The Department of Product
Briefing
Apple's Vision and a new way to predict the future. Plus: Airtable gets percentages, Slack’s revenue struggles and a new feature analytics tool
Hi product people 👋,
Building features that people want is the reason that product teams exist. This week, a new release from analytics startup June is hoping to make measuring feature usage simpler. Features is a feature-oriented view of your analytics that’s designed to validate, iterate and celebrate new feature launches. It’s a remarkably simple way to orient reporting from a product perspective but it says a lot that this approach to data feels like a differentiator vs other bloated SaaS reporting tools.
In an ideal world of course, you’d be able to predict whether a feature will work before you build it. A new product we discovered this week promises to help with that. Foresee keeps track of every prediction about the future you make. It claims the more you reflect on previous predictions, the better your intuition and judgment about the future will be.
Speaking of the future, Apple unveiled its own take on augmented reality this week. It’s pitching Vision Pro as a premium device that respects – rather than replaces – the world around you. Features like passthrough and Eyesight make it clear that the metaverse isn’t a world Apple wants us to live in. Instead, much of Apple’s presentation focused on the productivity gains of having on-demand 4k screens at your disposal that complement your existing work set up. The product designers who have spent 7+ years working on this have clearly worked extremely hard to uphold its human-centric design principles.
Despite this, there are still important UX questions that remain unanswered: What if you’re wearing makeup? What if you have longer hair? Will motion sickness be a problem? Ahead of the launch, a former Magic Leap exec said that in their testing, VR headsets automatically excluded 50% of those who tried it because of the problems associated with these use cases. His new company pivoted to light weight AR glasses as a result.
A more existential question is: do people want to strap computers to their face? If the performance of early entrants so far is anything to go by, the answer to that is a resounding no. But if anyone can brute force a market into existence, it’s Apple. And for product teams, this could mark the first step towards a future of building dedicated spatial computing products.
Enjoy the rest of your week!
Essential reads for product teams
How to create an API product strategy
Square’s Lead PM, Abhishek Bhardwaj, shares everything you need to know about developing an API product strategy in 2023:
(Department of Product and Sendbird)
Tools you can use
-
Documenso – an open sourced alternative to Docusign
-
Readme – transform API docs into developer hubs
-
Columns – turn Notion data into beautiful visualizations
Design principles – Apple Vision Pro’s design principles
To coincide with the launch of Apple Vision Pro at WWDC, Apple has shared a rich library of resources for developers and designers who want to build apps in its new proprietary operating system, visionOS. In this beautiful series, Apple designers share guidance on how to build immersive apps in spatial computing. Its core design principles for visionOS are: familiar, human-centered, dimensional, immersive, authentic.
Tweets to read
Bloomberg’s Michael McDonough on the number of AI mentions on earnings calls
Interview – Intercom co-founder Des Traynor on the future of customer success
Customer support is perhaps the most “target-rich” environment to apply generative models like GPT-4 – these technologies excel at talking, reasoning, and providing answers. Such conversational abilities have traditionally been the province of human agents. As their jobs change, the software they use must evolve, too. (
)
Technical explainers – Are you afraid of the Command Line tool?
With a few keystrokes, you can accomplish a task that might take multiple mouse clicks and menu selections in a GUI. And it’s not just that – much of the work engineers do in the terminal isn’t even possible in a GUI. (
)
New product features, launches and announcements this week
Airtable has launched a new feature which allows users to display percentages as progress bars. Helpful for tracking OKRs or other progress-oriented metrics.
Microsoft Teams is getting a new Discord-like communities feature. The new, free feature is currently only available on mobile devices but Microsoft’s VP of product Amit Fulya, says the company is planning to expand support into Windows, MacOS and the web.
BeReal has launched a new feature to help users connect with their friends using RealMoji reactions or RealChat. Earlier this year, the company defended its daily active user numbers and hit back at suggestions that it was struggling with 20m DAUs.
Despite the onslaught of negative feedback experienced by Snap, Instagram is rumored to be building its own AI chatbot . Users will be able to choose from 30 different personalities and ask the chatbots questions to ‘inspire creativity’.
📊Product insights and trends to stay informed
English is still the predominant language of the web, now used by 55% of the websites of the world. But the figure is down from 63% in 2022.
Twitter’s ad revenues dropped 59% during the five weeks between April 1 and the first week of May, with revenues of $88 million.
It’s getting harder to go viral on TikTok. Recent algorithm changes have seen the number of videos reaching over 10 million views decline 50% year on year to 4,600 in April 2023.
Slack accounts for just 5% of parent company’s Salesforce sales. New CEO wants to adopt some of Salesforce’s product culture to increase revenues.
Japan’s number one transportation app isn’t Uber – it’s a taxi app called Go. Go commands 70% of the mobility market in Japan with over 100,000 cabs from local taxi companies.
Tuesday is the highest office occupancy day of the week across 10 major US cities (bank holidays excluded). The lowest is Friday, which is stuck at 28% occupancy rates.
Other industry news in brief
Spotify is downsizing its podcast ambitions as it announces the lay off of 200 staff in the division.
Stripe has acquired engineering productivity tool Okay for an undisclosed sum.
Amazon’s Alexa has ditched celebrity voices.
Product Briefing – Jun 29, 2023
Figma’s new mode and AR gets a niche use case. Plus: Shopify takes a gamble, a new tool for API integrations and Dropbox unifies search
Product Briefing – Jun 22, 2023
Spotify, Revolut and the rise of the Super Sub. Plus: a new inbox for Slack, GitHub’s copilot creator speaks out and why Google can’t be trusted
Product Briefing – Jun 15, 2023
Netflix’s gamble pays off and Reddit starts an API war. Plus: a new tool for translations, Intercom charges per query and Google Meet gets easier on the go
Product Briefing – Jun 1, 2023
Notion’s new Projects and WeWork gets 3D video calls. Plus: goodbye YouTube Stories, FigJam’s new iPad app and AI natural selection
Product Briefing – May 25, 2023
Adobe unleashes its superpower and NYT takes on Spotify
Plus: a new tool to Rewind your life, Google Docs plays Notion catch up and Coinbase impresses
Product Briefing – May 18th, 2023
DuoLingo’s monetization machine and Google banishes blue links
Plus: Apple’s new voice clones, a new tool for async comms and the demise of Stack Overflow
Product Briefing – May 11th, 2023
Slack’s AI bet and Peloton gets a reality check. Plus: Zapier’s new no-code feature, a new tool for prudent product pricing and how to use Firefly for product design
Product Briefing – May 4th, 2023
Uber’s comeback and Tinder swipes for meetings. Plus: a new Slack thread management tool, how to sound engaging on Zoom and LinkedIn’s new genAI feature.
Product Briefing – April 27th, 2023
Snap’s AI backlash and Gmail gets beautified. Plus: a new tool for improving your writing, Spotify earnings impress and Klarna releases a new human shopping assistant
Product Briefing – April 20th, 2023
Netflix gets cold feet and Reddit flicks the API monetization switch.
Plus: a new tool for distraction free productivity, Shopify’s CEO on micromanagement and how to become more commercial