Moving From Dev to Pm
Mood
calm
Sentiment
mixed
Category
other
Key topics
Discussion about transitioning from a developer to a project manager or scrum master role.
Snapshot generated from the HN discussion
Discussion Activity
Light discussionFirst comment
31m
Peak period
5
Day 1
Avg / period
4
Key moments
- 01Story posted
Sep 6, 2025 at 3:59 AM EDT
3 months ago
Step 01 - 02First comment
Sep 6, 2025 at 4:30 AM EDT
31m after posting
Step 02 - 03Peak activity
5 comments in Day 1
Hottest window of the conversation
Step 03 - 04Latest activity
Sep 7, 2025 at 2:27 PM EDT
3 months ago
Step 04
Generating AI Summary...
Analyzing up to 500 comments to identify key contributors and discussion patterns
Product owner
Project manager
Product manager
Are all wildly different job roles.
Do you want to track and ensure deliver across multiple projects = project management
Do you want to be close support to dev teams and organize backlogs etc. = product owner
Do you want a business role talking to customers and deciding _what to build_ and why (product strategy) and much less focusing on the how to build it part.
I’m a data analyst right now and before that a SWE.
I guess I’m my own product manager right now. I get to decide quite often what a good strategy is, as long as I back it with data, and then build it myself.
2. Do everything you can to map out how the company makes money.
3. Speak to sales and customer success folks often.
4. Do everything you can to speak to customers directly, and listen to their pains points and opportunities.
5. Develop hypothesis about what to build next, test the hypothesis by debating internally, speaking to customers, showing them demos etc.
If you live in a peaceful state, my advice to you is to learn to bake bread, cook, or drive a truck, or if you have a medical education, become a paramedic. The world always needs food, logistics, or medicine. if you are a complete idiot - go to a construction site, they pay well there, and you will not work 16 hours a day like any IT specialist (don't tell me that you work 8 hours, I won't believe you, an IT specialist thinks only about IT all the time, both at work and after work, even on the toilet, and during meals).
when I moved away from IT I felt freedom, I could think not about IT, I worked only the time I was at work, I didn't think about work outside of work at all, because work remains at work, and that's great.
I think having the background in development makes things much easier, as you’ll actually understand what’s going on. My current scrum master has no idea what we’re talking about and can’t speak to anything we’re doing, which is a problem.
My biggest piece of advice in a role like that is to show up to meetings prepared. Starting a meeting with an empty sheet often ends with an empty sheet. Spending the time to put together some kind of framework to organize thoughts, even as a jumping off point, pays dividends. Build systems for the team and eventually things hum along pretty smoothly.
I ended up switching back into a dev role. While the team was considered successful, and the team members seemed happy, I was miserable. I’m a bit of a perfectionist, which is a burden I’m used to placing on myself, but wasn’t something I felt comfortable pushing on other people, because I know the weight of it. This led me to not give feedback I should have given, or letting work go that was “good enough,” but really should have been better. The work wasn’t up to my standards, and I was accountable for it, even though it wasn’t work I personally did. This slowly drove me mad, even though all external feedback was glowing. This is just a long way to say, know yourself, but also that it may simply take time to adapt and grow into the role. It’s a big mental shift, at least it was for me. Going back has also been a bit rough.
I did find it to be useful to be on that side of the house for a while. It gave me a little more empathy for people in those roles. I was pretty hard on them in the past and have eased up a lot.
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