Platform

AI

AI Agents
Sense, decide, and act faster than ever before
AI Visibility
See how your brand shows up in AI search
AI Feedback
Distill what your customers say they want
Amplitude MCP
Insights from the comfort of your favorite AI tool

Insights

Product Analytics
Understand the full user journey
Marketing Analytics
Get the metrics you need with one line of code
Session Replay
Visualize sessions based on events in your product
Heatmaps
Visualize clicks, scrolls, and engagement

Action

Guides and Surveys
Guide your users and collect feedback
Feature Experimentation
Innovate with personalized product experiences
Web Experimentation
Drive conversion with A/B testing powered by data
Feature Management
Build fast, target easily, and learn as you ship
Activation
Unite data across teams

Data

Warehouse-native Amplitude
Unlock insights from your data warehouse
Data Governance
Complete data you can trust
Security & Privacy
Keep your data secure and compliant
Integrations
Connect Amplitude to hundreds of partners
Solutions
Solutions that drive business results
Deliver customer value and drive business outcomes
Amplitude Solutions →

Industry

Financial Services
Personalize the banking experience
B2B
Maximize product adoption
Media
Identify impactful content
Healthcare
Simplify the digital healthcare experience
Ecommerce
Optimize for transactions

Use Case

Acquisition
Get users hooked from day one
Retention
Understand your customers like no one else
Monetization
Turn behavior into business

Team

Product
Fuel faster growth
Data
Make trusted data accessible
Engineering
Ship faster, learn more
Marketing
Build customers for life
Executive
Power decisions, shape the future

Size

Startups
Free analytics tools for startups
Enterprise
Advanced analytics for scaling businesses
Resources

Learn

Blog
Thought leadership from industry experts
Resource Library
Expertise to guide your growth
Compare
See how we stack up against the competition
Glossary
Learn about analytics, product, and technical terms
Explore Hub
Detailed guides on product and web analytics

Connect

Community
Connect with peers in product analytics
Events
Register for live or virtual events
Customers
Discover why customers love Amplitude
Partners
Accelerate business value through our ecosystem

Support & Services

Customer Help Center
All support resources in one place: policies, customer portal, and request forms
Developer Hub
Integrate and instrument Amplitude
Academy & Training
Become an Amplitude pro
Professional Services
Drive business success with expert guidance and support
Product Updates
See what's new from Amplitude

Tools

Benchmarks
Understand how your product compares
Templates
Kickstart your analysis with custom dashboard templates
Tracking Guides
Learn how to track events and metrics with Amplitude
Maturity Model
Learn more about our digital experience maturity model
Pricing
LoginContact salesGet started

AI

AI AgentsAI VisibilityAI FeedbackAmplitude MCP

Insights

Product AnalyticsMarketing AnalyticsSession ReplayHeatmaps

Action

Guides and SurveysFeature ExperimentationWeb ExperimentationFeature ManagementActivation

Data

Warehouse-native AmplitudeData GovernanceSecurity & PrivacyIntegrations
Amplitude Solutions →

Industry

Financial ServicesB2BMediaHealthcareEcommerce

Use Case

AcquisitionRetentionMonetization

Team

ProductDataEngineeringMarketingExecutive

Size

StartupsEnterprise

Learn

BlogResource LibraryCompareGlossaryExplore Hub

Connect

CommunityEventsCustomersPartners

Support & Services

Customer Help CenterDeveloper HubAcademy & TrainingProfessional ServicesProduct Updates

Tools

BenchmarksTemplatesTracking GuidesMaturity Model
LoginSign Up

Prioritize Your Time and Efforts, and Your Product Will Thank You

In product management, it's not enough to optimize your time; you must also optimize the work that is done on your product.
Insights

Oct 3, 2022

10 min read

JJ Rorie

JJ Rorie

CEO, Great Product Management

Prioritize your time in product management

Great product managers are fanatical about doing the things that will make the biggest impact on their product. If something does not have a direct or indirect effect on the product, then it is not important enough to do.

Prioritizing the work that makes the most impact on customers and our business is one of the most pressing challenges for every product manager. But many product managers are so focused on prioritizing the work—which problems to solve or which features get in a particular release—that they forget prioritization starts with how they use their time. Time is finite. We get the time we have and no more. Truth be told, we do not necessarily need more time; we need to better use the time we have. One of the most common mistakes I see product managers make is not prioritizing their own time.

How many Friday afternoons have you looked back on your week and said to yourself, “Well, that week got away from me. All those fire drills and not a single thing checked off my prioritized to-do list”? Great product managers are comfortable letting some fires burn. If something is not their explicit responsibility or it does not have a direct impact on the product, they know that it should not usurp the higher priority tasks. This is one of the hardest lessons product managers must learn. It is not our job to put out every fire or perform all tasks having to do with our product.

Prioritize Your Time

Before you can start prioritizing your time at work, you need to define what is important to you across your whole life. I am not a big believer in looking at a work-life balance in its traditional sense. I think we have evolved from the neatly bifurcated world of “work” and “life.” We now have constant access to work through technology, often work remotely from anywhere we want, and communicate at varying times with teammates across time zones. Many of us no longer have a true nine-to-five job. This can be both good and bad. It means we can attend our child’s soccer game on a Wednesday afternoon or take a yoga class on a Tuesday morning and do work at other times. But it also means we run the risk of never being truly “off work,” checking our email or other communication channels throughout the day and night.

In the work environments of most product management folks, the world will never return to a clock-in and clock-out environment. So, it has become even more critical for well-being to manage this blending of activities.

Instead of trying to magically balance professional and personal activities on an unrealistic fulcrum, we should harmoniously blend our activities in a way that ultimately creates prolonged contentment. I call this our “contentment mix,” the mix of activities that help us feel satisfied, happy, fulfilled, healthy, and productive. Those activities will be both professional and personal. Start by delineating the big buckets of things that make you happiest and most productive. It might look something like this:

Prioritization for product managers

You do not want to get too granular here. Just identify the major things on which you want to spend time, with some relative distribution across all the areas. Everyone’s contentment mix is different. Maybe travel is one of your contentment items. Or volunteer work. Mine, of course, would make time for naps and watching The Golden Girls. Make your contentment mix personal to what matters to you.

Use the VITAL map to manage time

Once you have your full life laid out, you can start breaking down the specifics of the work area of your mix. Remember, you do not necessarily need more time at work; rather, you need to better optimize the time you have. Are you spending your time on the things that will have the most impact on your product and on you as a product manager?

First, deconstruct and evaluate how you currently spend your time by assigning categories to your activities. You can use the VITAL time management tool to help with this. This tool allows you to see where your time is going. Review every work activity you did over the past week or two. If you have the information on everything you did in the past month, that is even better. Make sure to capture every meeting, task, time spent emailing, or any other major workstream that took your time. Go through each activity and map it on the VITAL map.

The categories of a VITAL map are Vital, Important, Transactional, Ancillary, and Learning, and each represents an area where most of your efforts should be going.

Vital

Vital activities are those that are essential to your product and the core of your product manager role. While you may do it in collaboration with your teammates, you should be the one responsible for these tasks because they directly involve activities or decisions about your product. Examples include voice of customer sessions, design sprints, product strategy generation, and stakeholder meetings.

Important

Important activities are those that affect your product but are possibly owned by teammates. You should be involved with but not drive these activities. Examples include marketing campaigns for your product, sales demos, engineering reviews, technology architectural decisions, and supply chain updates.

Transactional

Much of our workday involves simply providing or requesting information or support. These “transactions” often do not themselves have a material impact on the product, but they are an important part of working with others and ensuring work in progress continues smoothly. These back-and-forth interactions take up more of your time than you may realize. Examples include sending emails to clarify a request, communicating with the team on message apps, and attending meetings to represent the product.

Ancillary

Ancillary activities support your product but are not led by product managers. You may participate occasionally, but for the most part, these are left to someone else’s expertise. Examples include company supplier decisions, distributor discussions, and large business customer relationship meetings.

Learning

Learning activities are those that help you grow your knowledge about product management, business, your industry, or any other areas of importance to you. Product managers are on a continuous learning journey, so carving out time for learning activities is important. I also include downtime and stress-management activities such as a midday walk or meditation in this category.

Prioritize time with the VITAL map

Prioritizing for your product

Of course, it is not enough to optimize only your time; you must also optimize the work that is done on your product. Organizations use many valuable models to prioritize their product work. Truthfully, all prioritization methods have pros and cons. At the end of the day, a vast majority of prioritization can be accomplished through understanding these three things:

1. Does it matter to customers?

You may also need to answer sub-questions:

  • If so, how many customers? Is it important to one big customer or a larger swath of the customer base?
    • This is important to know because we generally do not want to build something simply because one customer requested it.
  • Which customers? (target segments, persona, or another category)
    • This can be important because some segments may be more important or strategic for the organization than others.

If you cannot answer the first question in the affirmative, why are you even considering it? You should probably just move on to something else. If you answer yes to question one, move on to question two:

2. Will customers pay for it?

A potential sub-question with related considerations may also need to be asked:

  • If not, is there residual value to other offerings? Does it shore up a portfolio gap that then allows for increased sales? Does it contribute to customer retention even if it does not produce incremental new revenue?

If you can answer question two or its sub-questions affirmatively, move on to question three:

3. Is it taking you in a direction you want to go?

Also consider some potential sub-questions:

  • Is it where you want your product to go?
  • Is it where your company wants to go?

Even if you answer yes to questions one and two, that does not necessarily mean the product is aligned with your organization or product strategy. Question three asks you to examine the long-term impact of the product. For example, if it is something that could sell quite well but requires you to focus on a geographic market or industry that you intend to exit or deprioritize over the next few years, you will need to decide what is best. Sometimes the few years of additional income from a legacy market allows us some leeway for focusing on a few riskier but higher-growth efforts. Other times, it simply drains resources that could be used in more strategic areas. Therein lies the importance of your judgment. No prioritization matrix can replace your experience and judgment.


Prioritization starts with your time. Forcing balance among your life’s priorities is key to happiness and success. Start there then move on to prioritizing your time at work. If your time is spent on the right things, you will have better inputs to the prioritization of the team’s efforts on your product.

To continue your learning on time management and PM skills, check out IMMUTABLE: 5 Truths of Great Product Managers today.

Product Metrics CTA
About the author
JJ Rorie

JJ Rorie

CEO, Great Product Management

More from JJ

JJ Rorie is faculty at Johns Hopkins University, teaching undergraduate and graduate-level product management courses. She is the author of "IMMUTABLE: 5 Truths of Great Product Managers," and is Chief Executive Officer of Great Product Management. JJ is a speaker, advisor, trainer, and coach, having worked with some of the world's largest companies, and also hosts the popular podcast Product Voices.

More from JJ
Topics

Product Management

Platform
  • Product Analytics
  • Feature Experimentation
  • Feature Management
  • Web Analytics
  • Web Experimentation
  • Session Replay
  • Activation
  • Guides and Surveys
  • AI Agents
  • AI Visibility
  • AI Feedback
  • Amplitude MCP
Compare us
  • Adobe
  • Google Analytics
  • Mixpanel
  • Heap
  • Optimizely
  • Fullstory
  • Pendo
Resources
  • Resource Library
  • Blog
  • Product Updates
  • Amp Champs
  • Amplitude Academy
  • Events
  • Glossary
Partners & Support
  • Contact Us
  • Customer Help Center
  • Community
  • Developer Docs
  • Find a Partner
  • Become an affiliate
Company
  • About Us
  • Careers
  • Press & News
  • Investor Relations
  • Diversity, Equity & Inclusion
Terms of ServicePrivacy NoticeAcceptable Use PolicyLegal
EnglishJapanese (日本語)Korean (한국어)Español (Spain)Português (Brasil)Português (Portugal)FrançaisDeutsch
© 2025 Amplitude, Inc. All rights reserved. Amplitude is a registered trademark of Amplitude, Inc.

Recommended Reading

article card image
Read 
Product
Getting Started: Product Analytics Isn’t Just for Analysts

Dec 5, 2025

5 min read

article card image
Read 
Insights
Vibe Check Part 3: When Vibe Marketing Goes Off the Rails

Dec 4, 2025

8 min read

article card image
Read 
Customers
How CAFU Tripled Engagement and Boosted Conversions 20%+

Dec 4, 2025

8 min read

article card image
Read 
Customers
The Future is Data-Driven: Introducing the Winners of the Ampy Awards 2025

Dec 2, 2025

6 min read

Explore Related Content

Integration
Using Behavioral Analytics for Growth with the Amplitude App on HubSpot

Jun 17, 2024

10 min read

Personalization
Identity Resolution: The Secret to a 360-Degree Customer View

Feb 16, 2024

10 min read

Product
Inside Warehouse-native Amplitude: A Technical Deep Dive

Jun 27, 2023

15 min read

Guide
5 Proven Strategies to Boost Customer Engagement

Jul 12, 2023

Video
Designing High-Impact Experiments

May 13, 2024

Startup
9 Direct-to-consumer Marketing Tactics to Accelerate Ecommerce Growth

Feb 20, 2024

10 min read

Growth
Leveraging Analytics to Achieve Product-Market Fit

Jul 20, 2023

10 min read

Product
iFood Serves Up 54% More Checkouts with Error Message Makeover

Oct 7, 2024

9 min read

Blog
InsightsProductCompanyCustomers
Topics

101

AI

APJ

Acquisition

Adobe Analytics

Amplify

Amplitude Academy

Amplitude Activation

Amplitude Analytics

Amplitude Audiences

Amplitude Community

Amplitude Feature Experimentation

Amplitude Guides and Surveys

Amplitude Heatmaps

Amplitude Made Easy

Amplitude Session Replay

Amplitude Web Experimentation

Amplitude on Amplitude

Analytics

B2B SaaS

Behavioral Analytics

Benchmarks

Churn Analysis

Cohort Analysis

Collaboration

Consolidation

Conversion

Customer Experience

Customer Lifetime Value

DEI

Data

Data Governance

Data Management

Data Tables

Digital Experience Maturity

Digital Native

Digital Transformer

EMEA

Ecommerce

Employee Resource Group

Engagement

Event Tracking

Experimentation

Feature Adoption

Financial Services

Funnel Analysis

Getting Started

Google Analytics

Growth

Healthcare

How I Amplitude

Implementation

Integration

LATAM

Life at Amplitude

MCP

Machine Learning

Marketing Analytics

Media and Entertainment

Metrics

Modern Data Series

Monetization

Next Gen Builders

North Star Metric

Partnerships

Personalization

Pioneer Awards

Privacy

Product 50

Product Analytics

Product Design

Product Management

Product Releases

Product Strategy

Product-Led Growth

Recap

Retention

Startup

Tech Stack

The Ampys

Warehouse-native Amplitude