I just tuned into the latest conversation on the upcoming Product at Heart 2026, and it hit on the exact challenges product leaders are navigating right now: curating meaningful content in a world where AI moves faster than our agendas, designing formats that create real connection, and ensuring every minute earns its place. Listening to Petra Wille and Teresa Torres map out the speaker lineup, workshops, and structural shifts, I found myself nodding along—this is the kind of thoughtful curation we need if we want product teams and product leaders to walk away with practical value, not just inspiration.
Listen to this episode on: Spotify | Apple Podcasts
What stood out immediately is the bold move to a single-track conference for 2026. In an era of gen ai hype and endless breakouts, this choice signals clear intent: tighter curation, a shared experience, and less FOMO. The team isn’t carving out a separate AI track—and I love that decision. Their stance is simple and sensible: No AI track—AI will show up everywhere, but not as a siloed topic. The team sees it as part of the everyday toolkit. That mirrors how high-performing, empowered product teams actually work today—AI Strategy and AI workflows are part of the operating system, not a side show.
The keynote lineup is already compelling. Christian Idiodi (SVPG) brings storytelling that turns product principles into habits you can actually use on Monday. Elaine Kasket, cyber-psychologist, exploring digital afterlife and AI replicas, will push us to think more deeply about the human side of our systems. And Teresa Torres will be sharing what she’s learning about AI—exactly the kind of continuous discovery mindset we need as we integrate LLMs into product discovery and delivery.
I’m also thrilled to see roundtables become what they’re calling an “alternative track.” That’s a smart way to deepen learning without fragmenting attention. The best conference ROI I’ve had often comes from targeted small-group conversations—where product trios compare approaches, swap metrics frameworks, or challenge each other’s product strategy assumptions. It’s a design choice that rewards curiosity and builds communities of practice.
We also get a behind-the-scenes look at Teresa’s Maker Studio workshop, where participants will build personal AI workflows. That’s exactly the hands-on, practitioner-first approach teams need right now—less demo theater, more systems that stick. If your roadmap includes integrating LLMs into continuous discovery or augmenting your team’s decision velocity, this kind of guided practice is gold.
The broader workshop slate looks deep and balanced. Expect returning favorites and practical frameworks: Rich Mironov on the realities of product leadership in complex orgs; Büşra’s metrics workshop translating outcomes into action; and an overview of additional workshops from Rich Mironov, Büşra Coşkuner, Marcus Castenfors, and Özlem Yüce. From success metrics to toolkits for product managers, the content spans IC to product management leadership—ideal if you’re stepping into new roles or scaling empowered product teams.
One of the most exciting evolutions is the Product Leadership Event, now a 1.5-day retreat. The format blends talk sessions, mini-workshops, dinners, and small-group excursions (boat rides, improv, etc.), giving leaders time and space to exchange playbooks, stress-test decisions, and build real relationships. It’s capped at 60 attendees (all in product leadership roles) to keep it intimate and useful. As someone who believes in outcomes vs output OKRs and first principles decision making, I appreciate how this structure encourages depth over breadth—and real accountability among peers.
Here are the core takeaways I’m carrying into my own planning: single-track means tighter curation, so every talk has to earn its place. Roundtables are growing into an “alternative track,” offering more ways to engage beyond stage talks. Workshops go deep and meet you where you are—IC, manager, or executive. And the leadership retreat expands to maximize learning from peers, not just from the stage. If you care about product discovery, product strategy, and conference networking that leads to actual business impact, this program looks thoughtfully engineered.
If you’re planning your 2026 calendar—or just curious how conferences evolve alongside the craft—this is a thoughtful walkthrough of what to expect. Come say hi to Teresa and Petra—on stage, at a roundtable, or somewhere in the hallway conversations that make these events memorable.
For more context and resources mentioned, explore: Product at Heart, Arne Kittler, Mind the Product, Christian Idiodi of Silicon Valley Product Group, Elaine Kasket, House of Beautiful Business, The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People by Stephen Covey, Rich Mironov, Marty Cagan, Claude Code, Codex by OpenAI, Marcus Castenfors, Büşra Coşkuner and her Success Metrics: A Playbook for Product Managers, Özlem Yüce’s Essential Toolkit for Product Managers, Petra’s Product Leadership Wheel (PLwheel), and Netlight.
Follow Teresa Torres: https://ProductTalk.org
Follow Petra Wille: https://Petra-Wille.com
Full transcripts are only available for paid subscribers.
Inspired by this post on Product Talk.












Leave a Reply