be the best designer on the team.

Myth #5: Design managers don't care about design anymore

While it may be true that you are pushing pixels less as a design manager, you are ultimately accountable for everything that your group creates.

Part of the job of being a design manager is coaching employees on their designs and helping them improve as designers. Your framework for approaching and executing designs will serve as a model for your employees.

Here’s what Cara, an Coho Design Fellow, had to say about her career path after having gone through the Coho Design fellowship: “

Skills that carry over from design & new skills to build

Becoming a design manager does not mean starting over from scratch. Even though you will be making fewer individual contributions to design work, the skills you have honed during your time as a designer will serve you as a manager. Examples include:

  • Foundational design skills: The foundational skills of research, empathy, experimenting, gathering feedback, and iterating also apply to managing a team
  • Empathy and active listening: This skill set becomes particularly important when it comes time to coach your team during 1:1s as a coach, and also in helping you understand customer needs as a strategist
  • Iteration and experimentation: These are key to developing a good design workflow. Even the most successful managers will not get everything right on their first try; iteration is essential to incrementally improve your management processes
  • Storytelling: Storytelling humanizes the personas we design for, building empathy and perspective in a human-centric way. Powerful stories are essential to keeping your team motivated and inspired.  
  • System design: Your work with leaders on org design as a manager will be similar to the way you’d work with an engineer on architecting large-scale,complex systems in the past as a designer

But while you can certainly utilize many of the skills that you have developed as a designer, you will also have to build new management skills to succeed as a manager. For example:

  • Leadership communication: As a manager, you’re balancing downstream communication with your direct reports, cross-functional communication with other peer managers, and upstream with execs and stakeholders. This requires different modes and strategies of communication that you may not have experienced as an individual contributor
  • Coaching and developing people: My belief is you want designers to thrive in their career, beyond their tenure with you and exceeding you in every way. If there is no career ladder, that is something to put in place immediately and continue to refine. From the first 1:1 together to the last, coaching is a daily activity.
  • Delegation and expectation setting: As an individual contributor, it’s likely you don’t have much of an option to delegate work to others. As a manager, it’s your primary objective to hand off responsibilities for your team and set clear expectations for them to own.
  • Assessing talent and hiring: Though you may have been involved with interviewing as a designer, understanding the scope of being a hiring manager, attracting talent, and striving to build diverse teams is a new endeavor as you step into management
  • Autonomy: Taking initiative by managing or creating your own projects that address core needs of your business. Managers need to be able to identify these opportunities based on customer feedback or strategic directions.

Is design management right for you?

The truth is that while design management can be a fulfilling career path, not everybody will be happy in the role.

This is okay. Management should not be the only way to advance in your career, and individual contributors have a path forward as well. Later on I will talk about strategies for advancing your design career in different ways, but in the meantime I invite you to take some time to reflect on whether design management is the right choice for you.

Before you read my take on the following questions, reflect and answer each one for yourself. Jot down your answers or type them into a document and refer to them as you go through the rest of this article.

  1. What areas of design management do I care about most, and what gives me the most energy?
  2. What part of my work makes me the happiest? What parts do I care less about?
  3. Who are my mentors and what can I learn from them?
  4. How involved do I want to be in the design work? Would I be okay with designing not my primary focus or would I miss it?

Ok, have you thought about and answered these questions for yourself? When you are ready, read on to learn more about which career path, whether in design or design management, is right for you.

  1. Do you like generating ideas and executing a design for a particular project or do you like to have input across projects to ensure consistent vision and quality? If you are happiest in the weeds plugging away at a particular design project, continuing the IC path might be the most gratifying for you. If you enjoy setting strategic directions, contributing across projects, and supporting others in their work then you may be suited to design management. Play to your strengths. Your role as a design manager is to ensure everything in your scope of responsibility is done well, not that you personally have to be good at things. Playing to your strengths and leveraging the strengths of others will yield the best outcomes.
  2. Do you have a design manager at your company that you are comfortable talking about career advancement? What can you learn from their career progression to apply to your own? A lack of mentorship does not mean that you are not cut out for design management, but it may mean that it is more difficult to get on the management track..perhaps at your current company. If you do not have a mentor you can draw from and bounce ideas off of, do you have the bandwidth and desire to put in the extra work required to make your case for design manager?
  3. Do you enjoy sitting with executives all day and debating and arguing about resourcing and never be attuned to what your team is doing? Or, do you want to be closer to the work sitting side-by-side with the people I am managing? Your answer to this question will help you map out and define your design management role (or even signal that you might want to advance as an individual contributor). For instance, if you prefer to be closer to the design work you may want to manage a smaller team whereas if you want to be closer to department-wide operations you may want to be sitting with those executives.

Although this article details what a design manager is and how to become one, as mentioned above in myth # 3, keep in mind that  becoming a design manager is not the only way for you to advance your career as a designer.

In the next section I’ll help you develop a game plan for advancing your career, whether as an individual contributor, or in pursuing a design manager role.

Building your career roadmap

This section covers your potential as a manager, the case for management in your current role (or beyond), and how to build your portfolio.

Would I be a good fit for management?

Like many things in life, there is no way to know you’d be a good fit for something until you try it. However, in my experience there are certain attributes and behaviors that demonstrate manager potential:

  • Keith Rabois, one of the most renowned operators in tech, talks about looking at who people come to for help in the office as a good heuristic for management material. When people seek you out to help unblock and help them, that’s a great sign as a manager
  • The time you spend coaching and training other designers delivers more value than you contributing to the work yourself
  • People are vulnerable around you because they know you care and feel safe.

How to make your case for a design management position

The number one mistake people make in their efforts to become design manager is not letting their organization leaders know that they’re interested in the role.

That said, leaders’ abilities to offer you a design manager role will be contingent on if management opportunities are available. For instance, if the team only has three designers there may not be a value add from a design manager for that team.

However, even if something like this is the case, maybe there is a larger team at your organization or a team that is positioned for growth? To make your case for design manager, you will need to identify these opportunities within the company or look for opportunities outside your company if none exist within.

What to consider when talking to organization leadership about your management interest:

  • What motivates you as a manager?
  • Why would you make a bigger impact as a people manager vs. an individual contributor?

Remember that you’re in the driver seat of your career path. Build your own career development plan in addition (or in absence) of what your manager gives you.

How to create a design management portfolio

One question I often get is, “What does a design manager’s portfolio look like?”

In reality, the answer is “not much different than an IC portfolio”.

  • Both provide case studies of the impact you’ve made.
  • As a manager, your team and organizational impact are the results you share instead.
  • Since you’re not showing pixels you’ve designed, the key is articulating how you understood the problem, company goals, and provide clarity for your team to achieve their goals.

When a hiring manager is reviewing your management portfolio, they should have a sense of how you lead humans, your business acumen, and the systems you put in place to ensure high quality work is done.

How to level up as an individual contributor

Through the earlier reflective exercise, you may have discovered that management is not for you, and that is okay.

Here are some steps that you can take to advance in your career as an individual contributor.

Step 1: Enhance Your Portfolio

Garnering recognition and earning coveted raises is dependent in large part on how you sell yourself. Tuning your portfolio is a great way to set yourself up for a conversation with your supervisor about a potential raise or promotion within your design team.

As you continue to progress in your career as an individual contributor, the focus will be on mastery and impact at the company level. Your portfolio should reflect the depth you have in a particular area and be framed on the impact and influence you have on projects at a higher level.

Step 2: Create Opportunities for Recognition

Perhaps you can do exemplary work, but you may still fly under the radar if you are having trouble getting your work out there and recognized throughout your company. Here are some concrete strategies that you can use to help broaden your reach and communicate your contributions to your team and beyond.

  • Set up demos to make your work visible that your team and stakeholders can attend. This can be as simple as recording a Loom of how you’re thinking of work. You’d be surprised how viral these can go to broaden recognition
  • Create tools and resources to help your peer designers do better work
  • Finally, the best way is being recognized for your impact through peer feedback. When your fellow designers give you praise for your leadership and you have that trust, that’s the best evidence for your candidacy for management

Step 3: Talk to your manager about advancement opportunities

Talking to your manager is an important step in increasing the recognition you receive for your role as well as for getting opportunities to do fun, interesting, and challenging projects.

Through my own experiences I have developed a framework for navigating these conversations by asking myself the following questions in advance:

  1. What is my superpower should I double down on?
  2. Are there stretch opportunities for me to grow new skills with close guidance/mentorship? (ex: hiring, etc.)
  3. Where can I be a fly on the wall and learn through observation of leaders in action?

The management growth track

Design management is galvanizing humans towards a shared mission while developing their professional and personal growth. You will make a great design manager if you enjoy focusing on the progression and growth of other people. I discovered that this is one of the greatest joys that I get from management.

If you find that—like me—you enjoy management, you can look towards career advancement opportunities at senior manager, director, and finally executive level (VP or C-Suite). You might find yourself expanding in other areas of responsibility laterally. As some design leaders grow, they might take lateral responsibilities and lead product as well. Design management can lead to more expansive opportunities.

There is no set single pathway from designer to manager, and that’s exciting. Remember that ultimately you’re in the driver seat of your career journey. What I have outlined here is based on my own experiences with the transition, but it is by no means exhaustive or linear. Talking with your manager or another mentor at your current firm is a great way to understand how you can chart your own path from designer to manager or how you can advance as an individual contributor.

If you’re looking to diver deeper into Design Management, consider applying to the Coho Design fellowship to learn, connect, and level up with the best designers in tech.

One of the most exciting things I’ve seen lately is the emergence of no-code tools. These platforms have changed the game in terms of what people can do to improve their daily workflow without the need for an engineering degree or coding experience.

I’ve seen firsthand how no-code has allowed my colleagues of all stations to take ownership of their ideas and bring them to life without remaining dependent on traditional software development methods. And it’s not just about making things easier; it’s also increasing productivity, efficiency, and innovation across organizations worldwide.

So, if you’re interested in learning more about how no-code technology can benefit your team and your organization, in this article we’ll dive into some of the benefits of these tools, how it can transform your workflow, and empower your entire team to drive true digital transformation.

“No-code” refers to an array of visual programming platforms to build software applications, fundamentally eliminating the need for manual coding. The tools in this category enable non-technical folks such as marketers, salespeople, executives, and many others to contribute to the creation of digital solutions, lending to its rapid adoption across numerous industries. With no-code, there truly is a use case for everyone.

The no-code suite of tools has seen remarkably fast adoption among startup founders, presumably because it can empower non-technical folks with the ability to bring their own apps, platforms, and sites to life without having to spend a ton of time and money to get an MVP out to market.

Evidence of the rise of the no-code movement can be seen through the stories of small companies raising significant rounds of funding that mirror what we often see from innovative Silicon Valley startups. As mentioned in a recent Forbes piece on the topic, the value of no-code tools is being recognized among the tech community and the companies running them are strongly gaining momentum as user bases skyrocket. Webflow, a no-code website builder and hosting platform, raised $140 million in Series B funding with a market value breaching $2 billion. In another instance, Bubble, one of the leading no-code platforms for building software applications, recently claimed $100 million in Series A funding with a value above $1 billion. Large rounds of funding such as these are a strong indication of the rapid adoption of these tools, and bodes well for the future of this fast-growing space. 

Of course, this paints a pretty picture of no-code and all of its vast benefits. But, as is the case with most things, it is not perfect. Frequent complaints about no-code platforms include a lack of granular feature control and/or customization, scalability (many concerns here are debatable and have been proven incorrect in many instances), and a lack of security.

However, in my career I have seen (and demonstrated to my clients) first-hand how these same tools can transform and streamline their own business processes. In my experience, the pros strongly outweigh the cons. Below, we will explore some of the benefits of no-code tools for non-technical team members and stakeholders.

Ease of Use

As mentioned above, one of the main draws of no-code tools is that you don’t need a coding-related degree to use them. No-code tools are a breath of fresh air for users who want to create software without learning programming languages or constantly updating their skills. With these platforms, the development process is streamlined into a set of intuitive controls that anyone can learn. 

Unlike traditional programming languages, no-code tools provide a visual interface enabling you to see the software you are building as you build it. The platforms also often provide features that allow for easy feedback gathering and iteration, making it easy to gather input from stakeholders and users so you can make necessary adjustments to the software quickly. Say hello to an easier, more accessible way of creating software.

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Improving Autonomy

One of the foremost benefits of no-code in a corporate setting is the improvement of autonomy within a team. No-code platforms enable non-technical team members to contribute to internal software development efforts, allowing them to take ownership of their ideas and bring them to life without the need to rely on constrained technical resources. This leads to a more efficient work environment; one where all team members can share their ideas and participate in the creation of new tools and automations.

While no-code tools are conducive to autonomous action, these tools simultaneously enhance cross-functional team collaboration. By providing a common visual language, team members from different backgrounds can work together to build solutions. Eliminating the need for being fluent in any particular programming language while providing intuitive controls lets any team come together over a solution and figuratively speak the same language. While solutions may be developed quickly and without the need for bogging down technical resources, if a non-technical team member hits a snag in the development of a new tool or automation the barrier of communication is now brought into a common denominator, improving collaboration among the team as a whole.

Streamlining Business Processes

Have you ever reached out to customer support for a product you’ve purchased, and been pleasantly surprised that your issue was resolved quickly and painlessly? If so, then you’ve experienced the benefits of sound business processes. But the truth is, many businesses struggle to provide their customers with the level of support they deserve, often due to inefficient and error-prone processes. That’s where no-code tools can make a huge difference.

Every business is dependent on processes to run its operations effectively, and they are in need now more than ever of solutions to help them manage those processes.

By automating routine tasks, businesses can increase efficiency and reduce errors. This can include automating data entry, processing and analysis, task and project management activities, approval workflows, customer support, and a ton of other use cases. By freeing up resources from these tasks, team members are free to focus on higher-value activities.

Think of the amount of time spent poring over a list of pending approvals, gathering data from vendors’ or competitors’ websites, sorting through emails and their attachments, or other tedious tasks in your daily work life. Now, imagine having a toolkit that takes care of those things for you. Using no-code tools like Zapier or Integromat, you can quickly create automations that integrate with the applications you already use.

Such platforms improve data management and reporting through the use of pre-built integrations and connectors. This enables data to be easily collected, integrated and analyzed, leading to better decision-making. Businesses can also use no-code platforms to build customized dashboards, enabling stakeholders to access real-time data and insights. A manager or founder with little or no technical background can spend an afternoon with Google Data Studio or similar tools to create OKR or KPI dashboards that give them a high-level view on real-time performance.

Conclusion

In closing, no-code offers numerous benefits for non-technical team members and stakeholders. No-code platforms improve collaboration and communication within a team, streamline business processes, and enable digital transformation and innovation. These platforms are also cost-effective and time-efficient, reducing the cost of software development and accelerating project timelines. As no-code technology continues to evolve, businesses of all sizes should consider it as a valuable tool for digital transformation.

If you would like to explore some of the specific tools I find useful, here is a non-exhaustive list to get you started:

Key Takeaways

  1. No-code tools are enabling non-technical team members to participate in software development, which was previously limited to developers only. With no-code tools, team members can create and customize their own software solutions, which improves productivity and reduces dependency on IT departments.
  2. No-code tools are cost-effective and offer a low barrier to entry for businesses that may not have the budget to hire a team of developers. With no-code tools, businesses can create their own applications, automate workflows, and create websites without the need for coding knowledge or expertise.
  3. No-code tools allow for faster iterations and experimentation. Since team members can create and modify applications on their own, they can quickly test and refine solutions without waiting for developers to make changes. This leads to faster deployment and ultimately, better results.
  4. No-code tools can improve collaboration and communication between technical and non-technical team members. With no-code tools, team members can work together to create solutions and workflows that meet their specific needs, without the need for extensive technical knowledge.
  5. No-code tools are constantly evolving and improving, making it easier than ever for businesses to create their own software solutions. As more businesses adopt these tools, the technology is likely to become more accessible, powerful, and efficient, leading to even more democratization of software development.
  1. Chief of Staff role can have a significant impact on the success of a startup: The author, who served as the Chief of Staff at Dover, credits her role with helping the company achieve key milestones such as raising funding, expanding the team, and acquiring new customers.
  2. Adaptability is key in a startup environment: The author emphasizes the need for flexibility and the ability to pivot quickly as a startup grows and evolves. She describes how her responsibilities changed over time as the company scaled, and how she had to learn new skills and take on new challenges.
  3. Communication and collaboration are critical: The author stresses the importance of clear communication and collaboration within a startup team. She describes how she worked closely with the CEO and other members of the team to develop and execute on key initiatives.
  4. Startups require a relentless focus on growth: The author highlights the need for startups to prioritize growth above all else, and to constantly look for ways to improve and expand. She describes how Dover focused on building a strong product, acquiring new customers, and expanding into new markets.
  5. The Chief of Staff role requires a diverse skillset: The author notes that the Chief of Staff role is a multifaceted one that requires a broad range of skills, including project management, strategic thinking, communication, and leadership. She also highlights the need for adaptability and a willingness to learn and take on new challenges.
Coho Engineering is a highly curated fellowship designed to help aspiring engineering leaders and technical managers build managerial confidence, learn from industry leaders, and cultivate a personal advisory board.

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How to Go from Designer to Manager

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Throughout my career, I’ve made the switch from design leader to individual contributor based on the company I was at and the impact I wanted to make. After I left Black Pixel, I joined One Medical as a Product Design lead with no managerial responsibilities. During year two of my tenure at One Medical, there was a management need and I happily took the mantle again.

The goal of this article is to help you decide if design management is the right choice for you, and if it is, to help you start that journey. It will cover:

  • The qualities that make a great manager
  • The skills you will need to hone to develop those qualities
  • Rebuttals to widely-believed myths about the transition from designer to manager

Afterward, I will provide you with key frameworks and reflection questions to help you decide if a design management career is right for you and if so, how to set yourself up for success.

Design manager as strategist, operator, and coach

The first thing to understand is that there’s no one formula for leadership . It’ll vary based on the company you work on, its scale, and situational aspects of what your team needs.

That said, being a designer manager boils down to three core areas:

  1. Leading design as a strategist
  2. Ensuring your team runs well and is happy as an operator
  3. Growing your team members as a coach

As a strategist, your chief concern is whether or not the team is meeting business goals. The  main priority should be understanding customer problems end-to-end and researching new opportunities to create an inspiring design vision.

As designers, it is important to connect all of the work we do as a team to key business outcomes. In your role as strategist you will be responsible for developing and tracking Objectives and Key Results (OKRs) for your team. This can get a little tricky due to the nature of design work being dependent on the work OKRs of other teams.

More often than not, design team OKRs will be more lateral than vertical. Design is not only a practice, but a capability that can be a force multiplier for outcomes for the customer and company.

This could show up in many ways. For example, brand design helping marketing increase signups due to awareness campaigns that drive traffic to the site, or product design improving a feature customers have been asking for, keeping them retained as a happy customer.

In your capacity as “operator”, you’re responsible for the team running effectively. This is the most traditional aspect of management, stemming from production line managers overseeing the work. The operator’s role is to implement effective processes to build team culture and engagement, recruit and hire quality designers, and manage team performance.

The operator is responsible for setting the design cadence and the pace and frequency of feedback. One of the most important processes to engineer is the design critique (Noah Levin, Director of Product Design at Figma has a great article about how to run great critiques), and ensuring that it is a good fit for how the team operates.

A happy team is an effective team. As managers, you’re also responsible for the team’s well-being and create the most safe and positive environment possible.

You’re not going to be able to make everyone happy and will need to balance the needs of each individual as the collective team with what needs to get done at the company level. They’ll need to know when to make the call if a team member needs a break due to burnout or when things need to slow down. An offsite that recharges someone could be the reason they decide to stay when facing burnout.

Lastly, as a coach you’re responsible for providing growth and development opportunities to team members. This can be done through providing funding for workshops and classes or  through coaching team members  yourself.

The 1:1 is a manager’s secret weapon and the most important meeting you’ll have with their team members. It’s a way to build relationships and ensure your team members are happy, check on what barriers you can remove, and discuss career development.

During my first 1:1 with a direct report, I ask them where they want to go professionally, not only in their current role but over the course of their entire career. My belief is you want designers to thrive in their career, beyond their tenure with you and exceeding you in every way.  If there is no career ladder, that is something to put in place immediately and continue to refine. From the first 1:1 together to the last, coaching is a daily activity.

Finding the Right Balance

One of the chief challenges of being a design manager is fluidly moving between these three roles. A manager's responsibilities will change based on what the company needs at that moment.

For instance, if a company’s goals are well-defined and growth is one of them then a manager may find themselves in the operator facet more than the other two.Then when company growth stabilizes and it is time to define new goals, the manager will move into the strategist facet.

The trick is to balance these three responsibilities as they fluctuate as the company grows and evolves. For example, in my career I’ve had various design leadership levels based on specific needs:

  • As a Design Director at Black Pixel, the majority of our work was client services. I was very involved as a strategist and doing the work while I mentored other designers
  • My time at One Medical was growing the Product Design team in its scaling stage. As I led in strategy, I hired more designers and increased more of my time operating the team and being a coach
  • At Webflow, I don’t even edit Figma files, and the majority of my time is operating the team and working with the management team
How my roles as designer manager changed between companies
How my roles as design managers changed between companies

Management is a point of no return” (and other myths about becoming a design manager)

A great manager needs to be a strategist, an operator, and a coach, but what does a great manager not need to be?

There are some widespread misconceptions about what it means to be a design manager. I am going to cover the five myths that I believe are the most problematic.

Myth #1: Becoming a design manager is a point of no return

One very common myth is that once you become a manager, you can’t go back to an IC. This is untrue and can be counterproductive.

Management in tech is littered with people in the role who didn’t receive enough training and support or felt forced to step into the role. I have switched between being a manager and IC throughout my career. It might feel like an ego hit at first when you go from a manager to an IC, but it should not.

Myth #2: Design management is only about supporting people.

While the best managers go into management because they care deeply about people, supporting others is just the tip of the iceberg. Design management is also operations, administration, and accountability. Coaching is not the only aspect of the job.

Myth #3: You need to become a design manager to move up in your career

This might be true for some companies — but not all.

In fact, the industry is evolving separate parallel career paths for both managers and individual contributors. Many companies have ways for designers to remain individual contributors as they level up, while also being able to receive compensation and exercise influence on the same level as a senior manager.

For instance, at Webflow, the Principal Designer role is leveled the same as a Senior Manager role and allows for a similar compensation and similar level of influence within the company. Leadership and management, while often tied together, are not mutually exclusive.

So in deciding which path to choose, ask yourself:

  • Where would you like to have the most impact?
  • Do you want to contribute to specific projects or do you want to have an impact at the company level?
  • What gives you the most gratitude?

Myth #4: Design managers are the best designers on their team

Not only is it not true that designer managers must be the best designers on the team — they also shouldn’t be.

While there is a certain level of skill and comprehension that you should have as a design manager to lead your team, the goal is to make every designer on your team their best — not to be better than them at what they do.

Some of the best coaches in NBA history, for example, were not hall-of-fame players; but they were knowledgeable, they knew how to motivate talent, and they had enough experience to lead.

Similarly, while you will need to draw from your core skill set as a designer in order to evaluate and critique your employees’ work, that doesn’t mean you need to be the best designer on the team.

Myth #5: Design managers don't care about design anymore

While it may be true that you are pushing pixels less as a design manager, you are ultimately accountable for everything that your group creates.

Part of the job of being a design manager is coaching employees on their designs and helping them improve as designers. Your framework for approaching and executing designs will serve as a model for your employees.

Here’s what Cara, an Coho Design Fellow, had to say about her career path after having gone through the Coho Design fellowship: “

Skills that carry over from design & new skills to build

Becoming a design manager does not mean starting over from scratch. Even though you will be making fewer individual contributions to design work, the skills you have honed during your time as a designer will serve you as a manager. Examples include:

  • Foundational design skills: The foundational skills of research, empathy, experimenting, gathering feedback, and iterating also apply to managing a team
  • Empathy and active listening: This skill set becomes particularly important when it comes time to coach your team during 1:1s as a coach, and also in helping you understand customer needs as a strategist
  • Iteration and experimentation: These are key to developing a good design workflow. Even the most successful managers will not get everything right on their first try; iteration is essential to incrementally improve your management processes
  • Storytelling: Storytelling humanizes the personas we design for, building empathy and perspective in a human-centric way. Powerful stories are essential to keeping your team motivated and inspired.  
  • System design: Your work with leaders on org design as a manager will be similar to the way you’d work with an engineer on architecting large-scale,complex systems in the past as a designer

But while you can certainly utilize many of the skills that you have developed as a designer, you will also have to build new management skills to succeed as a manager. For example:

  • Leadership communication: As a manager, you’re balancing downstream communication with your direct reports, cross-functional communication with other peer managers, and upstream with execs and stakeholders. This requires different modes and strategies of communication that you may not have experienced as an individual contributor
  • Coaching and developing people: My belief is you want designers to thrive in their career, beyond their tenure with you and exceeding you in every way. If there is no career ladder, that is something to put in place immediately and continue to refine. From the first 1:1 together to the last, coaching is a daily activity.
  • Delegation and expectation setting: As an individual contributor, it’s likely you don’t have much of an option to delegate work to others. As a manager, it’s your primary objective to hand off responsibilities for your team and set clear expectations for them to own.
  • Assessing talent and hiring: Though you may have been involved with interviewing as a designer, understanding the scope of being a hiring manager, attracting talent, and striving to build diverse teams is a new endeavor as you step into management
  • Autonomy: Taking initiative by managing or creating your own projects that address core needs of your business. Managers need to be able to identify these opportunities based on customer feedback or strategic directions.

Is design management right for you?

The truth is that while design management can be a fulfilling career path, not everybody will be happy in the role.

This is okay. Management should not be the only way to advance in your career, and individual contributors have a path forward as well. Later on I will talk about strategies for advancing your design career in different ways, but in the meantime I invite you to take some time to reflect on whether design management is the right choice for you.

Before you read my take on the following questions, reflect and answer each one for yourself. Jot down your answers or type them into a document and refer to them as you go through the rest of this article.

  1. What areas of design management do I care about most, and what gives me the most energy?
  2. What part of my work makes me the happiest? What parts do I care less about?
  3. Who are my mentors and what can I learn from them?
  4. How involved do I want to be in the design work? Would I be okay with designing not my primary focus or would I miss it?

Ok, have you thought about and answered these questions for yourself? When you are ready, read on to learn more about which career path, whether in design or design management, is right for you.

  1. Do you like generating ideas and executing a design for a particular project or do you like to have input across projects to ensure consistent vision and quality? If you are happiest in the weeds plugging away at a particular design project, continuing the IC path might be the most gratifying for you. If you enjoy setting strategic directions, contributing across projects, and supporting others in their work then you may be suited to design management. Play to your strengths. Your role as a design manager is to ensure everything in your scope of responsibility is done well, not that you personally have to be good at things. Playing to your strengths and leveraging the strengths of others will yield the best outcomes.
  2. Do you have a design manager at your company that you are comfortable talking about career advancement? What can you learn from their career progression to apply to your own? A lack of mentorship does not mean that you are not cut out for design management, but it may mean that it is more difficult to get on the management track..perhaps at your current company. If you do not have a mentor you can draw from and bounce ideas off of, do you have the bandwidth and desire to put in the extra work required to make your case for design manager?
  3. Do you enjoy sitting with executives all day and debating and arguing about resourcing and never be attuned to what your team is doing? Or, do you want to be closer to the work sitting side-by-side with the people I am managing? Your answer to this question will help you map out and define your design management role (or even signal that you might want to advance as an individual contributor). For instance, if you prefer to be closer to the design work you may want to manage a smaller team whereas if you want to be closer to department-wide operations you may want to be sitting with those executives.

Although this article details what a design manager is and how to become one, as mentioned above in myth # 3, keep in mind that  becoming a design manager is not the only way for you to advance your career as a designer.

In the next section I’ll help you develop a game plan for advancing your career, whether as an individual contributor, or in pursuing a design manager role.

Building your career roadmap

This section covers your potential as a manager, the case for management in your current role (or beyond), and how to build your portfolio.

Would I be a good fit for management?

Like many things in life, there is no way to know you’d be a good fit for something until you try it. However, in my experience there are certain attributes and behaviors that demonstrate manager potential:

  • Keith Rabois, one of the most renowned operators in tech, talks about looking at who people come to for help in the office as a good heuristic for management material. When people seek you out to help unblock and help them, that’s a great sign as a manager
  • The time you spend coaching and training other designers delivers more value than you contributing to the work yourself
  • People are vulnerable around you because they know you care and feel safe.

How to make your case for a design management position

The number one mistake people make in their efforts to become design manager is not letting their organization leaders know that they’re interested in the role.

That said, leaders’ abilities to offer you a design manager role will be contingent on if management opportunities are available. For instance, if the team only has three designers there may not be a value add from a design manager for that team.

However, even if something like this is the case, maybe there is a larger team at your organization or a team that is positioned for growth? To make your case for design manager, you will need to identify these opportunities within the company or look for opportunities outside your company if none exist within.

What to consider when talking to organization leadership about your management interest:

  • What motivates you as a manager?
  • Why would you make a bigger impact as a people manager vs. an individual contributor?

Remember that you’re in the driver seat of your career path. Build your own career development plan in addition (or in absence) of what your manager gives you.

How to create a design management portfolio

One question I often get is, “What does a design manager’s portfolio look like?”

In reality, the answer is “not much different than an IC portfolio”.

  • Both provide case studies of the impact you’ve made.
  • As a manager, your team and organizational impact are the results you share instead.
  • Since you’re not showing pixels you’ve designed, the key is articulating how you understood the problem, company goals, and provide clarity for your team to achieve their goals.

When a hiring manager is reviewing your management portfolio, they should have a sense of how you lead humans, your business acumen, and the systems you put in place to ensure high quality work is done.

How to level up as an individual contributor

Through the earlier reflective exercise, you may have discovered that management is not for you, and that is okay.

Here are some steps that you can take to advance in your career as an individual contributor.

Step 1: Enhance Your Portfolio

Garnering recognition and earning coveted raises is dependent in large part on how you sell yourself. Tuning your portfolio is a great way to set yourself up for a conversation with your supervisor about a potential raise or promotion within your design team.

As you continue to progress in your career as an individual contributor, the focus will be on mastery and impact at the company level. Your portfolio should reflect the depth you have in a particular area and be framed on the impact and influence you have on projects at a higher level.

Step 2: Create Opportunities for Recognition

Perhaps you can do exemplary work, but you may still fly under the radar if you are having trouble getting your work out there and recognized throughout your company. Here are some concrete strategies that you can use to help broaden your reach and communicate your contributions to your team and beyond.

  • Set up demos to make your work visible that your team and stakeholders can attend. This can be as simple as recording a Loom of how you’re thinking of work. You’d be surprised how viral these can go to broaden recognition
  • Create tools and resources to help your peer designers do better work
  • Finally, the best way is being recognized for your impact through peer feedback. When your fellow designers give you praise for your leadership and you have that trust, that’s the best evidence for your candidacy for management

Step 3: Talk to your manager about advancement opportunities

Talking to your manager is an important step in increasing the recognition you receive for your role as well as for getting opportunities to do fun, interesting, and challenging projects.

Through my own experiences I have developed a framework for navigating these conversations by asking myself the following questions in advance:

  • What is my superpower should I double down on?
  • Are there stretch opportunities for me to grow new skills with close guidance/mentorship? (ex: hiring, etc.)
  • Where can I be a fly on the wall and learn through observation of leaders in action?

The management growth track

Design management is galvanizing humans towards a shared mission while developing their professional and personal growth. You will make a great design manager if you enjoy focusing on the progression and growth of other people. I discovered that this is one of the greatest joys that I get from management.

If you find that—like me—you enjoy management, you can look towards career advancement opportunities at senior manager, director, and finally executive level (VP or C-Suite). You might find yourself expanding in other areas of responsibility laterally. As some design leaders grow, they might take lateral responsibilities and lead product as well. Design management can lead to more expansive opportunities.

There is no set single pathway from designer to manager, and that’s exciting. Remember that ultimately you’re in the driver seat of your career journey. What I have outlined here is based on my own experiences with the transition, but it is by no means exhaustive or linear. Talking with your manager or another mentor at your current firm is a great way to understand how you can chart your own path from designer to manager or how you can advance as an individual contributor.

A Lifetime Building Coho: The Unheard StoriesA Lifetime Building Coho: The Unheard Stories
CEO Updates
All
min read

Coho CEO Unveils His Journey

By
Mindaugas Petrutis
All
From The Team

From The Beginning

Embark on a journey with me, as I share some stories of what got me here and how I've been really building versions of Coho all of my life.

From a humble beginnings in Lithuania to trying to find a home in European cities, and finally to the vibrant pulse of Dublin - this is a story of resilience, exploration, and the power of community. Experience the rollercoaster ride of job hunting in Galway, the gruelling lessons of the service industry, and the thrilling leap into entrepreneurship.

Discover the transformative power of design, the necessity of community bonds, and the challenges of navigating a new career path.

Dive In

Come, dive into the chronicles of building Coho and my transition to a CEO role, fostering professional growth, and ultimately constructing a community rooted in shared learning and development. This isn't just a narration of events, but a testament to the power of perseverance and the transformative magic of stepping outside comfort zones. So, are you ready to journey with me?

Watch The Coho Story

B2B Product Management: Competitive AnalysisB2B Product Management: Competitive Analysis
Community Written
Marketing
10
min read

B2B Product Management: Competitive Analysis

By
Gonzalo Sáenz
All
Community Written

However, this approach is not enough. Features should align with a product strategy. We should not blindly build features without properly understanding or, at the very least, hypothesizing our competitor's strategy and how it compares to ours.

In this article, I will cover a simple way to structure this information using two widely-used tools that have helped me conduct a competitive analysis, which informs my product strategy.

Why Competitive Analysis?

  1. Stay informed about industry trends and changes: Conducting a competitive analysis not only helps you keep track of what your competitors are doing but also provides insight into the latest industry developments and emerging trends.
  2. Identify strengths and weaknesses: Analyzing your competitors' products is a great way to gain a deeper understanding of your own product's strengths and weaknesses. By identifying areas where your product is lacking, you can focus on improving those areas and creating a stronger overall offering.
  3. Uncover opportunities for innovation: By examining your competitors' products, you may discover new and innovative features or approaches that you can adopt in your product. This can help you differentiate yourself from competitors and provide unique value to your customers.
  4. Assess pricing and positioning: A competitive analysis can help you determine the best pricing and positioning strategy for your product. By analyzing your competitors' pricing and positioning, you can get a sense of where your product fits in the market and how to make it more competitive.

First Tool: The 4 fits model

Developed by Bryan Balfour from Reforge.com, you can find a more detailed explanation of the framework here. The summary is that Product-Market fit is not enough and to build a successful product you also need to ensure that Distribution Channels and the Business model (how you charge for your product) are also aligned and balanced.

What I like about this framework is that it helps you think about your product through two different approaches; one regarding what the user wants (Product and Market), and what works for the business (Channels and Model).

In the article I shared above, each part of the 4 fits model has its frameworks but I only use the high-level structure to present information in a more simple way that is also easier to maintain on a frequent cadence.

During my live sessions on this topic, I compared visual collaboration tools such as Miro, Mural, and Whimsical. However, in this article, I will provide a summarized version and guidelines for you to work on independently. It's important to note that almost all the necessary information can be obtained from the product's homepage.

As mentioned before, the tools and processes I use help structure information and build a hypothesis about how competitors think about each part of the 4 fits model. It's essential to emphasize the hypothesis part because the only way to gain 100% certainty of another company's strategy is by joining them.

Once you finish this comparison, you can make more informed decisions about whether to build a feature based on the customer and market served. For example, if you are a Whimsical Product Manager and you find out, via a feature comparison table, that you are missing the +2,000 advanced diagramming options that Miro offers, you could skip this feature for now. These advanced shapes are likely tailored for enterprise users, while Whimsical is focused on SMBs.

Second Tool: Positioning Maps

I’d recommend this article from Harvard Business Review, it’s from 2007 but as I mentioned lines above I’m not reinventing the wheel and introducing brand-new tools.

The idea behind positioning maps is to identify a few customer-valued attributes and position yourself and competitors based on how customers perceive them. Pricing is the most common attribute used for positioning maps, but as shown in the example below, you can use any important attribute. This is an inexpensive way to understand your positioning relative to the competition on the attributes that matter. I usually perform this type of analysis qualitatively, with some high-level support. In my opinion, it is more important to have structured information to make quick decisions, rather than getting bogged down in the details of the process.

Don’t forget to map alternatives

In this section, I'll briefly cover a concept I explained in my previous article B2B Product Management: Inertia and Alternatives.

The concept of alternatives refers to how users solve their problems without your product. One example I like to use is Close.com, a CRM similar to Salesforce or HubSpot.

Although popular tools like MS Excel and Google Sheets are used to manage sales pipelines and prospects, they break at scale. Close.com has a blog post explaining how to build a CRM with those tools, which raises the question: why would they do that?

The answer is simple: alternatives are cheap and easy to use, but they lack scalability. Therefore, it's important to keep them in mind during competitive analysis or when interviewing users about how they solve certain issues. You should think about how to provide a 10X or 100X experience with your product.

I particularly like how the Close.com team phrased it in their blog post:

If you're a solopreneur or just testing the waters with your sales efforts, a spreadsheet can be a good choice, and in that case, you should download our (free) ready-to-use Excel CRM template.

And if you're ready to try the CRM that can help you scale your results without scaling your efforts?