
Insights from recent episode analysis
Audience Interest
Podcast Focus
Publishing Consistency
Platform Reach
Insights are generated by CastFox AI using publicly available data, episode content, and proprietary models.
Most discussed topics
Brands & references
Total monthly reach
Estimated from 1 chart position in 1 market.
By chart position
- 🇮🇪IE · Technology#773K to 10K
- Per-Episode Audience
Est. listeners per new episode within ~30 days
1.5K to 5K🎙 ~2x weekly·190 episodes·Last published 5d ago - Monthly Reach
Unique listeners across all episodes (30 days)
3K to 10K🇮🇪100% - Active Followers
Loyal subscribers who consistently listen
1.2K to 4K
Market Insights
Platform Distribution
Reach across major podcast platforms, updated hourly
Total Followers
—
Total Plays
—
Total Reviews
—
* Data sourced directly from platform APIs and aggregated hourly across all major podcast directories.
On the show
From 11 epsHosts
Recent guests
Recent episodes
190 / Nesrine Changuel: How Product Delight Drives Business Outcomes
Jun 19, 2026
Unknown duration
189 / Mike Belsito: Why Timeless Product Skills Matter in an AI-Driven World
Jun 9, 2026
26m 23s
188 / Prerna Singh: Avoiding the AI Build Trap with Better User Research
May 27, 2026
32m 45s
187 / AI Native: Reimagining Product Roles and Development Cycles, with Adam Creeger
May 13, 2026
44m 44s
186 / TiPS: AI-Enabled First Principles + Core Product Skills Spark Adoption
Apr 29, 2026
24m 29s
Social Links & Contact
Official channels & resources
Official Website
Login
RSS Feed
Login
| Date | Episode | Topics | Guests | Brands | Places | Keywords | Sponsor | Length | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 6/19/26 | ![]() 190 / Nesrine Changuel: How Product Delight Drives Business Outcomes | Product leaders often measure success in terms of retention, revenue, and growth. In this episode of Product Momentum, Nesrine Changuel explains that the most successful products achieve those outcomes by creating meaningful emotional connections with users. Nesrine’s experience includes leadership roles at Skype, Spotify, Google Meet, and Google Chrome. But these days, she is perhaps best known for her book, Product Delight. Nesrine will explore these and other topics at the ITX Product + Design Conference, June 24-25 in Rochester NY. On conference Day 1, she will conduct a workshop that delves into her Product Delight framework, guiding attendees on how to design products that users will not only use – but will come to love, remember, and recommend to others. During this conversation, Nesrine discusses what she has learned from product teams since the book’s release and explains why delight is not simply a design tactic, but a business strategy that transcends industries. Product Delight Extends Beyond Design One of Nesrine’s biggest discoveries during her global book tour was the widespread misunderstanding of what product delight actually means. Many practitioners associate delight with visual design, animations, or clever interface surprises. This view is too narrow, she says. Nesrine defines delight as the overall feeling users experience while interacting with a product. “Product delight is the entire experience,” she adds. “It’s actually the feeling that the user enjoys while using the product.” It extends well beyond aesthetics to focus on creating experiences that improve how users feel while accomplishing their goals. Emotional Connection Creates Measurable Outcomes Among Nesrine’s key challenges was helping product and business leaders recognize the fact that user emotions directly influence business performance. Emotional design has long been familiar to designers and marketers, but many product organizations still prioritize operational metrics above customer sentiment. Nesrine was able to connect the dots between delight and business performance by demonstrating that “the delight itself can actually double retention, referral and revenues.” By framing emotional connection through the lens of retention, referrals, and revenue growth, she demonstrated that delight is not a soft concept. Rather, it is a practical approach that can strengthen both customer loyalty and business results. Adding Delight to Your AI Product – Emphasize the Human Aspect On conference day 2 – Keynote Day – attendees will be treated to brand new content from Nesrine: how to add delight into your AI product. “I’ve been very quiet about AI over the last couple of months,” Nesrine shared. “I’ve always believed in the humanization of product and the human aspect, but now the product is the conversation. So how can we add delight in these kinds of experiences? That’s something new that I’m going to be talking about” at the ITX Product + Design Conference. As product teams continue navigating AI-driven technological change, core product principles remain unchanged: products that make people feel understood, respected, and supported are more likely to earn user trust, loyalty, advocacy – along with long-term success. [04:25] How writing a book is like a box of chocolates. When I was writing the book, there were some uncertainties about how it would be perceived….kind of like eating a chocolate egg, you have no idea what’s inside. [05:33] Emotional connection is a universal topic that spans industries. When the book came out, I received a lot of feedback that actually related to the topic and the framework — even from completely diverse industries. [12:21] The ITX Product + Design Conference, June 24-25. I’m really excited to be in Rochester, NY for this event to come. It’s always a pleasure to teach the Product Delight method. It’s going to be special because I want to make it as actionable as I can; I want to make sure that I inspire people. [13:54] Nesrine’s day 2 keynote to include brand new content. I’m going to talk for the very first time about something I have not spoken about before — how to add delight and the human aspect into your AI product. [15:56] Just because it’s harder for mature, well-established companies to integrate delight into their products doesn’t mean they shouldn’t try. Please don’t ignore delight; rather, to remain established and successful, you need to add those elements of delight in your product anyway. [17:58] Even busy PMs should make time for delight. Even when I was a “regular” PM sitting on a backlog on fire with so many conflicting priorities, I tried not to let that stop us from trying to incorporate any element of delight into our roadmap. The post 190 / Nesrine Changuel: How Product Delight Drives Business Outcomes appeared first on ITX Corp.. | — | ||||||
| 6/9/26 | ![]() 189 / Mike Belsito: Why Timeless Product Skills Matter in an AI-Driven World✨ | product managementartificial intelligence+4 | Mike Belsito | Product CollectiveMind the Product+1 | — | product managementAI+6 | — | 26m 23s | |
| 5/27/26 | ![]() 188 / Prerna Singh: Avoiding the AI Build Trap with Better User Research✨ | AIuser research+3 | Prerna Singh | Scrappy to Scale AdvisorsMeetup | — | AI build trapuser research+3 | — | 32m 45s | |
| 5/13/26 | ![]() 187 / AI Native: Reimagining Product Roles and Development Cycles, with Adam Creeger✨ | AI NativeProduct Development+3 | Adam Creeger | SlateMeta+2 | — | AI NativeProduct Roles+3 | — | 44m 44s | |
| 4/29/26 | ![]() 186 / TiPS: AI-Enabled First Principles + Core Product Skills Spark Adoption✨ | AI adoptionproduct management+4 | Sean MurrayAndrew Knoblauch | ITXProduct Momentum | — | AIproduct skills+4 | — | 24m 29s | |
| 4/23/26 | ![]() 185 / Confronting Cognitive Bias in AI Models, with John Haggerty✨ | cognitive biasAI models+4 | John Haggerty | BiasHawkDatasite+2 | — | cognitive biasAI+5 | — | 34m 06s | |
| 3/31/26 | ![]() 184 / Connecting Product Teams with Go-To-Market Outcomes, with Margie Agin✨ | go-to-market strategycross-functional collaboration+3 | Margie Agin | Centerboard MarketingCisco+1 | — | go-to-marketproduct teams+3 | — | 32m 47s | |
| 3/17/26 | ![]() 183 / Rich Mironov: Using ‘Money Stories’ To Communicate Real Business Impact✨ | product managementbusiness impact+3 | Rich Mironov | ITX Corp. | Silicon Valley | product managersbusiness outcomes+3 | — | 41m 19s | |
| 3/3/26 | ![]() 182 / How ‘Sense Shape Steer’ Helps UXers Design AI Solutions, with Bansi Mehta✨ | UX DesignAI Solutions+3 | Bansi Mehta | Koru UX DesignITX Corp. | US | AIUX Design+5 | — | 31m 49s | |
| 2/17/26 | ![]() 181 / From IC to PM: Practical Insights for Effective Leadership, with Keith Lucas✨ | leadershipteam building+4 | Keith Lucas | Product Momentum PodcastITX Corp. | — | leadershipteam building+5 | — | 33m 35s | |
Want analysis for the episodes below?Free for Pro Submit a request, we'll have your selected episodes analyzed within an hour. Free, at no cost to you, for Pro users. | |||||||||
| 2/3/26 | ![]() 180 / Oji Udezue: The Renaissance PM – Core Skills for Today’s AI-Driven World✨ | product managementAI impact+3 | Oji Udezue | CalendlyAtlassian+2 | — | product managementAI+5 | — | 42m 12s | |
| 1/20/26 | ![]() 179 / Teresa Torres: Is AI Re-Prioritizing Delivery Over Discovery (Again)?✨ | product discoveryAI+3 | Teresa Torres | ITX Corp.Continuous Discovery Habits | — | AIproduct discovery+4 | — | 45m 47s | |
| 12/16/25 | ![]() 178 / Phil Hornby: How To Make High-Quality Decisions That Stick | Phil Hornby is an experienced product leader, coach, and technologist whose mission is to help product leaders think clearly, make strong decisions, and take powerful action that drives high-impact outcomes. He’s a regular speaker at product events and is co-host of the “Talking Roadmaps” YouTube channel and podcast. If Phil were asked to distill product management down to its core, he’d tell us, “We’re paid to have an opinion.” Not simply putting a ‘licked finger to the wind,’ but trusting your experience and intuition to make high-quality decisions. Ah, and also to remember: there’s a difference between a high-quality decision and the “right” decision. There’s no way to guarantee that we make the right decision, Phil says, but there’re plenty of ways we can improve our odds. Here’s what we learned: Empowerment Is ‘Making Decisions that Stick’ At its most fundamental level, doing Product is decision making, Phil says. “That that’s like the whole heart of it. When we use the term empowered to describe product teams, we talk about their ability to make decisions that stick. If you can’t make a decision stick, then you’re not empowered. It’s really boiled down to this: empowerment is at the heart of all product work. Trust = Character + Competence Trust is an essential component in any relationship. Perhaps even more so in the often high-stakes world of product management. Phil’s hypothesis is that high-quality decision making cannot occur in its absence. “Trust comes down to two core components,” he says, “character and competence. You want others to look at you and say, ‘That’s someone I can trust.’ That’s the character…. Then there’s competence: ‘Do I think you can make it? Have you got the skills to make that high-quality decision? And those two things combine to provide trust. ‘We’re Paid to Have an Opinion’ – Evidence-informed Decisionmaking Phil talks about being evidence informed versus data driven, because “data can tell you anything. As product managers,” he adds, “I can massage the data to show whatever the heck I want it to do. “We absolutely need to bring data into our decision-making process,” Phil continues. “Data is a form of quantitative evidence, but then we need the anecdotes and other feedback to complete the equation. But we’re humans, we also have intuition. And, dare I say it, we are paid to have an opinion – to understand our markets, to bring that tacit knowledge, which some people call product sense, and apply it to the context of the situation we’re in.” Catch the entire episode with Phil Hornby and learn even more about: His 6-step process for raising the odds of making a high-quality decision. How product roadmaps reflect your team’s decision tree of what to do and when. Why strong opinions are valuable, as long as we’re open to the opinions of others. The post 178 / Phil Hornby: How To Make High-Quality Decisions That Stick appeared first on ITX Corp.. | — | ||||||
| 12/2/25 | ![]() 177 / Big Bets Are Back — Why They Need a Balanced Approach, with Michelle Parsons | Michelle Parsons is a dynamic product leader who has led high-growth teams at Kayak, Spotify, Netflix, Hinge, and Lex. Her passion for building community and embracing new challenges has recently brought her to a leadership role in a new startup that helps people reconnect to themselves and one another. In this episode of Product Momentum, Michelle joins Sean and Dan to talk about “making bets” – not just the seductive big bets that promise game-changing innovation – but also the smaller bets and quick hits that also play important roles in delivering value, validating assumptions, and mitigating risk. Here’s what we learned: The Balanced Portfolio Framework At the heart of Michelle’s thinking is the notion of the Balanced Portfolio Framework – an idea she developed while leading product for kids’ content at Netflix. Under this framework, your roadmap is divided into three buckets – big bets, smaller bets, and quick hits – that help you pursue transformational innovation while delivering consistent value. As you’ll hear, connecting the dots between them helps to ensure that product work is driven by the value delivered to users and your business. Big bets start with user insights and clear hypotheses Big bets are the bold, strategic moves that are super-impactful, but also come with a great deal of uncertainty. They start with user insights and clear hypotheses that address the following questions: What need are we trying to solve? Why does it matter to our users? What metric will this move – and why does that metric matter for business impact? “These are the things that everyone wants to work on,” Michelle adds. “But they’re never just ‘cool ideas.’ They’re the big innovative features that bring your strategy to life. But they come with a ton of unknowns. Super impactful, but really, really risky.” Small bets preserve resources and de-risk the big bet Think of small bets as the “meat and potatoes” of your roadmap – incremental improvements like polishing UX, refining workflows, or optimizing metrics. Here’s what Michelle says: “The small bets are really about the optimizations and enhancements, the things that consistently create incremental impact for your users. Not only do they touch on macro metrics like retention, engagement, and delight, but they also help to de-risk the big bets.” Quick hits are the targeted work that accelerate learning We’re all familiar with those small, fast, low-cost experiments or enhancements. These are the low-hanging fruit that support rapid learning. “A quick hit is a learning task,” Michelle adds – “not to be confused with a quick win.” Certainly, they can also be quick wins, but “quick hits are really this body of work, discreetly tied a hypothesis or a data point that you want to prove out further.” Use storytelling to align stakeholders around ‘why’ Michelle emphasizes that roadmap planning is not just an exercise in listing features, but a storytelling exercise. Because many stakeholders – executives, founders, investors –don’t live in the product trenches. To get buy-in, you need to clearly articulate: What problem we’re solving, for whom, why it matters, and how this work moves the needle. Be sure to watch/listen to our entire conversation with Michelle, so that you can catch her thoughts about: How her team at Netflix utilized the Balanced Portfolio Framework. The role AI can play in balancing bets that deliver user benefit and business value. Michelle’s new start-up plans for building connections and community. The post 177 / Big Bets Are Back — Why They Need a Balanced Approach, with Michelle Parsons appeared first on ITX Corp.. | — | ||||||
| 11/11/25 | ![]() 176 / Axel Sooriah: Discovery Done Right To Drive Product Success | Axel Sooriah explores the many challenges product managers face -- and explains how simple Discovery activities can help to resolve them. | — | ||||||
| 10/28/25 | ![]() 175 / Seamless AI Integration: Challenges and Opportunities, with Shensi Ding | Shensi Ding explores the obstacles to AI integration and offers valuable tips to help product managers unleash the power of AI technology. | — | ||||||
| 10/14/25 | ![]() 174 / How Product Managers Can Master the Art of Communication, with Sahil Jain | Sahil Jain, co-Founder and CEO of Samepage.ai, explains how product managers can master the Art of Communication. Tune in to find out how. | — | ||||||
| 9/30/25 | ![]() 173 / John Cutler: Product Managers as Game Designers – Shifting the Workplace Mindset | John Cutler explains when product managers think like game designers they can shift the workplace mindset toward fun, growth, and dynamism. | — | ||||||
| 9/16/25 | ![]() 172 / How Emotional Connections Deepen Product Delight, with Nesrine Changuel | Dr. Nesrine Changuel, product coach and author, urges product managers to solve for functional and emotional needs to deepen product delight. | — | ||||||
| 9/2/25 | ![]() 171 / Harnessing AI to Transform Content Strategy, with Brian Piper | Content strategist Brian Piper explores the implementation of AI, revealing its power to transform content creation into audience engagement. | — | ||||||
| 8/19/25 | ![]() 170 / Lena Sesardic: Building and Using Custom GPTs for Product Management | Lena Sesardic -- former product manager turned creator of custom GPTs -- helps fellow PMs build and use AI to work less and think bigger. | — | ||||||
| 8/5/25 | ![]() 169 / Matt LeMay’s Keys to Delivering Impact That Propels Your Business Forward | Matt LeMay helps product teams and leaders drive real impact by closing the gap between individual goals and organizational objectives. | — | ||||||
| 7/22/25 | ![]() 168 / Ioana Teleanu, Designing With AI: Overcoming Barriers and Embracing Change | Ioana Teleanu follows her keynote at ITX's Product + Design Conference with this live podcast recording, discussing how to Design with AI. | — | ||||||
| 7/8/25 | ![]() 167 / How SaaS Teams Drive Impact Through Alignment and Innovation, with Usha Iyer | Usha Iyer explains how SaaS product teams maximize business impact by forging strong alignment with GTM counterparts using the Bow Tie Model. | — | ||||||
| 6/17/25 | ![]() 166 / Sophia Prater, on Object-Oriented UX: The Backbone of the Design Process | Sophia Prater, CEO of Rewired UX and evangelist for object-oriented UX, explains how a solid UX structure inspires strong UX design. | — | ||||||
Showing 25 of 196
Pitch Fit is a Pro feature
See how bookable this show is for guests, which brands already advertise, the per-episode ad value, and the best-fit guest and sponsor profile. The numbers are blurred on the free plan.
How readily this show books outside guests like you.
How proven this show is for host-read sponsorships.
For Guests
ProFor Advertisers
ProUpgrade to Pro to unlock guest cadence, sponsor categories, fit scores, and per-episode ad value for this show.
Chart Positions
1 placement across 1 market.
Chart Positions
1 placement across 1 market.
