Facebook Product Manager Execution Interview: Comments & Reactions
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- Опубліковано 6 лип 2024
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Watch our mock Facebook PM interview. Kevin Wei (Coinbase PM) asks Peter, Facebook PM an execution style interview question about Facebook comments and reactions.
Chapters -
00:00:00 - Introduction
00:00:52 - Question
00:01:11 - Answer
00:01:23 - Mission
00:01:53 - Types of users
00:08:30 - Metrics
00:22:23 - Follow-up questions
00:26:22 - Interview analysis
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Very informative but did not seem like a mock interview at all. It was like an informative lecture from an industry expert.
Its clear that this guy knows his job.
He looked one he was a PM of reactions or commentsI in general so that’s why he was able to do a deep dive so quickly
For tradeoffs it’s particularly insightful to mention impacts to the specific surface the competing features sit on, then look at the impacts to that surface. And then roll it up to see the impacts to the larger meta ecosystem since reactions and comments in particular sit on multiple surfaces
Great answer and overview of the FB's Reactions feature.
It can even answer a different question on 'is REACTIONS a good addition to the FB platform?'
I can hear fine. May be they fixed it?
This is not an interview. The elephant in the room is how do we tradeoff between increase in reactions and decrease in comments. The PM didn't provide a clear answer. If I were an exec asking this question, his answers would make me very concerned about the state of the business.
Some amazing content here!
This is a goldmine.
Yea, agree with many comments. This does not seem realistic in terms of an interview.
Indeed great insights the the FB ecosystem.
The interviewee gave such a perfessional answer and it's apparent that he worked at Facebook and know all the metrics... My question is : is it fair to ask an average interviewee to answer this quality of answer?
this is a big no. the reason is because if i was the interviewer, i would want to find out where he lives and interrogate him for knowing so much about the FB and its product without being a FB employee.
i did not think he was rambling! his explanation was very clear - not sure why he self reflected that! he has a high bar i guess!
This was a root-cause analysis problem. He spent way too much time talking about the value of reactions and why. Instead, he should have spent a minute or two on the why these reactions matter to FB and the importance of both of the metrics. Then, dive into the root-cause analysis by first checking if this was an expected result of a change or we dont know why this happened. Then, talk about any changes to the way metrics collected or calculated, external factors (demographics, seasonality, competitors, etc.), internal factors (new feature role-out, expected AB testing, cannibalization, relevance of devices...), and finally see, if anything happened that is out-of-control of FB (political changes, natural disasters..). Finally, given both reactions and comments are critical metrics to the success of FB engagement, there is most likely a weekly review of these metrics with LT, so have an explanation to the root-cause and an action plan on what the team is doing to address it.
It's more talking and less execution. Its so uni-directional. Candidate isn't asking any questions, or collaborating with the interviewer. Not particularly among some of the good execution videos I have seen.
This is the execution of a seasoned manager. It's less questions and more driving, he moves with a sense of authority.
completely agreed
Such poor audio quality. Please have the interviewees use a headphone.
Is this an interview? If so, I wouldn't hire someone irrespective of their qualification and skill set that talks non stop the entire window
Candidate knew the product, but took way too long to answer the question. In a real interview, he would run out of time
The interviewees constant SMACKING while he is talking is very distracting..
Wasn't structured and problem solving oriented.
Poor audio and video. Video is still forgivable. But it's a struggle to even listen to what he is saying
I used to like watching exponent videos, but I definitely have lost respect seeing all these Facebook promos. With the whistleblower case still recent, I’m surprised you’re having these people interviewed. I’m sure the people are good at their jobs, but they’re at a company that has failed their customers in both privacy and morality. You’re essentially still touting them as a cool company to work for when they’ve clearly done injustice to the public society.