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Figma's Collaborative Product Strategy

Key Points

  • Successful product strategy hinges on spotting and aligning with long‑term industry megatrends, as illustrated through the Figma case study.
  • Figma’s core insight was that software would transition from a solitary activity to a collaborative one, and they chose design—a highly collaborative discipline—as the launchpad for this shift.
  • By delivering a fully cloud‑based, real‑time design tool, Figma outpaced incumbents like Adobe, which were still tied to outdated, single‑user workflows.
  • The launch of Figma Slides demonstrates how a disciplined, trend‑driven strategy can evolve into a “capstone” product that extends the original platform while staying true to the original collaborative vision.

Full Transcript

# Figma's Collaborative Product Strategy **Source:** [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QkRlKJVjeDQ](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QkRlKJVjeDQ) **Duration:** 00:11:04 ## Summary - Successful product strategy hinges on spotting and aligning with long‑term industry megatrends, as illustrated through the Figma case study. - Figma’s core insight was that software would transition from a solitary activity to a collaborative one, and they chose design—a highly collaborative discipline—as the launchpad for this shift. - By delivering a fully cloud‑based, real‑time design tool, Figma outpaced incumbents like Adobe, which were still tied to outdated, single‑user workflows. - The launch of Figma Slides demonstrates how a disciplined, trend‑driven strategy can evolve into a “capstone” product that extends the original platform while staying true to the original collaborative vision. ## Sections - [00:00:00](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QkRlKJVjeDQ&t=0s) **Leveraging Mega Trends: Figma’s Strategy** - The speaker explains how product managers can harness industry‑wide shifts—such as the move toward collaborative software—to create long‑term, successful product strategies, using Figma’s evolution and its recent Slides feature as a concrete example. ## Full Transcript
0:01so today I want to talk about product 0:04strategy about figma and about how 0:07successful companies and successful 0:09product managers can latch onto larger 0:12trends that are in the industry to build 0:15really successful long-term approaches 0:17to solve real problems for people and 0:19we're going to make it specific because 0:21like who really has the time to do this 0:23generally we're going to talk about 0:25figma and we're specifically going to 0:27talk about the motion that figma had 0:29from getting started as a company all 0:32the way through to their most recent 0:35their most recent release which is 0:37slides uh and slides is a wonderful 0:42example of how you can build a 0:44Capstone product on top of an existing 0:47strategy if you've been diligently 0:49working at this for a long time now the 0:52best strategies are strategies that 0:55capture Mega trends that affect all of 0:58us for years in 1:01and so you might wonder what did figma 1:04do right like where's their 1:06strategy well the truth is figma figured 1:10out earlier than most people that 1:12software was going to become 1:16collaborative one of the defining 1:18characteristics of software in the 1990s 1:22software in the 2000s was that it was an 1:25individual activity that you did at your 1:28computer at the beginning you would 1:30literally go and you would get software 1:31on desk and you would put it on your 1:33machine and you would compute on the 1:35machine now we're not really talking 1:39about Computing as like a cloud service 1:43right that's a whole separate 1:44conversation we'll do a separate YouTube 1:46video on that we're talking about 1:49Computing as an activity designed to 1:52produce economic output for a worker 1:55which sounds really dry but at the end 1:57of the day fundamentally most 2:00productivity software for businesses is 2:01built around the idea of can it make you 2:04more efficient at your job that's what 2:06companies like auna pitch all the time 2:09so with 2:10figma what they figured out their core 2:12Insight what they believed was true five 2:1510 years and in the future when they got 2:17started was that software was going to 2:20move from being this individual activity 2:22to being something that we all work on 2:25together and they pick design as the way 2:28to do that because design is one of the 2:30more collaborative job Families how many 2:33times if you work in engineering if you 2:34work in product if you work in marketing 2:37have you been talking with a designer 2:39about the way something is framed or 2:42structured or designed so that it 2:45affects the customer in the right way so 2:47the customer can get their job done more 2:49efficiently whatever it 2:51is it is a collaborative art it is 2:54easier to be collaborative if you can 2:56all be in the tool together see what you 2:59each are doing if you have Canvas OR 3:01space to comment and 3:03talk and frankly Adobe was late to the 3:06game on that adobe was not investing in 3:08that with their sketch product they 3:10viewed productivity in the old 1990s way 3:13as let's just get this on Dis Let's get 3:15this downloaded let's get this worker a 3:17seat that we can monetize and off we 3:20go so if you're figma that's a massive 3:23opportunity right but there's a huge 3:26technical challenge which by the way is 3:29a reason to start a business not to stop 3:31it because at the end of the day if you 3:33are solving a big technical challenge 3:35you're fundamentally making a difficult 3:36promise come true for 3:38customers and that is hard to beat if 3:41you can do it if you can get it right 3:43now figma was really hard because they 3:44basically had to take software that 3:46everyone had assumed you could write on 3:49a computer program that you can use your 3:50whole computer to to employ and and work 3:53against and they had to put it all in a 3:56little light 3:57browser which is a much smaller envelope 4:00for your 4:02application and they did it just took a 4:04long time and so when we talk about sort 4:06of the Saka of silicon bellet companies 4:09which ones have started quickly which 4:10ones have not figma's a slow one figma 4:13took a long time to really get going 4:16four or five years I think 4:18and one of the reasons why is because 4:21they had to solve a whole bunch of 4:23complicated technical problems to get 4:25into the browser and have a smooth 4:27collaborative experience in order to 4:29take vage of that Nega Trend now I want 4:31you to think about something if you are 4:33solving a hard challenge but you're not 4:36solving in the direction of a larger 4:38Trend what's going to happen in four or 4:40five years when You' solved it you're 4:43going to be off 4:44Trend and so it's so important to 4:48understand where is the trend going over 4:50the long term and how can you be infront 4:53of it and in a sense startups are about 4:58seeing the future a little bit more 5:00accurately than everybody else and in 5:03this case for the specific kind of work 5:06figma saw the future more accurately 5:08they saw that people were going to want 5:09to collaborate they'd be hungry for it 5:12if they could deliver the product so 5:14when they finally did four or five years 5:15later people latched on to it I remember 5:19when every design director I knew was 5:22getting figma installed at their 5:23workplace and rolling Adobe back out and 5:26I think that's part of why you know a 5:28few years later Adobe tried to acquire 5:30figma because they saw that they kind of 5:32missed the boat um they missed the boat 5:34on collaborative software and they 5:36needed to spend some of the cash that 5:38they had on hand to change that and get 5:40back in the 5:41game and that's how larger companies 5:44often do it like if they miss the boat 5:45on a particular Trend they'll try and 5:46buy their way out so let's get back to 5:49figma at the end of the day when you 5:52have this core product you've launched 5:54they have figma they launch it it's 5:56collaborative it starts to take off the 5:58natural thing to do is to add more 6:00features to that 6:03product when people tell you to add them 6:05right you talk to your customer your 6:07product manager Now talks to the 6:08customer they add a feature it's a 6:09little Widget the widget goes inigma the 6:11product manager takes their hat off and 6:13says job well done everybody great job 6:16that's a path to feature bloat that's a 6:19path to unhealthy product long term 6:22regardless of the micro results what you 6:25need to do is understand what are the 6:27things that your customers are saying 6:29about adjacent problem spaces that you 6:32can solve using a similar approach so 6:36yes you do need to listen to your 6:37customers but don't listen to them if 6:40what they are telling you to do is going 6:42to make your product more complicated to 6:44use or only available to Super users 6:47listen to it if it's going to enable you 6:50to solve meaningful problems for them 6:52across more and more 6:54workflows so in this case with the 6:56slides released just fast forwarding to 6:58the present and there's other ones we 6:59can talk about that figma has done I'm 7:01just using slides as an example because 7:03it's 7:05recent at the end of the day what they 7:07realized is that designers were already 7:10using 7:12figma and not just for design they were 7:14already using figma for 7:16presentations but it wasn't clean it 7:18wasn't easy to do other people couldn't 7:20get in there and use it as a slide 7:22Creator really easily so they decided to 7:26change that and it was a Leap Frog 7:28motion for them because the the thing 7:29that they are now worried about getting 7:31disrupted by is of course AI so they 7:34needed to find a way to start to compete 7:35in the AI space as well and what better 7:38way to do that than by getting AI which 7:42is deeply informed by text because we 7:44have so many large language models now 7:47and that's like the heart of the 7:48movement I know there's a big image 7:49generation movement and I know that's a 7:51factor in design they went all in on 7:54large language models I think partly 7:55because those are so influential right 7:58now for business 8:01that being 8:03said they go in on 8:05slides and what they realize is that 8:07they have an opportunity to level up the 8:10actual core presentation experience yes 8:13customers are asking for slides by their 8:17behavior they're basically saying I use 8:19this for presentations and figma 8:22noticed but what they probably didn't 8:25say clearly because I've done a lot of 8:27customer interviews and they almost 8:28never say this 8:31is please can I have an AI powered 8:35applet called 8:37slides where I can actually show my 8:40clickable demos as if it was a slide 8:42presentation that's what they built 8:45almost never do your customers ask that 8:47clearly that was up to the imagination 8:49of the product and design teams and the 8:51engineering team at figma to figure out 8:54from what the customers were doing and 8:56presenting those slides and to say how 8:58can we take this and tie it back back to 8:59this larger Trend this larger strategy 9:01where we're working on collaborative 9:02software and how can we continue to 9:04build on that into more workflows this 9:07slide or presentation workflow is a new 9:09one for them people were using their 9:11software for it but it was kind of a 9:12hacky use case so if they wanted to 9:14build it right they had to understand 9:16that workflow and they had to apply 9:18figma's knowledge of how to do 9:21collaborative software to that new 9:23workflow that's really the heart of what 9:25makes slides tick and that's why I think 9:27it's a great example of how you start to 9:28build on Trend over time because now 9:31slides is out and all of a sudden people 9:34are able to interact with this 9:36PowerPoint presentation beyond the 9:38canvas and so just like we are now 9:40thinking about design as a fundamentally 9:43collaborative exercise figma is inviting 9:46us to think about presentations as a 9:49fundamentally collaborative 9:51exercise and yes designers will probably 9:54be the ones that use this most often 9:57initially but the idea of having strong 10:00collaborative activity is something that 10:02figma is really good at and that they 10:04are extending into more workflows and I 10:07think that we as product managers we in 10:09Tech often don't have that degree of 10:11consistency of vision we don't start out 10:14years and years ago building something 10:16for a future we think is possible around 10:17a megat trend consistently solve a hard 10:20technical problem finally get something 10:22done that many people thought was 10:24impossible by the way getting figma into 10:26the browser people thought that wasn't 10:27going to get done and then keep building 10:29on that right like we don't just build 10:31bloatware after that like keep 10:33relentlessly building on the core value 10:36that we have discovered that people like 10:38to collaborate they need to collaborate 10:39and that that accelerates value so I'm 10:42not a figma person I don't work at figma 10:44I don't have figma stock or anything 10:46like that I just think this is a 10:48wonderful case study for people who 10:51study product strategy and I wanted to 10:52kind of take it and open it up I've done 10:55a shorter version of this on my Tik Tok 10:56but I thought this would be a good place 10:58to sort of have a long form discussion I 11:00hope you enjoyed it