I have a question for current Google, Facebook and Microsoft Product Manager/Program Manager. Do you all have computer science background? I currently don’t have a computer science background but trying to apply for the PM role at these companies. I realized many of you have computer science background so first hire was software engineer than PM role. If I don’t have any computer science background would it be crucial to not hired because of this reason? Thoughts?
Political Science + MySpace page building when I was a kid.
No degree here but 22YOE at this point. Came to tech when things were just getting started and taught myself what I needed to know. These days I likely couldn't get my job with my background which I find sad because there are lots of smart people out there without formal education.
At Microsoft, you don't need any background. PMs only setup meetings, send emails and take credit for what engineers do.
Lol. I love salty devs.
It's true. Their work is mostly collaboration and XFN alignment so that the Eng is not Disturbed till needed with needless meetings. At least at Facebook. None of my PMs knew a dang about CS or I don't think it even matters. You can the PM job done with zero technical know-how
No. I can code a little from HS but I’ve never used it. I have some natural aptitude for math and logic which have been useful for discussions of architecture and design. My expertise is in business and strategy. Eng respect and appreciate that skill because it saves them headaches.
You didn’t ask about Amazon but Amazon has both kinds of PM positions, Tech and Non Tech.
I meant to post Amazon too. Thanks for sharing! I am the OP but not showing as OP
Depends. What’s your background and profile? Do you mind sharing?
Sure, BS in Chemistry & MBA in general management; 2-3 years experience as Product Manager at software/tech industry start ups
You should be totally fine. As far as you understand technology, tech stack. I’d assume being in the tech space you understand more than just growth/ops. If you have a solid understanding of the tech powering the product that counts for a degree in CS or whatever. Plus mba hopefully helps w/ product positioning/ sales/ mktg etc.