POPM 과정은 어떻게 하나의 ‘제품’이 되었나 (opens in new tab)
Kakao developed its internal POPM (Product Owner/Product Manager) training program by treating the curriculum itself as an evolving product rather than a static lecture series. By applying agile methodologies such as data-driven prioritization and iterative versioning, the program successfully moved from a generic pilot to a structured framework that aligns teams through a shared language of problem-solving. This approach demonstrates that internal capability building is most effective when managed with the same rigor and experimentation used in software development. ## Strategic Motivation for POPM Training * Addressed the inherent ambiguity of the PO/PM role, where non-visible tasks often make it difficult for practitioners to define their own growth or impact. * Sought to resolve the disconnect between strategic problem definition (PO) and tactical execution (PM) within Kakao’s teams. * Prioritized the creation of a "common language" to allow cross-functional team members to define problems, analyze metrics, and design experiments under a unified structure. ## Iterative Design and Versioning * The program transitioned through multiple "versions," starting with an 8-session pilot that covered the entire lifecycle from bottleneck exploration to execution review. * Based on participant feedback regarding high fatigue and low efficiency in long presentations, the curriculum was condensed into 5 core modules: Strategy, Metrics, Experiment, Design, and Execution. * The instructional design shifted from "delivering information" to "designing a rhythm," utilizing a "one slide, one question, one example" rule to maintain engagement. ## Data-Driven Program Refinement * Applied a "Product Metaphor" to education by calculating "Opportunity Scores" using a matrix of Importance vs. Satisfaction for each session. * Identified "Data/Metrics" as the highest priority for redesign because it scored high in importance but low in satisfaction, indicating a structural gap in the teaching method. * Refined the "features" of the training by redesigning worksheets to focus on execution routines and converting mandatory practice tasks into selective, flexible modules. ## Structural Insights for Organizational Growth * Focused on accumulating "structure" rather than just training individuals, ensuring that even as participants change, the framework for defining problems remains consistent within the organization. * Designed practice sessions to function as "thinking structures" rather than "answer-seeking" exercises, encouraging teams to bring their training insights directly into actual team meetings. * Prioritized scalability and simplicity in the curriculum to ensure the structure can be adopted across different departments with varying product needs. To build effective internal capabilities, organizations should treat training as a product that requires constant maintenance and versioning. Instead of focusing on one-off lectures, leaders should design structural "rhythms" and feedback loops that allow the curriculum to evolve based on the actual pain points of the practitioners.