15% off membership for Easter! Learn more. Close

What goals would you set for a Facebook Dating feature?

Asked at Meta (Facebook)
9.4k views
Answers (14)
crownAccess expert answers by becoming a member

You'll get access to over 3,000 product manager interview questions and answers

badge Platinum PM

what is FB dating?

  • FB dating is product feature built into facebook
  • As the name suggests its focussed on dating 
  • Available in limited countries 
  • It's an opt- in experience, users can meet similar folks basis your preferences
  • it ensure privacy to the extent possible 
  • FB's Mission is to connect the world/gives the tool to build a community 
    • This is line with FB's mission 

Clarification 

  • When you say goal Im assuming you're referring to focus metrics
  • At  what stage is  this - is it launched already or about to be launched Im assuming the former since its live in a few countries already but not too long ago so is still in growth phase
  • Is it fair to say this feature was focussed on driving engagement for Fb app, assuming so 
Who is  the user base
  • People looking to date
    • Short term
    • long term (serious relationship)
 
user journey 
  • Awareness
    • User opens FB 
    • User finds about dating app
  • Acquisition
    • Tries to sign up
      • Fills profile
      • Preferences 
    • Completes sign up (drop off point)
  • activation
    • Starts going through profiles suggested
  • Engagement/retention
    • Starting swiping/saying yes/no  (drop off point)
    • Has matches (drop off point)
    • Talks to matches (drop off point)
      • spends time here 
    • Matches reply  (drop off point)
    • Exchange numbers (drop off point)
    • Meet offline 
  • Churn
    • stop because cant find anyone 
    • Stop because they found someone 
  • Reactivation 
    • Start looking again 
metrics to focus on 
Given we are newish - Id want to focus on growth and engagement, under 2 dedicated buckets. 
 
Also it makes sense to focus on this in the longer run given the nature of the space - you wont marry your first date so chances are that even after you found a partner you may come back so you want to ensure users leaving << users signing up (quick ratio)
 
Growth/Engagement is also a function of the dating pool size so I want to track that as well, listing down key metrics (will triage them right after)
  • Active user base/country 
    • Total 
    • Signing up daily 
    • Profile completion rate 
  • Average network size when user opens the app (how many active users are eligible basis geo boundaries to the user opening the app)
    • Max options available to the user (if I were to filter basis user preferences what are the max options I can present to the user)
  • Swipes per user
    • Yes/no/didnt swipe split 
    • Per day swipes 
  • Matches 
    • unmatch rate post match
    • total unmatched match size
    • per user per day
  • Conversation per user
    • One way
    • 2 way 
    • Exchanged numbers or IG or snap handle 
  • churn rate 
    • Stopped using FB dating 
  • Growth rate
    • Users  added vs users churned
 
given the goal/state(recent launch) of FB dating I'll create 2 major buckets
  1. Engagement
    1. Daily Active Users (with a cut on  % of users swiping )
      1. Retention rate WoW 
    2. Active network per user (how many users are eligible for a given user/max number of matches possible) -> indicator of network density
    3. Match rate: What % of daily users have  at least 1 match daily 
    4. Conversation rate as a % of match: 1 way vs 2 way split 
      1. Overall 
      2. daily
    5. Time spent per user 
  2. Growth
    1. Quick ratio -> Users added vs user's lost 
Engagement: Primary metrics will be 1 with 2 being the balancing metric (I may have high DAU for a country but they may be distributed leading to a bad experience) 
(breadth of engagement)
From a quality perspective(users are discovering value ie matching) I would to track 3, 4 and 5 (defensive metric)
(depth of engagement)
 
For growth I would want to track
Quick ratio
Access expert answers by becoming a member
1 like   |  
Get unlimited access for $12/month
Get access to 2,346 pm interview questions and answers to give yourself a strong edge against other candidates that are interviewing for the same position
Get access to over 238 hours of video material containing an interview prep course, recorded mock interviews by expert PMs, group practice sessions, and QAs with expert PMs
Boost your confidence in PM interviews by attending peer to peer mock interview practices, group practices, and QA sessions with expert PMs
badge Silver PM

Define:

Ask the interviewer about the FB dating feature and how it works?

Summarize the feature based on understanding:

FB dating is a new feature that users can opt into and use end-users common interests, events, and groups. Builds your dating profile and integrates with Instagram. The app is safe, secure, and personalized for the end-user. No payment, links, photos, and videos are allowed in messages.

Goal:

As everyone can opt-in to this feature. And no payment is required, so we can rule out revenue as the key focus for this exercise. I assume that our goal is two-fold

  1. increase engagement, leverage this feature to get the end-users coming back to the app again to check their matches or tweak their profile to get more matches
  2. defensive play against the likes of Match.com, Tinder, and even other social networks

The success of this feature is dependent on if it can increase or improve user engagement.

User actions/ Journeys

The user goes to FB app -> goes to dating feature -> discovers the feature -> opts-in and explores the capability -> setups/create profile a profile/links with Instagram.

The user goes to FB app-> goes to dating feature -> view his/her matches-> explore matches -> comments / like/ starts conversation with matches

The user goes to FB app-> goes to dating feature -> comments/likes on someone's profile that they are interested in

The user goes to FB app-> goes to dating feature -> setups a secret crush (if they have one) on their friend.

The user goes to FB app-> goes to dating feature -> view his/her matches-> explore matches -> connects with one of the matches.

List of Metrics:

As we are focusing on engagement, I want to list engagement metrics that we can capture, and then we can evaluate these based on criteria to see if it would be a success or not.

  1. D/W/MAU for the dating feature
  2. avg dating feature visits/session
  3. (# of users with profile + # of users with a secret crush + # user with matches) / # of users opted-in dating feature
  4. Total number of matches
  5. Total number of profiles created
  6. Total number of conversations started after matches/ total # of matches.
  7. Avg time between date app visits
  8. Avg comments/likes per dating profile
  9. Avg # of events/groups joined to improve dating profile.
  10. Avg # of new photos/posts added to improve dating profile.

Evaluate metrics:

These are too many metrics, but we want to narrow them down to top-3 to use for success. Here are my criteria

  • Is the metrics actionable? Does it tell us if we are moving in the right direction, or does it tell us to pivot?
  • Does the metric align with our top-line goal of user engagement?
  • How easy or hard to capture the metric?
 
MetricActionableAligns with goalCollectionNotes
DAU/WAU/MAULME Good metric to track but does not really tells us if increased engagement is because of the feature                 
 Avg dating feature visits/session                                MME Good metric to track but less actionable                        
 (# of users with profile + # of users with a secret crush + # user with matches) / # of users opted-in dating feature LME Good metric to track but only helps us in identifying users the are not engaged with the feature  
 Total number of matches                 LMEThis somewhat aligns with the goal as matches are key for engagement but it is not actionable over a period of time      
 Total number of profiles created             LME Helps in discoverability of feature and highlights problem if low profile creations are there         
 Total number of conversations started after matches/ total # of matches.     HHE This metric is really important as it not only evaluates the feature by comparing conversation/ match but also increases engagement for the users to a) start conversation b) explore the further to see more matches                
 Avg time between date app visits           MME This a good secondary metric that we might want to track, if our avg time is long then it might indicate that customers are loosing interest in the feature      
 Avg comments/likes per dating profile  LME Comments and likes are key part of FB's engagement strategy but are low on actionability      
 Avg # of events/groups joined to improve dating profile.      MHH Another secondary metric to track, our goal is to increase engagement and if users are not getting the right matches then might want improve or complete their profile by joining events/groups to beef up their profile 
 Avg # of new photos/posts added to improve dating profile.       MHH Another secondary metric to track, our goal is to increase engagement and if users are not getting the right matches then might want add posts/photos as suggested by profile creation or to improve their profile   
 

 

Summary:

The critical metric I will use to evaluate this feature will be the total number of conversations started after matches/ total # of matches. This metric is crucial as it considers the feature by comparing conversation/ match and increases engagement for the users to a) start conversations b) explore further to see more matches.  Avg # of events/groups joined to improve dating profile and Avg # of new photos/posts added to improve dating profile are two secondary metrics that I would track to see if the feature leads to engagement with other parts of the product

 

Access expert answers by becoming a member
1 like   |  
Get unlimited access for $12/month
Get access to 2,346 pm interview questions and answers to give yourself a strong edge against other candidates that are interviewing for the same position
Get access to over 238 hours of video material containing an interview prep course, recorded mock interviews by expert PMs, group practice sessions, and QAs with expert PMs
Boost your confidence in PM interviews by attending peer to peer mock interview practices, group practices, and QA sessions with expert PMs
badge Platinum PM

What goals would you set for Facebook Dating feature?

1. Clarify

FB Dating is an opt-in service that allows users to mark themselves as looking for relationship and then FB either matches between users who it assumes might be a good match based on their profiles, or lets users search for other opted-in users, based on specified parameters.

2. Goal and mission alignment
The goal is to obviously help people find a romantic match - either a short- or a long-term. It aligns well with FB's mission to bring people closer together. So it sounds like the overall metric would be how many people actually connected, and the quality of those connections, but first I'd like to think about our audience.
 
3. Segmentation
Among the different ways to segment here (men/women, older/younger, heavy/light users, etc) - I'd like to break down by the intentions scale:
  • serious intentions (seeking long-term relationships)
  • non-serious intentions (seeking short-term or one-night stand type of relationships)
the reason is that I feel like the success for these two groups would be measured differently, as opposed to a different split.
It would also probably map well into the age of the users (older = long term, younger = short term), but it comes down to the terms.
Both segments are legit and quite large (unless we have data that suggests otherwise), so our prioritization comes down to other factors, such as competitive placement and FB reputation. In both markets (short/long term) we have well-established players such as Tinder for the short-term and Match, Harmony for the long-term. However, besides Tinder there's no other big-name services for short-term, while for long-term there's a service for every nich one can think off (Christians date, Blackpeople date, Jdate, etc). Also, FB is aging and it's a huge problem, younger people see it as a platform where their parents hang out. To beat this view, we need to attract more younger people to the platform, therefore I'm going with short-term. 
 
4. User journey
Let's quickly review the user journey for the user who's searching:
  1. I'm assuming it's possible to choose the intention on FB Dating (if not, it's a potential feature suggestion) - sets intention.
  2. Setting other parameters for a match
  3. Sees a list of matches
  4. Engages with the user 
  5. If the user replies, engages in a conversation
  6. Meet up in real life
  7. Repeat
And a journey for the receiver (user who gets messaged by the searcher):
  1. Receive notification about a potential match (initiated by searcher or by FB)
  2. open the searcher profile, review info
  3. If decided to engage, send a reply, engage in conversation
  4. Meet up in real life
  5. Repeat
5. Mapping of journey to metrics
Since the feature is in its infancy - just recently launched, I'll put a bit more focus on awareness-related metrics, since those are always a pre-requisite to the engagement that follows:
 
stagemetric for searchermetric for receiver
awareness/ activation1.1 % of people opened the page or communication (email/push) related to FB dating
1.2 Out of those, % of people who opted-in to the service
1.3 Out of those, % of people who have their status set to "in relationship or married" - to track mistakes, confusion and misuse around the feature
1.4 % of opted-in people who have configured parameters for search
engagement - specific 2.1 % of people who saw a list of search results
2.2 % of people who sent at least one message
2.3 ave # of people a person messages per month. Potentially also track 1st month of service vs following, to track general excitement about the service
2.1 ave # of messages per receiver per month
2.2 % of opened messages per receiver per month. Similarly to searcher - 1month vs others

 
engagemetn - shared2.4 For conversations (when the receiver replies) - the ave depth of a convo (to track quality of conversation and also what depth is corelated with what outcome)
2.5 % of convos resulting in a real life meet up - might be able to track that by text recognition (might get in trouble) or by explicitely ask the user after N messages, whether they have met (similar to how it works for marketplace)
2.6 % of positive feedback from the users (again, similar to marketplace - can rate. If the date was bad - we want to know)
retention - shared3.1 DAU, MAU - specific to the service (out of FB users in general)
3.2 ave time spent in the service per day, per week, per month
3.3 % of time spent in the service per week out of time spent in FB (cannibalization)
retention - specific3.4 Out of those who sent a message, % of people who sent more than 1 message3.4 Out of those who opened a message, % who have opened more than 1 message - another measure of quality and excitement
Negative and eco-systemWe've already discussed cannibalization of other FB categories, but also need to look across all other FB services - Whatsapp, IG, messenger, etc - % of usage of those among people who started using FB dating.
referral4. % of people inviting others to try out the service
 
6. Evaluate
I'll evaluate based on how aligned the metric is with a mission as well as how difficult it is to measure.
As a North star, I'd choose 2.2 % of people who sent at least one message - it tells me both wether people are aware of the service, since it's so up close to the beginning of the funnel, and it's a metric I want to promote, since the more messages are sent, the more downstream engagement it would create.
Other primary metrics would be related to quality of convos - 2.4 the ave depth of a convo and 2.5 % of convos resulting in a real life meet up, since those are the actual goals of the service.
Finally, I'd keep an eye of a number of secondary metrics such as 3.3 % of time spent in the service per week out of time spent in FB (cannibalization) and 4. % of people inviting others to try out the service, to track general health and virality of the feature.
 
7. Summarize
blah
 
 
 
 
Access expert answers by becoming a member
1 like   |  
Get unlimited access for $12/month
Get access to 2,346 pm interview questions and answers to give yourself a strong edge against other candidates that are interviewing for the same position
Get access to over 238 hours of video material containing an interview prep course, recorded mock interviews by expert PMs, group practice sessions, and QAs with expert PMs
Boost your confidence in PM interviews by attending peer to peer mock interview practices, group practices, and QA sessions with expert PMs

Note: Presenting this as an interview chat with assumed questions and answers:

 

Interviewee: I want to understand the Dating product as I haven’t used the product. From what I have heard it allows one to activate / enable the dating profile from Facebook, bring Instagram photo feeds once activated. It helps people find the dating match through friends and known connections based on common interest / profile attributes.

 

Interviewer: yes, and it lets you like / dislike suggestions based on social graph FB has. 

 

Interviewee: Does it have video / audio calling features?

 

Interviewer: Don’t know but you could decide or assume.

 

Interviewee: I would assume for this purpose of conversation that it does.

 

Interviewer: Ok, now tell me in plain simple english the goal of the product?

 

Interviewee: I would like to align on the business goal of Facebook Dating. Given that Facebook has 1.6 Billion DAUs, I would assume that Facebook is looking to increase engagement and retention of its existing user base, and I would like to propose that as the goal is focused around engagement but open to other suggestions.

 

Assuming this, the one line goal of Dating would be

Goal: “Find & build long lasting authentic relationships”

 

Interviewer: Ok, why authentic?

 

Interviewee: Because dating relies on real people / genuine profile. Most of the existing apps outside profile dating feature but FB can leverage its social graph and years of data to accurately determine a fake or a genuine profile. Anyone coming to FB dating would be guaranteed that the person is real

Interviewer: Ok, makes sense. So how would you go about measuring success against this goal?

 

Interviewee: Let me take a few minutes to jot down my thoughts

 

Interviewee: Ok, I can think of the following actions people take on the dating app and then I am going to talk about corresponding metrics that impacts those actions. Finally, I would prioritise and pick the most critical metrics that would impact the goal most. Starting with the key actions that users can take on FB Dating:

Key Actions:

  1. Dating profile creation

  2. Finding people  to date

  3. Arranging dates

Metrics:

Acquisition + activation:

  • # of people visiting and activating dating profile on FB

  • # of people liking someone 

Engagement:

  • Average time spent on app per user

  • DAU, MAU

    • Highly active

      • Spending certain time on dating related activities such as commenting, sharing, chatting, calling 

    • Low active

      • Less time on dating related activities such as commenting, sharing, chatting, calling

  • Average activities such as commenting, sharing, chatting on dating with another match

  • Total time spend / user on dating app

 

Retention:

  • Number of users returning to app every 30 days

Monetisation:

  • There are opportunities to monetise by helping people setup the offline date, send gifts flowers where FB can get commission, run ads etc. but given the goal I would turn my attention towards other metrics for now

 

Interviewer: why activation is same as acquisition here?

Interviewee: Because as I understand the user coming to FB dating simply activates and all the profile info is created for the user to start finding suitable dates.

 

Interviewer: ok, so which one is your north star metrics from this?

Interviewee: I would pick the following:

  1. # people visiting and activating dating profile on FB

  2. DAU, MAU

    1. Highly active

      1. Spending certain time on dating related activities such as commenting, sharing, chatting, calling 

    2. Low active

  3. Number of users returning to app every 30 days

 

Interviewer: Why is returning user important, because I could have found my date or I am the kind of user who is simply not interested in doing much on the app?

Interviewee: Our goal is to find people and build long lasting relationships. These take time to build and often people would meet a few people before finding the right match. We would expect the users to come back for a longer time before finding the right match.

Interviewer: Ok, but if I find a match within a month, then?

Interviewee: Such cases, my guess is that this would be fairly low in number, we can find that out by validating from their profile updates - e.g. in a relationship with a person and understand if its a genuine case of the user finding a good outcome rather than abandoning the app.

Interviewer: Ok, so which 1 metric will you tell your engineers to focus on?

I: Given the goal around engagement, I would go for how active the users are. Hence I would ask them to focus on:

  • DAU, MAU

      1. Highly active

        1. Spending certain time on dating related activities such as commenting, sharing, chatting, calling 

      2. Low active:

        1. So that we can think about how to make them highly active

Interviewer: ok, so what happens when a user is very active, but I like trying it for fun, and not really trying to find an ideal date?

 

Interviewee: Interesting point. In that case, I would also recommend we look at the quality of the activity. E.g. how engaging it is, how +ve / -ve the comments are from the users along with their activity

 

Interviewer: ok, so imagine if dating app is highly engaging but activity on other app such as newsfeed has decreased. What will you do?

 

Interviewee: Ok, as a dating PM that would be really thing to achieve, but of course then I would look at the 

 

  • Total time of engagement across dating and other apps. Has that been decreasing / increasing?

  • Revenue generated from apps (assuming Dating app is also generating revenue) and if this has been going up / down

I would like to summarise that first having understood the basic feauture of product we defined the goal of the product to make it easier for people to find and build long lasting relationship through the FB dating app. Then we looking at the various actions users can take on the products, the various metrics we can measure and finally prioritised the metrics focused on goal as 1) Adoption -> # people visiting and activating dating profile on FB, 2) Engagement -> DAU, MAU - Highly active (Spending certain time on dating related activities such as commenting, sharing, chatting, calling), Low active (Number of users returning to app every 30 days), and 3) Retention -> Number of users returning to app every 30 days.
Among these we picked the 2) Engagement -> DAU, MAU as the north star metric for FB Dating.
 
 
Access expert answers by becoming a member
3 likes   |  
Get unlimited access for $12/month
Get access to 2,346 pm interview questions and answers to give yourself a strong edge against other candidates that are interviewing for the same position
Get access to over 238 hours of video material containing an interview prep course, recorded mock interviews by expert PMs, group practice sessions, and QAs with expert PMs
Boost your confidence in PM interviews by attending peer to peer mock interview practices, group practices, and QA sessions with expert PMs
badge Gold PM

Use these 10 categories to clearly answer this Facebook metrics question.

Product Description:

I want to make sure that I have a right understanding of the features. Facebook Dating is a feature to connect individuals with similar interests using the power of algorithms for creating long lasting relationships. This is aligned with the mission of Facebook of establishing, fostering and enriching relationships. 

Business goal: 

Next, I would like to align on the business goal of Facebook Dating. Given that Facebook has 1.6 Billion DAUs, I would assume that Facebook is looking to increase engagement and retention of its existing user base, and I would like to propose that as the goal but I am open to other suggestions.

User Personas:

  • Individuals looking to meet new people 
  • Individuals looking for long-term serious relationships

User Goals: 

1) To meet someone interesting and compatible with their interests 2) To get to know them better 3) To ensure that it is not a fake person or profile 4) To keep this low profile as friends and family are also on the same platform

User Journey:

1) Opt into the feature

2) Create a dating profile

3) Express interest or accept interest

4) Exchange messages

Taking into consideration business goal and user goals, I would track the following user actions and behaviors as metrics:

Usage and Adoption:

  • #Number of users who opted in to the dating features
  • #Numbers of users who completed a dating profile
  • #How much % of a dating profile is complete
  • #Number of interests per user
  • #Number of accepts per user
  • #Number of successful dates
  • #DAUs

Engagement

  • Time spent per user on the Facebook Dating feature
  • #Number of messages sent or received per user per connection

Retention:

  • Number of users who revisit the Facebook Dating Feature from 7 days, 30 days, 45 days of creation of a profile
  • Number of users who delete their profile

Quality and Performance:

  • Number of app crashes
  • Number of buggy clicks
Prioritization:
Based on the business goals and the user goals, I would prioritize the following metrics - 1) Time spent per user on the Facebook Dating feature as a proxy for users getting value from it 2) Number of messages/user/connection as a proxy of a good match 3) Number of users who create a dating profile/Number of single users as a proxy for adoption
Access expert answers by becoming a member
12 likes   |  
Get unlimited access for $12/month
Get access to 2,346 pm interview questions and answers to give yourself a strong edge against other candidates that are interviewing for the same position
Get access to over 238 hours of video material containing an interview prep course, recorded mock interviews by expert PMs, group practice sessions, and QAs with expert PMs
Boost your confidence in PM interviews by attending peer to peer mock interview practices, group practices, and QA sessions with expert PMs
badge Platinum PM

Facebook's mission is to connect the world and provide tools that help you do so.

Facebook dating is a recently launched feature that allows you find people who are matches for you basis a personalised quiz that you take.

Users get matches and then they can start conversation with matches.

Goal here is to drive engagement 

Assuming  the goal is here for product metrics in BAU state and not launch driven metric

User journey here

user signs up > user takes the quiz > user shows preference for people he/she likes > match > engagement > user may churn off

I feel that sign/user takes the quick = handleded under growth metric

 primary metric: i want to focus on people showing preference for people as it's a leading metric and also is a great input metric plus indicates engagement well 

defensive check metric: Users may want to take converstion off facebook which runs the risk of churn however user may come back after a while to try dating again

monthly churn - people who become inactive suddenly ( since they took conversation offline, this should be easy to detect )

re-activation time- after how long do people come back to FB dating 

other health metrics

DAU

Time spent

Matches created daily

% of matches leading to conversations

New conversation created everyday

Access expert answers by becoming a member
1 like   |  
1 Feedback
badge Platinum PM

Things you did well

  • Great description of the product: Good summary of the product, its objective and what it does 
  • Overview of the user journey: You walked through the user journey and highlighted the relevant metrics for each phase of the user journey which was great
  • List of metrics: You came up with good list of metrics 

Areas of Improvement

  • List your metrics for each phase of user journey: As you walk the interviewer through the user journey, list the metrics for each phase
  • Number of metrics: Try to list at least 10 metrics to showcase your analytical skills

 

0
Get unlimited access for $12/month
Get access to 2,346 pm interview questions and answers to give yourself a strong edge against other candidates that are interviewing for the same position
Get access to over 238 hours of video material containing an interview prep course, recorded mock interviews by expert PMs, group practice sessions, and QAs with expert PMs
Boost your confidence in PM interviews by attending peer to peer mock interview practices, group practices, and QA sessions with expert PMs
badge Silver PM

What is Facebook Dating?

 Facebook dating is build for people who are looking for a romantic connection. It is open to anyone who is a member of Facebook community.

 

The users can create a profile and set their preferences of who they want to date (based on demo, location, Gender, Interests, etc). Once the profile is created, they can go to FB dating homepage to look for the potential matches. If a user likes prospect, they will go to their detail page and give them a like. Once, the user get a match, they can start chatting and set up a date.

 

Facebook Dating Mission: Help people to create romantic connection and build a family.

 

Assumptions:

  1. This will for people who are above the age of 21
  2. The feature will be available on all platforms
  3. Currently, the feature is available in the US.
  4. A new product launch for FB app, which will be available within FB (i.e. not a stand alone app)

 

Who are the current competitors?

  1. Craigslist
  2. Serious Apps (eharmony, match.com)
  3. Swipe apps (Tinder, Hinge)
  4. Friends and Family Network.

 

Why did Facebook Entered the Market?

  1. Facebook is uniquely positioned to utilize it’s community of 1B MAUto find romantic connection.
  2. Facebook already has enough data in their social graph such that FB dating can provide better matches.
  3. The Market size of Single people is huge, so building a product focused on this target segment can help increase the engagement on the platform and bring revenue (Ads revenue)
  4. Could be a strategy to enter the wedding market and building products for end to end customer journey of finding love to getting married to share their stories on FB

 

What are the unique value the product can bring to the dating world?

Dating is a social activity and FB is uniquely positioned to help people find dates through their social network.

  1. Better matches -- using the social graph of each user (their preferences, interests etc.)
  2. Can better control fake profiles than other apps since most of the users are already have a history on FB platform.
  3. Utilize Community help to find dates:  As a dater, I would feel more comfortable to go on a date with a potential match if the match is connected with someone in my network(1st, 2nd, 3rd degree etc.)

 

Market Size:

  1. This is a population problem, so lets assume total US pop is 320 million.
  2. Average life span is 80 years, so we have 40 million people in each age group. Calculation 320 Million/ 80 = 40 million in each age group of 10 years. (0-10 age - 40 million, 10-20 age group: 40 million etc.)
  3. Lets assume this app is for anyone above the age of 21, and lets consider the age group 60 -70 years and 70-80 years outside the scope since this population will likely not look for a romantic connection on FB.  Therefore the total people who are eligible age group to use FB dating, which is around 160 million.
  4. How many people are eligible to date. For simplicity, lets assume people who are not married or in a relationship are looking for a date. We can look at the recent divorced data and single's index report to estimate the number, but from lets assume there are at least 30% of single people. Calculation: 30% of 160 million = 48 million.
  5. Of 48 million, how many are WAU on FB? Most of people will at least login to FB a week so I'd assume 90% of 48 million are WAU = 43.2 million.
  6. Lets take 10% out for fake/duplicate WAU profiles, so our target segment is approximately 40 Million.

 

How do we define success?

Lets assume the timeline for goal setting is a year. Since this is a new product I'd say even if we get 10% of the market share in year 1, that would be an ambitious goal.

 

Again our goal is to help community find romantic connection. Therefore, the primary success metric would be the customer happiness with the app, which can me measured as NPS score, rating, or by users inviting their connection to use the App.

 

Secondary Metrics:

  1. Awareness: 100% of the 40 Million (dating eligible WAU customers) are aware of the FB Dating feature
  2. Profile Completion: This includes inputting preferences and uploading 4 pictures. At least 50% of 40 million customers = 20 million customers  have a completed profile.
    1. We can use the same structure that FB uses to help customers fill their profiles when they sign up for FB platform.
    2. For benchmarking, we can look at the publicly available data to see how many people usually complete their dating profiles on the other apps and why are the reasons they don't?
  3. Active customers: at least 90% of the customers who finished their profile become active i.e. 18 million customers login to the FB dating app at least 2-3 times a week.
  4. Maintain M:F ratio of WAU customers of Dating app  - 50:50 : 9 million each.
  5. Show at least 50-100 new potential real matches(no fake profiles) to the Active members per week Again, we can look at the dating data from Hinge or Tinder and see how many new profile does the user see each week.
  6. Engagement:
    1. Average number of profiles checked by user per week.
    2. Average number of matches per user per week
    3. Total number of matches per week on the platform
    4. Average number of chats that has phone number exchanged.
  7. Churn and Retention:
    1. To be successful, we want user to find connection and delete the App.
      1. Track the average number of weeks user was active before churning.
      2. If the user churned, ask them did you find a connection? Y/N
  8. # of users who found love and back promoter of the app that helped bring more users to the dating App.

 

Guardrail Metrics:

  1. Uptick in the fake profiles.
  2. Customer tickets about potential harassments.
  3. Negative impact to the overall engagement to the FB platform.
  4. Negative impact to the WAU of Facebook App.

 

Access expert answers by becoming a member
0 likes   |  
Get unlimited access for $12/month
Get access to 2,346 pm interview questions and answers to give yourself a strong edge against other candidates that are interviewing for the same position
Get access to over 238 hours of video material containing an interview prep course, recorded mock interviews by expert PMs, group practice sessions, and QAs with expert PMs
Boost your confidence in PM interviews by attending peer to peer mock interview practices, group practices, and QA sessions with expert PMs
badge Gold PM

Before I proceed to discuss the metrics for Dating feature, I would like to first clarify if my understanding of the feature is correct. Facebook Dating feature helps users ages 18 and up find a meaningful relationship.

How does the feature work?

Facebook Dating feature is available on the Facebook app. To use it you need to set up a separate profile. The service will present you with potential matches based on your location, indicated preferences, and other factors.  Once the match is suggested and you acknowledge you can start exchanging messages

Let’s talk about how Dating aligns with Facebooks overall mission

Facebooks mission is to give people the power to build community and bring the world closer together. Dating feature helps to connect people who are looking for meaningful long-lasting connections thereby bringing them closer

Goal of Dating Goal of this feature is to help find meaningful relationship. Facebook has around 2B active users. Many of these users have used this platform passively to find their match. 

Product Lifecycle: Facebook Dating has been around for around 4 years. Due to this I would not like to focus on awareness but adoption and engagement

Let us now talk about the users of the groups

 Users of Feature

1.   People looks for serious long-term relationship

2.   People looking to meet new people

Let us talk about the user journey and then I will focus on metrics around specific steps that are important to track for engagement and adoption

 User Journey

1.   Candidate opts into the feature

2.   Candidate creates a profile

3.   Candidate is presented with potential matches

4.   Candidate accepts or declines

5.   If both candidate accepts then they can exchanges messages

METRICS

ACQUISITION

1.  Avg no of new users / month and evaluate this trend over time (MoM)

2.  % of profiles completed

ACTIVATION

1.  Number of unique users who either accepted or declined the suggestion once and see how this metric is performing over time(month over month)

ENGAGEMENT: 

Recommendation engine

  • Acceptance rate >80%. Track this month over month
  • Decline rate<20%. Track this month over month.
  • Acceptance is when both accept and declined is when one declines the recommendation

Depth of interaction

  • % of users who exchange more than 5 messages when a connection is matched

Time spent 

  • Time spent on dating on average / member. Would like to measure this over time and correlate this with Accept rate. If accept rate is high and time spent is more then maybe they do find some use.If decline rate is more and time spent is less then they are not finding value on the website

 

RETENTION

  1.  Avg no of users who come back to the feature after 30 days of creating a profile
  2. Avg no of users who come back even after declining the match
  3. Avg no of users who delete profile every month

 Counter metrics

  1. Number of profiles reported every month
  2. Number of people who never responded
  3. Cannabilazation across different facebook services due to time spent on this website

Now I would like to evaluate these metrics against the goal of increasing engagement and adoption

Theme

Metric

Impact to Engagement and Adoption

# of users

# Avg of new users/month

 

H: We want to increase adoption. While users may grow we still dont know if they are finding value. However, since it is in growth stage we will track this along with other engagement metrics 

 

# of users

Avg no of users who accepted or decline recommendation once

 

Low: This doesn’t give us details on if the users are still using the feature and getting value out of it

 

Engagement

Acceptance rate

High: High accept rate means users are finding value on website

 

Engagement

Decline rate

High: High decline rate consistently would mean that users are less likely to return

 

Engagement

# of messages exchanged

 

High: This indicates that users are interested in taking the next step. If acceptance rate is high but messages are not exchanged, then it doesn’t help

 

Engagement

Avg time spent on website

High: This has to be correlated with acceptance and decline rate to understand if users are truly spending more time because they are getting more value on the website

 

Retention

no of fake profile reported per month

 

L: It is good to know if more fake profiles are created. The higher the number the lesser is the trust on the feature. However, it doesnt help us still understand engagement on platform

 

Retention

Average amount of time group user stays

 

Low: Many people may join group and forget it or may find a match but still donot close profile so not best indicator. 

 

 

METRIC SELECTION: Based on prioritization, I'd focus on the 4 metrics below with a high weighting .These 4 metrics fall within the engagement bucket, which is a direct measure of how valuable the feature is. Measuring these trends overtime demonstrates how valuable is feature  

1.  Acceptance and decline rate

2.  Message depth - % of peopke with 5 or more message exchange when a match is made

3.  MAU - Retention

4.  Avg time spent on website correlated with accept rate

5.   

Access expert answers by becoming a member
0 likes   |  
Get unlimited access for $12/month
Get access to 2,346 pm interview questions and answers to give yourself a strong edge against other candidates that are interviewing for the same position
Get access to over 238 hours of video material containing an interview prep course, recorded mock interviews by expert PMs, group practice sessions, and QAs with expert PMs
Boost your confidence in PM interviews by attending peer to peer mock interview practices, group practices, and QA sessions with expert PMs

 

Facebook’s mission is to bring the world closer together.

Dating helps with that mission by creating a space within Facebook that makes it easier to meet and start new conversations with people who share your interests. This can potentially lead to long term, meaningful relationships.

 

The users are people who have a FB account and they are looking to meet other people that they can date or become friends with. These are users of all ages across the markets FB dating was launched in. The value they drive is based on finding people they can click with it. 

 

For Facebook the value comes from people spending more time on the platform.

 

In a very competitive market, this product stands out as it decreases the risk of dealing with fake profiles (due FB’s ongoing integrity efforts), and potentially allows to bring in other components of a participant’s life like IG stories or events that both who matched have in common (thus showing a more nuanced view of a potential match). An easy North Star metric would be Monthly Active Users but I believe we should actually focus on providing users with a high quality experience. 

 

I would like to take a few minutes to establish the North Star Metric, and then maybe we can brainstorm some metrics that come out of that, along with some counter or downstreams  metrics that we need to keep in mind as we are developing the product.

 

Based on what I think is this product’s point of differentiation (e.g. building more authentic connections), a good North Star metric would be matches that result in a meaningful connection.However, since that is likely to happen offline (with no way for FB to track what happened as soon as things were taken offline), I think a measurable metric would be  number of matches per user per month - as I think connection is what will eventually drive engagement up.

 

I’d like to break down that metric down as follows:

 

Metrics based on user journey:

 

Acquisition: num of people on FB who sign up for FB dating 

  • Num of DAU/MAU

  • Num of matches per user per month

  • %of likes that result in a match

Activation: %of MAU who filled in any sections of their profile

  • Average completion rate of profile 

Engagement:

  • Num of meaningful conversations (at least 3 lines exchanged) per user per month

  • Num of virtual dates (e.g. video/audio calls assuming that is possible)

  • Time spent per user per month

Retention:

  • This is a tricky metric in the context of dating as eventually a successful interaction might result in the deactivation of the profile

Monetisation: - there are opportunities for monetisation by showing people ads but since this is a new product I imagine that will become more important as the product reaches maturity.

 

I’d also like to go through some counter metric or downstream metrics that we would also need to measure in order to see how this app adds value to the platform overall

 

Counter metrics: 

-percentage of users who un-matched someone

- total number of un-matches per month

- conversations unreplied /per user (one user initiates convo after match but goes unreplied) as this might be a big pain point for many users

- num of fake profiles taken down

- % of users who reported a profile as fake/abuse

Downstream metrics

 

  • We see time spent in Feed or Groups per user per month going down due to canibalization from FB Dating

  • Number of User accounts blocked

  • FB MAP goes down as a result of a bad experience with Dating

Access expert answers by becoming a member
0 likes   |  
Get unlimited access for $12/month
Get access to 2,346 pm interview questions and answers to give yourself a strong edge against other candidates that are interviewing for the same position
Get access to over 238 hours of video material containing an interview prep course, recorded mock interviews by expert PMs, group practice sessions, and QAs with expert PMs
Boost your confidence in PM interviews by attending peer to peer mock interview practices, group practices, and QA sessions with expert PMs

Product Rationale

Facebook dating allows users to meet other facebook users and form meaningful relationships. A user is matched with potential facebook user profiles based on her specified interests, geo location etc. A user is able to "accept" the match and if the match accepts the user as well, they are paired, and they can start dating. Additionally, a user is able to add "secret crushes" from her list of facebook friends and instagram followers. If she happens to be one of her secret crushes' crush, they are matched and they can start dating. Facebook dating also has safety features for users to share their location with their friend when they are going on a date. 

Since FB dating allows users to meet and form connections with new people, it ties right back into FB's mission of helping build a community and bringing the world closer together. 

User segments

FB dating caters to the below broad user segments:

1. Users that have never dated before and want to date

2. Users that have dating experience and want to date

3. Users that just want to check out the dating market and may not necessarily be serious about meeting

Goals/User actions: Now let's look at what the user journey looks like within facebook dating:

 

  1. User accesses the feature

  2. User creates her dating profile

  3. User views suggested matches

  4. User likes a match and is paired with one another

  5. User goes on a date (may not be completely visible within the app)

  6. User adds a FB or insta follower as a secret crush

  7. User shares shares location with a friend before going on a date as a safety measure

 
Based on the user journey above, following are the possible metrics
 
Metrics
Since Facebook dating is a matured feature, I will not spend time on acquistion of "new users" into facebook dating.
Product Health Metrics/Engagement Metrics
  1. Adoption - DAU, WAU and MAU accessing the facebook dating feature

  2. Number of users that created a profile/Total number of daily active users

  3. Number of users that liked a suggested match/total number of users that were presented matches, daily, weekly, monthly

  4. Average time spent per user on fb dating section

Retention Metrics:
1. Number of users that have dated more than one facebook user in a period of 6 months to 5 years. 
North Star Metrics:
  1. Number of users that were matched successfully/number of users dally, weekly, monthly

  2. Number of users that exchanged messages

  3. Number of users that went on a date (if we have data from “sharing location”)

While the success of facebook dating lies in how it gets people to meet each other, it is also useful to track product health metrics to keep informed of overall engagement.
Guard Rail Metrics:
  1. Guard rails : I would make sure that average time spent in the rest of the app doesn’t get cannibalized.

Risk Metrics:
1. Sentiment index
2. Safety index - to ensure safety of both parties
3. Number of reported/blocked user profiles
 
Summary

Overall, I would track the users that were matched successfully over total number of users daily, weekly, monthly (let's call this match rate) and users that were matched that exchanged messages, while passively monitoring adoption rate of users

Access expert answers by becoming a member
0 likes   |  
Get unlimited access for $12/month
Get access to 2,346 pm interview questions and answers to give yourself a strong edge against other candidates that are interviewing for the same position
Get access to over 238 hours of video material containing an interview prep course, recorded mock interviews by expert PMs, group practice sessions, and QAs with expert PMs
Boost your confidence in PM interviews by attending peer to peer mock interview practices, group practices, and QA sessions with expert PMs
badge Bronze PM

Goal: FB overall goal is to Give people the power to build community and bring the world closer together. Dating should align with that as well.

Product feature: People create profiles, write about themselves, and set preferences in what kind of people they are interested in, in order to find a partner

Metrics:

  • Adoption
    • % of FB users using FB dating
    • # of daily/weekly new user profiles being created
  • Engagement
    • % of FB time spent on FB dating OR avg session time/user
    • # of swipes/user
  • Retention
    • % of DAU of the WAU
    • % of repeat users after getting a match
  • Conversion
    • # of matches/user
      • Cohort by light, moderate, and highly active users
  • Revenue
    • % of FB revenue generated from Dating from ads/premium accounts
  • Counter metric:
    • FB DAU/WAU

Prioritize metrics to keep top 2 or 3

  • Conversion and Retention - If they run well, there will be automatic more adoption and engagement, and thus revenue by network effect/word of mouth

Growth ideas (in case product growth analytics team works on this):

  • Understand the pain point by understanding the user journey (to understand user drop rate by creating funnel metrics):
    • User lands on the dating app UI
    • Signs up
    • Creates his/her profile
    • Set preferences in what they are looking for
    • Start swiping
    • Gets a match/not in X timeframe (say a week)
    • Start a conversation
  • Notify single people for more adoption
  • Ads in newsfeed
  • Free trial version
  • Pre-filled what to write in bio, suggestions in setting preferences (If the drop off is high at creating profile or setting preferences)
    • AB test feature: with and without pre filled text to see increase in profile creations
    • Control and experiment: New users signing up for the first time
    • Metric: # of profile creations
    • Trigger: Lands on profile creation page
    • Power analysis: Significance level, min detectable lift needed, and volume coming in
      • Will determine the duration based on above
  • Suggestions to start a convo (ice breakers/one liners etc)

 

Access expert answers by becoming a member
0 likes   |  
Get unlimited access for $12/month
Get access to 2,346 pm interview questions and answers to give yourself a strong edge against other candidates that are interviewing for the same position
Get access to over 238 hours of video material containing an interview prep course, recorded mock interviews by expert PMs, group practice sessions, and QAs with expert PMs
Boost your confidence in PM interviews by attending peer to peer mock interview practices, group practices, and QA sessions with expert PMs
badge Silver PM

I'll start by laying out FB's overall Mission and goals: 

FB is focussed on bringing people together and creating community. 
There are two tabgible outcomes that I can distill from there: creating connections and fostering meaningful interactions between them. 
Knowing where FB is in its lifycycle, I would assume FB is currently focussed on Engagement/Retention and Revenue. 
 
With that context, I'll get into the Dating feature and first frame the problem is solves for different user groups involved:
FB Dating allows FB users to find and connect with a match in a safe and secure manner. I can see how this fits very well with FB's overall mission as it can create new connections and help them interact in meaningful, in some case life changing way. I would imagine this feature aligns with Engagement/Retention goal for FB as there is no direct Revenue tied to this feature. 
 
The user has a few different needs wrt dating:
1. User wants to find interesting people to meet based on their relationship goals
2. User wants to be discovered by others will similar interests 
3. User wants to be assured of quality, safety and privacy of their interactions 
 
If we had to summarize those aspects into one NS metric, it might be Total number of dates/matches made over a period of time (D,W,M) - I'd probably go with Week.
 
We can impact that metric by working across the following pillars in line with the user journey: 
 
Awareness: User becomes aware of the feature 
Activation/Conversion: User creates a dating profile 
Engagement: User engages with the community, initiates Likes, Messages and finds a match in due course
Retention: User is satisfied with the experience, re-engaes with Dating feature (if needed) or with FB more and more because of the positive impact it had on the user
 
This feature is fairly new, so I will look to prioritize multiple pillars: build adequate awareness (Priority 3), get users to create dating profiles (Priority 1), engage and find a match (Priority 2). I might measure retention but not necessarily set it as a goal metric at this point. If I learn that there is adequate engagement and success rate of finding a match is very high, I might prioritize Awareness and Activation pillars over Engagement. 
 
Metrics (Goal metrics in bold based on Impact on NS and strategic context): 
 
Awareness
% of users that become aware of Dating feature per D,W,M (measured by # of users that visit landing page for Dating to learn about the feature)
# Impressions of landing page per D,W,M 
Segment by demography, channel, geography
 
Activation/Conversion:
Base Conversion Rate for Profile Set Up per D,W,M (% of users that have converted to create a dating profile)
Funnel metrics for profile set up 
# Users that set up a profile in a D,W,M
Segment by demography, channel, geography, relationship goal
 
Engagement:
  • Avg # Interactions (Likes, Messages) before a match is made
  • # Likes / User / D,W,M
  • # Likes Received / User / D,W,M
  • # Messages Sent /User / D,W,M
  • # Messages Received / User / D,W,M
  • Aggregate Engagement Score: Total engagement (Likes, Messages, Reactions per user over a period of time)
  • # of dates that result in Friend connections outside Dating feature
  • # Matches made in a D,W, M
  • % of initiations that result in a successful match in a D,W,
  • % users that modify their profile  after account set up in a D,W,M
  • #profile modifications per user per D,W,M
  • Time Spent on dating feature / user / Session, D, W, M
  • Avg amount of time a user has to wait before a match is made
Segment by engagement level (high , low), demography, channel, geograo
 
Retention:
  • % Users that re-initiate search after a match is made
  • Identify metrics that correlate best with long term engagement with the feature throughout the journey and measure those - e.g. 
        % users that initiate Likes/Interest in the first week of account creation 
        % of users that spend at least 30 mins a week on dating feature 
        in the first two weeks 
        (assuming these users remain engaged and ultimately find a 
        match)
  • If Referrals is a feature in Dating, I will track that as word of mouth can be extremely powerful for a feature like this. 

Counter Metrics: 

I will have a control group for this feature to understand the impact it's having on overall engagement with FB

  • Time Spent on FB / User / D, W, M
  • DAU/WAU/MAU
  • Aggregate engagement / user / D, W, M
  • Amount of time spent / user outside Dating per D,W,M - Assuming the amount of time one has for social media is finite, if a user is spending a good amount of their time on a feature like dating, there is a chance they are not spending much time on it outside Dating. I would want to make sure users continue to remain interested in FB overall so they can continue to engage with their cmmunity after they find a match.
  • %Churn (% users that disengage with FB after using Dating)
Access expert answers by becoming a member
0 likes   |  
Get unlimited access for $12/month
Get access to 2,346 pm interview questions and answers to give yourself a strong edge against other candidates that are interviewing for the same position
Get access to over 238 hours of video material containing an interview prep course, recorded mock interviews by expert PMs, group practice sessions, and QAs with expert PMs
Boost your confidence in PM interviews by attending peer to peer mock interview practices, group practices, and QA sessions with expert PMs
badge Platinum PM

Taking another  stab at this question. Hopefully I'll fair better than my earlier question

Background

FB dating as the name suggests is an FB product, FB's mission is to connect the world/provide the tools to build community.

FB falls under the latter category.

What is FB dating?

Dating feature within FB where can sign up to find potential dates around you - you take a quiz and basis that + Im assuming FB's social graph  based enrichment it suggest a set of people to you who match your preferences and vice versa.

It's an opt-in feature and available in limited countries.

Users 

FB People users opting into dating.

Product goal

The nature of product seems to be targeting towards engagement/retention.

User journey 

User finds out about FB dating -> searches for it -> Signs up/takes the quiz/profile -> Starts swiping  -> Matches -> Conversation/engagement -> offline date/meet up -> relationship ends -> user comes back 

 

I'd like to map the above with the AAARC funnel 

StageStepPriorityComments
Awareness                                                     User searches for FB dating or clicks on ad for the same on FB         P1Secondary
Acquisition Users signing up for FB datingP0   Network density is critical
ActivationUsers start swipingP0 possible drop off point
EngagementUser starts a conversation with matchesP0possible drop off point
RetentionUsers comes back to swipe some more or chat with matches or bothP0 
ChurnUser finds a match/starts dating - stops using the platformP0 
Re-activationUsers starts swiping again  P1 

I want to focus on Engagement and retention part of the funnel given the product goal - metrics that indicate engagegment 

  1. DAU and Active DAU as a % of app open DAU (Open the product and took an action)- Weekly/daily/monthly. 
  2. Swiping users 
  3. Matches count/user and conversations(1 way and 2 way split) count/user count 
  4. Timespent per user 
  5. Users taking things offline ( proxy can be number or snapchat or IG handle exchange)

I want to pick a metric for goal and health 

- Product goal/mission focussed metric: Swiping users/ users having conversation count absolute and  % of app open 
this gives a peak into actual DAU for the product vs a vanity metric like feature open 

- Product health metrics: Time spent per user and daily/weekly retention, retention is reliable indicator of product health however its a lagging metric and hence balance with time spent per user.

Time spent captures the overhall health since - swiping or conversation both will lead to increased time spent. We can further  choose to track swipes/matches user count and total count daily to get a more granular understanding of product health. 

 

From an FB perspcetive the goal of FB dating is to increase net FB engagement so I would want to track timespent/retention for users using dating feature to make sure Im not cannabilising FB feed users/leading to a net negative. 

 

Access expert answers by becoming a member
0 likes   |  
Get unlimited access for $12/month
Get access to 2,346 pm interview questions and answers to give yourself a strong edge against other candidates that are interviewing for the same position
Get access to over 238 hours of video material containing an interview prep course, recorded mock interviews by expert PMs, group practice sessions, and QAs with expert PMs
Boost your confidence in PM interviews by attending peer to peer mock interview practices, group practices, and QA sessions with expert PMs
badge Platinum PM

Feature Description : Since i dont know much about this app , assuming its for people to connect with like minded individuals tas well to pursue long term relationships.

Goals : Facebook's goal for this feature would be increasing the engagement as well as retention of  existing users. As this comes along with the exusting facebook account, we are not actually looking at increasing users count.

Customer Journey :

User logging in -> Create dating profile -> Selects the recommended matches provided by FB -> Start conversation if interested

Metrics to measure : (using the AARRR framework)

1. Acquisition and Activation 

  • No of users exploring the dating app (separate section provided in FB home page)
  • No of users creating dating profile ,monthly and quaterly basis
  • No of users churning out during profile creation.
2. Engagement : To track the time spent by users 
  • Average No of interests made by user.
  • Average no of conversations per user.
  • Average session time for the user
3. Retention
  • No of users who comes back to the app and the frequency of coming back within a week , month or 45 days
  • No of users who didnt come back even once after profile creation .
Note : Referral and revenue doesnt make much sense as its not a paid version.
 
Priortization 
Will keep engagement and retention metrics on higher priority for this feature.
 
Access expert answers by becoming a member
0 likes   |  
Get unlimited access for $12/month
Get access to 2,346 pm interview questions and answers to give yourself a strong edge against other candidates that are interviewing for the same position
Get access to over 238 hours of video material containing an interview prep course, recorded mock interviews by expert PMs, group practice sessions, and QAs with expert PMs
Boost your confidence in PM interviews by attending peer to peer mock interview practices, group practices, and QA sessions with expert PMs
Get unlimited access for $12/month
Get access to 2,346 pm interview questions and answers to give yourself a strong edge against other candidates that are interviewing for the same position
Get access to over 238 hours of video material containing an interview prep course, recorded mock interviews by expert PMs, group practice sessions, and QAs with expert PMs
Boost your confidence in PM interviews by attending peer to peer mock interview practices, group practices, and QA sessions with expert PMs