1. Writing Clear Updates
Your updates are the primary way your team(stakeholders) know what’s happening. A clear update:
- States progress succinctly.
- Highlights what’s done, what’s next, and any blockers.
- Avoid unnecessary details
- Focuses on what matters to the audience.
Example:
✅ “Completed user flow diagrams for onboarding. Next: wireframes for login screen. Blocker: waiting on designer’s feedback.”
2. Asking Intelligent Questions
Good PMs ask questions that clarify, reveal risks, or unblock progress, rather than showing confusion.
- Be specific: Name the feature, task, or issue.
- Show context: “I noticed X in the login flow-should we also consider Y?”
- Avoid vague questions like “What do we do next?”-do your homework first.
3. Communicating Blockers Early
Blockers kill timelines if unreported. PMs must:
- Identify blockers as soon as they appear.
- Explain impact: “I can’t start testing until the backend API is live, which may delay sprint 2 by 2 days.”
- Propose solutions where possible.
Rule: Early alerts > perfect work later.
4. Managing Stakeholders
Stakeholders expect updates without noise. To manage them effectively:
- Tailor your message: technical details for engineers, outcomes for managers.
- Provide clarity on decisions and risks.
- Keep them engaged without overwhelming them.
Pro Tip: Weekly summaries + immediate alerts for critical issues work better than daily detailed reports.
5. Writing Proper Work Messages
Work communication is professional and efficient:
- Use clear subject lines in emails/messages.
- Avoid ambiguous pronouns-“it,” “this,” “that.”
- Close messages with the next steps or decisions needed.
Bad: “Can you check this?”
Good: “Can you review the login flow wireframe and approve by 3 PM today?”
6. Documentation Etiquette
Documentation is permanent knowledge. Best practices:
- Use consistent formats and headings.
- Keep records updated.
- Assume someone completely new will read it.
- Avoid jargon unless it’s clearly defined.
Good documentation reduces repeated questions and protects the team from chaos.
7. PM Communication Expectations
A PM’s communication should always be:
- Precise – say exactly what you mean
- Clear – avoid ambiguity, make intentions obvious
- Brief – value people’s time; avoid unnecessary details
Rule of Thumb: If a message can’t be misinterpreted, it’s good communication.
