For an intensive and full Immersion PM experience i think FB is the winner. For a wlb and slightly more technical Bent PM experience Goog is the winner. For execution and operational experience Amazon is the winner. TC is undisputedly top Notch at FB followed by G followed by Amazon. If tough to crack is a yardstick then FB is the toughest on Product sense front and Google on technical front and Amazon on Leadership principles front. Brand recognition wise I think both G and FB are at par followed by Amazon.
In what context, what type of products, and what company stage?
On average, for larger companies, it's probably G or FB. Between G and FB, G has more skilled PMs in product differentiation/innovation. (FB's latest products, Reels, Lasso, and Audio are literal copies of TikTik and Podcast, respectively)
If you're talking the aggregate average across all product management dimensions, then you'll probably find the best of the best at hot pre-IPOs because the financial upsides are a no-brainer for anyone highly skilled enough at their respective field to push a company public to be at a pre-IPO
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Immersion PM experience i think FB is the winner. For a wlb and slightly more technical
Bent PM experience Goog is the winner. For execution and operational experience Amazon is the winner. TC is undisputedly top
Notch at FB followed by G followed by Amazon. If tough to crack is a yardstick then FB is the toughest on Product sense front and Google on technical front and Amazon on Leadership principles front. Brand recognition wise I think both G and FB are at par followed by Amazon.
On average, for larger companies, it's probably G or FB. Between G and FB, G has more skilled PMs in product differentiation/innovation. (FB's latest products, Reels, Lasso, and Audio are literal copies of TikTik and Podcast, respectively)
If you're talking the aggregate average across all product management dimensions, then you'll probably find the best of the best at hot pre-IPOs because the financial upsides are a no-brainer for anyone highly skilled enough at their respective field to push a company public to be at a pre-IPO