I’ve long believed that the Product Strategist & Evangelist role is where analytics meets impact. When I work with teams using Amplitude, my focus is simple: turn product data into decisions that compound, and tell the story in a way that mobilizes people—customers, stakeholders, and empowered product teams alike.
At its core, this role aligns product strategy with business outcomes. I anchor planning to outcomes vs output OKRs, partner closely with product trios, and run continuous discovery to ensure every roadmap item is tied to a measurable customer problem and value proposition. That discipline keeps us honest about what moves the needle.
Analytics is the engine. I start with a clean event taxonomy, dependable instrumentation, and a self-serve insight layer in Amplitude analytics. From activation to retention analysis, I define a few sharp metrics that predict sustainable product-led growth—then I build dashboards the whole organization can trust and use.
Experimentation is where insight becomes action. I operationalize A/B testing with clear hypotheses, guardrails for minimum detectable effect, and crisp success criteria. The goal is speed with rigor: learn fast, ship what works, and retire what doesn’t. Over time, this creates a culture where teams default to evidence rather than opinions.
Evangelism turns analytics into momentum. I practice developer evangelism to meet practitioners where they are, and I translate complex findings into accessible narratives for executives and customer-facing teams. That means live walkthroughs, in-app guides, product tours, and field enablement that shows not just the what, but the why and the how.
Under the hood, a unified analytics platform is essential. I pair it with pragmatic data governance and privacy-by-design so we can scale insights confidently. The result is a flywheel: reliable data, repeatable workflows, and reusable patterns that accelerate every subsequent initiative.
On the go-to-market front, I connect product strategy to positioning, packaging, and enablement. The stories we tell in the market should mirror the value we measure in the product. That alignment makes launches sharper, sales motions clearer, and adoption smoother.
In practice, my playbook is straightforward: clarify the North Star and adjacent metrics, stand up trustworthy pipelines and dashboards, institutionalize experimentation, and continuously translate insights for decision-makers. Done well, analytics stops being a report and becomes a system for growth.
If you’re building or evolving this function, start small and intentional: instrument the few events that matter, ship one meaningful A/B test, and circulate a concise narrative on what you learned. Consistency beats complexity, and momentum compounds quickly when teams see their decisions move the metrics that matter.
Inspired by this post on Amplitude – Perspectives.












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