There are more open product manager roles globally right now than there have been in three years. The last time the number was this high was peak COVID. So why is half of your LinkedIn feed full of laid-off PMs?
Because the job split in two and nobody told the loser.
Nikhyl Singhal — ex-Meta, ex-Google, ex-Credit Karma CPO, and the guy who runs the Skip community of 125 sitting heads of product — calls this a "complete renaissance for the product industry." But it's a renaissance with strings. The strings are: if you built your career as an information mover, you are the dinosaur. If you built it as a builder, you just got handed a vault.
Here is the bet he's making out loud: in the next twelve to twenty-four months, large companies will shed thirty thousand and rehire eight thousand. The eight thousand will be AI-first. The thirty thousand will be the people whose entire job was to take a deck from one boss, reframe it for the next boss, run the standup, write the status report, manage the backlog, and drive “alignment” through theatrics. That entire job description has been quietly automated. Nobody put up a sign.
The split. About half the product industry got into product because they liked moving information through organizations. The other half got into it because they liked making things. The first group is being shed. The second group is having the time of their lives — they have more offers than they've ever had, comp is at all-time highs, and the wall between PM, founder, CEO, and even non-product C-suite roles is dissolving. Singhal has fourteen sitting founders inside his community of 125 today. Twelve months ago there was one. He recently watched a senior member interview for a Chief HR Officer job because the company decided they wanted a product builder running HR.
That last detail is the real signal. Forward-leaning companies have started believing the obsolescence skill — the instinct to look at any manual workflow and write software around it — is more valuable than the function it's being applied to. The function is easier to learn than the skill.
The shadow superpower. Here is the cruel part. The people who are best at the old game are the slowest to adopt the new one. Their entire identity says what I do is working. Their employer agrees. Their bonus agrees. So they don't reinvent. Meanwhile the weaker performer — the one who was already struggling — has nothing to defend, opens Claude Code on a Saturday, ships something silly, catches the bug, and a year later is the most valuable person on the floor.
The block isn't intelligence. It isn't even taste. It's time. The mid-career person in their thirties — the one with the most leverage on paper — is in their power years for everyone else too. Aging parents. Small kids. A spouse. The first body aches. A career that demands constant relearning at exactly the moment when no one has a free hour. Singhal's framing for what your daily prioritization actually is: “I am going to equally disappoint everyone.” That is the honest math. And on top of that math, the industry is now asking you to spend your nights “feeding the LLM.” That is why the most predictable casualty of this era is going to be the diversity progress of the last five years. The Bay Area pace tax falls hardest on whoever already has the least slack.
What the new job actually looks like. Less moving information. More judgment. Judgment meaning: when ten ideas can be tested for the cost it used to take to test one, somebody has to decide which of them deserve to ship — what's good for the brand, the system, the long-run product. That somebody used to be in a meeting. They are now in their IDE.
The PMs Singhal sees thriving have one thing in common: they obsoleted a part of their own job. They built a chief-of-staff app. They wrote an agent that does the matching their community needs. They replaced their status reports with software. They got rid of the meetings they hated by automating the work the meetings were supposed to coordinate. That single moment — the first thing they ship that makes them go wait, this works — is the conversion event. Joy is the antidote to burnout, and most product work has been joyless for a decade. Building is joyful. Once a PM crosses that line, the energy comes back, the time appears, and the rest is mechanical.
Three things that are about to be true.
One: brand on your resume is depreciating fast. Six years at a name-brand company that builds the old way is now a liability in the room. Nobody asks “where did you ship?” They ask “what tools, what judgment, what would you build right now?” If your answer is a 2021 answer, you don't get the job.
Two: this is not a thirty-year treadmill. Singhal is firm on this. The next two years are chaos because every operating system of building software is being rewritten in real time. After that, things settle. There will be a new normal. There will be training programs and predictable tracks again. The activation energy is now. The merry-go-round does not spin forever.
Three: PMs are about to invade every other industry that runs on legacy software — which is most of them. The HVAC company a private-equity firm just bought. The school district. The mid-market manufacturer. They are all going to need someone who can walk in, look at how things are done, and obsolete the manual parts with software. The supply of those people right now is roughly equal to the population of the Skip community plus a few thousand others. Demand is the entire economy.
The one decision. If you love building, stay current — relentlessly, even at the cost of every other comfort, for two years. If you don't love building, be honest with yourself early enough to do something about it. The middle path — wait and see, hope it stabilizes, lean on the brand on your resume — is the path that gets shed in the round of thirty thousand.
Smiling exhaustion is the new floor. Exhausted-but-not-smiling is what comes next if you don't move.
Source: Nikhyl Singhal on Lenny’s Podcast — Why half of product managers are in trouble