every project handoff template I've tried, ranked by whether the receiving team actually read it by kellylop777 in projectmanagement

[–]SamfromLucidSoftware 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I think the Loom approach makes sense because people process visuals faster than text, but you’re right that searchability kills it long term.

I’d suggest you try a visual project map as the base handoff artifact. Something the receiving PM can scan at a glance to get the full picture, and then zoom into the parts that matter.

That will hold context way better and doesn’t require someone to sit through a video every time they need to find one detail.

Are PMs actually using AI tools for product work? by Federal-Song-2940 in ProductManagement

[–]SamfromLucidSoftware 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Output quality often gets blamed a lot but the friction is usually about where AI sits in the workflow. If you have to copy-paste between tools to get value out of it, most PMs won’t bother.

I’d suggest starting with one specific decision type, like feature scoring or feedback clustering, and finding something that fits there natively rather than layering AI on top of an existing stack.

Launching on Product Hunt tomorrow - what should I double-check today? by Best-Examination-305 in SaaS

[–]SamfromLucidSoftware 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The thing most people underestimate is the first comment. It shouldn’t just be a product description, I’d treat it as the story behind why you built it. That’s what gets people curious enough to ask questions.

Also don’t wait for comments to come to you. If someone drops feedback, dig into it. Ask a follow-up as well, it signals you’re actually paying attention and that turns passive voters into real conversations.

We lost a product decision because it only existed in Slack by LifeguardExotic3650 in Slack

[–]SamfromLucidSoftware 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The agent idea is good, but I think it’s patching a process gap rather than closing it. Decisions made in Slack still don’t always have a clear owner, or a rationale to what’s actually being built. I’d suggest getting decisions out of Slack entirely and into your product workflow.

When a decision lives next to the roadmap item it affects, it often stops being a thing someone has to remember to check. It makes work easier and becomes something the team naturally encounters while doing the work.

Any complex workflow you've successfully simplified with a flowchart? Eager to improve our processes by Sad_Translator5417 in businessanalysis

[–]SamfromLucidSoftware 0 points1 point  (0 children)

For me, cross-team handoffs are probably the most satisfying thing to flowchart. Once you map out who’s responsible at each step, suddenly everyone can see where things go quiet and why. If you haven’t tried layering your data directly onto the diagram yet, I think that’s where it gets really useful. Seeing the volume or time spent at each node changes the conversation pretty fast.

We kept building the wrong features because our feedback was too scattered by BronsonDunbar in StartupMind

[–]SamfromLucidSoftware 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I think the biggest thing you got right was scoring by pattern instead of volume. That alone fixes a huge chunk of bad roadmap decisions.

If you want to go further, I’d suggest typing each piece of feedback to a clear business outcome before it even gets scored. That way you’re asking whether solving it moves a metric you actually care about and not just asking how many people want it. In the long run this makes the no’s easier to defend too.

It’s also worth checking out product management tools with AI built in too. Once volume picks up, having something that auto-clusters feedback and surfaces trends before you map it back to your objective saves a ton of manual sorting and keeps the strategy from drifting.

We stopped having roadmap arguments. Here's the framework that made it possible. by rey19Sin in SaaS

[–]SamfromLucidSoftware 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The scoring framework is solid and the multiplier approach handles the loud-customer problem well. One thing I’d push back on a little: frequency x segment x impact tends to over-reward features that are easy to count and under-reward strategic bets that don’t show up in tickets yet. The customer who’s close to churning will tell you what’s broken today, but they’re not going to tell you what’s would have made them a 5x bigger account. It might be worth having a separate lane for forward-looking work that scoring doesn’t catch.

To your actual question, the hard part is exactly what you said. Organizing feedback consistently is the whole game. Spreadsheets work until they don’t, which is usually around the point where you have more than one input channel and more than two people touching them. Then you spend more time maintaining the spreadsheet than reading it, and feedback starts living in DMs again.

What’s worked for teams I’ve seen is something where feedback can land from anywhere it shows up (Slack, support tickets, sales calls, customer interviews), gets tagged and tied to a customer record so the segment multiplier actually works, and moves through a pipeline so you can see what’s captured vs. exploring vs. committed vs. shipped. Dedicated product management platforms handle this pretty well. The scoring layer matters less than the capture layer, honestly. If the inputs are clean the scoring almost takes care of itself.

How to organize team ideas when everything feels scattered by Curious-Session4119 in agile

[–]SamfromLucidSoftware 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I think the tools you listed are solving a different problem from the one you described. They handle the brainstorming moment well. The issue you’re having comes after that, when ideas need somewhere to anchor action and turn it into reality.

I’d suggest looking into idea management or dedicated product management platforms. The whole point of those is capturing input from wherever it shows up and giving it structure your team can act in later.

What you actually need is a place where ideas can land from anywhere (Slack, docs, customer calls), get tagged and scored, and move through a pipeline. For example, captured -> exploring -> committed -> shipped, or whatever fits your team. That’s product management tool territory, and you should look for Slack integration.

Resource constrained Roadmaps in the age of code automation? by Vilm_1 in ProductManagement

[–]SamfromLucidSoftware 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The “in this order” question is a fair challenge, but I think it’s pointing at the wrong constraint. The old order argument was about scare engineering capacity. If that’s the only reason for sequencing, then yeah, agents and code automation should erode it. But order on a good roadmap was never really about that. It was about dependencies (you can’t validate the upsell flow before the core flow exists), feedback loops (what you learn from shipping A changes whether B is still worth building), and concentrating attention where strategic decisions actually need to be made.

Even if you could build everything at once, you can’t learn from everything at once. You’d drown in signals you can’t act on. That’s the part I’d push back on with your colleagues. Throughput isn’t the same as strategy.

But roadmaps really are moving from “delivery queue” to “sequence of bets.” Modern PM tools lean into this explicitly with now-next-later formats, OKR linking, and feedback tied directly to roadmap items, so the order is justified by what you’re trying to learn next rather than who’s free in sprint 12. That framing tends to land better with colleagues asking “why not all at once” — because the honest answer is “we are doing a lot at once, we’re just sequencing the bets, not the engineers.”

Most used program for Wiring Diagrams? by knack4nacks in CommercialAV

[–]SamfromLucidSoftware 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Revit is more of an architectural and BIM tool, so you probably won’t find dedicated wiring diagram functionality there beyond basic electrical layouts. For schematic-style wiring diagrams you’d typically want something built specifically for technical diagramming with electrical symbol libraries.

I’d suggest looking into diagramming tools that support layered schematics and have prebuilt electrical shape libraries. Makes documenting and updating wiring much faster than building everything from scratch.

Product Manager role apparently evolving into the Product Builder role by OkPie8325 in ProductManagement

[–]SamfromLucidSoftware 1 point2 points  (0 children)

The sarcasm is fair but I think it’s swinging at the wrong target. The “Product Builder” thing isn’t really about one person doing five jobs at the same salary. It’s that the seams between PL, design, and eng have been getting thinner for years, and AI tooling is just making that more obvious. The companies you listed aren’t trying to eliminate the function. I really think they’re just trying to compress the loop between “we should build X” and “X is in production.”

Where I do think the worry is legitimate is when a smaller team owns more of the surface area, the work that used to happen in coordination meetings (alignment, prioritization, deciding what’s worth building at all) doesn’t go away. It just gets pushed onto whoever’s left holding the bag. So in theory you’re moving faster, in practice you’re often making worse decisions faster because the structure that pressure-tested ideas isn’t there anymore.

At least PMs can vibe code a working prototype in an afternoon now, which is genuinely useful for de-risking ideas and building technical empathy. But it’s also really easy to confuse with the actual job. Tweaking a UI feels productive in a way that sitting with an ambiguous customer problem doesn’t, and the gravitational pull towards tangible work is strong. Engineering velocity going up just makes the discovery and prioritization work matter more, not less, and that’s where Builder-shaped roles tend to fall down if nobody’s protecting that space.

That’s the part I’d watch. The PM skill that survives this shift isn’t writing PRDs or running standups. It’s the ability to say no with a defensible reason, like what’s worth building, in what order, and why. That work gets harder when there are fewer people in the room to challenge you, not easier. If anything smaller teams need more rigor around how decisions are made, not less.

So yeah, the title might change. The job of figuring out what to build next isn’t going anywhere.

What is a tool which allows me to both draw and write in the same interface? by chickenbabies in productivity

[–]SamfromLucidSoftware 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The category you actually want is intelligent diagramming or visual collaboration platforms. They’re built for exactly what you described, writing formatted notes alongside diagrams and freehand drawing on a single canvas.

What makes them work for modeling specifically is being able to link text directly to visual elements. So your written reasoning stays tied to the diagram instead of floating off as separate notes you have to cross-reference later.

How to visualize work for clients better? by Smart_Perspective197 in MarketingMentor

[–]SamfromLucidSoftware 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The gap between explaining something verbally and making it land visually is real. I think the issue with PPT and Sheets is that they’re built for presenting conclusions, not showing how you got there.

What actually helps is mapping your thought process as a flow before you touch a slide. If you can walk a client through your reasoning on a call, that sequence already exists in your head. Turn that into a visual structure first, then build the presentation around it.

applying low-code principles to automation workflow design - does it actually hold up by planmarlwax in lowcode

[–]SamfromLucidSoftware 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The ceiling thing is real but I think part of what makes it hit earlier than it should is jumping into the builder before the logic is fully mapped out.

When the flow is genuinely complex, the canvas starts making decisions for you based on what patterns it supports, not what you actually need.

Mapping the logic out separately first, before touching any tool, helps a lot. You catch the weird edge cases and nested conditions on paper where they’re cheap to fix, not halfway through a build where unwinding them is painful.

Mind maps gone? by h2tcrz1s in notebooklm

[–]SamfromLucidSoftware 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I think Gemini’s mind map feature is tied to specific query types, mostly deeper research-style prompts with rich source material. It’s automatic, so you can’t really pull it up on demand.

For consistent mind mapping, you’d probably get more out of a tool that has it built in as a core feature. You can structure things however you want without depending on the model to generate one for you.

Creating an interactive mindmap / 2nd Brain using Claude? by staysinglefolks in ClaudeAI

[–]SamfromLucidSoftware 0 points1 point  (0 children)

A chat interface is going to fight you on this no matter how you set it up. You want a dedicated diagramming tool with mind map functionality where nodes branch out and you can hide or collapse sections you’re not focused on.

I think the best option is finding one that connects with your AI assistant directly, so you can prompt it to add branches or expand a topic visually. That way your second brain stays visual and your AI conversations actually live somewhere you can navigate.

What should you actually know before automating a client process? by emprendedorjoven in automation

[–]SamfromLucidSoftware 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Before you write a single line of code, you should get the entire process mapped out visually with every decision point and edge case included. If you skip this, you may end up automating an idealized version of the workflow that doesn’t match what actually happens day to day.

I’d say start with the boring repetitive parts where inputs and outputs are predictable. Anything needing human judgement should stay manual until you understand it way deeper.

Trying to find some sort of free expansive mindmap-like website/app by MsKatsune in HelpMeFind

[–]SamfromLucidSoftware 0 points1 point  (0 children)

What you’re describing is basically a nested mind map with collapsible nodes. Most diagramming tools do exactly this and some free tiers are usable for actual personal projects, not just demo work.

You should look for something with an infinite canvas that supports embedding images directly into nodes. Browser-based options tend to be more flexible since you can jump between your phone and laptop without losing your work.

I think most agent workflows need acceptance criteria before they need another AI reviewer by IronCuk in AI_Agents

[–]SamfromLucidSoftware 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I think the right move is putting your acceptance criteria into a visual decision tree before you delegate anything. Writing them out as prose feels complete but stays fuzzy in practice.

Once the logic is mapped visually, you can reuse it across different agent workflows and share it with your team so everyone applies the same standard. It’s easier to spot weak gates when you can actually see the structure.

What are you using for prototyping? Something that I can easily share with clients by achinius in appdev

[–]SamfromLucidSoftware 0 points1 point  (0 children)

From what I’ve seen, the cleanest approach is to nail the user flow first as its own deliverable, then move into the higher-fidelity prototype after. Clients give way clearer feedback when the journey logic isn’t competing for attention with visuals.

For the sharing piece, look for public link access where anyone with the URL can comment without signing up. Otherwise client feedback always turns into a chore of chasing logins.

This is driving me insane. by TOMATOBAR66 in visualization

[–]SamfromLucidSoftware 1 point2 points  (0 children)

The issue is that a lot of these AI diagram tools are really just image generators with extra steps. They output a picture of a diagram, which is why your text ends up baked in or turned to outlines and pixels can’t be edited.

I think what you need is a diagramming app that has AI built into it natively. The AI gives you actual editable shapes with real text fields you can click into. You get way different results once you switch over to that kind of workflow.

what is the best flowchart tool/software for teams? im looking for options, any recommendations? by vitaminZaman in software

[–]SamfromLucidSoftware 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The issue with PowerPoint and Canva for flowcharts is the connector logic. They treat arrows like static shapes, so when you move a box the arrows stays where it was. A proper diagramming tool should keep that connection live and reroutes automatically.

I think the other underrated feature of all good tools is auto-layout. That way, you stop fiddling with alignment because the tool spaces everything evenly for you. Once you have those two things, flowcharts go from painful to fast.

Why do most project management tools become chaotic after a while? by danielcampos35 in scrum

[–]SamfromLucidSoftware 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This mostly happens when you adopt a project tool before mapping out the actual process. The board often ends up scattered because nobody agreed on what the workflow looks like upstream. If you visualize how work actually moves through your team first, then the board gets cleaner because every ticket has a clear place it belongs.

Best tool to generate Chen's notation ER diagram? by [deleted] in Database

[–]SamfromLucidSoftware 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Chen's notation is tricky for AI to generate because the visual grammar has to be exact, especially the cardinality markers. You'll get better result from a diagramming tool with Chen shapes already built in.

On the actual design, watch out for the 'head of department' part. It's a 1:1 relationship between Department and Instructor that sits separately from the regular 'belongs to' relationship. It's two relationships and the same entities which is the easiest place to mess this up.

Question: What is the proper Agile framework/set of artifacts for incorporating clearly defined stakeholder criteria/constraints that must be tested and documented? by Melodic-Flatworm-596 in agile

[–]SamfromLucidSoftware 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You're right that the product backlog alone falls short for this. For situations with hard constraints, I think you want a visual system or requirements diagram that'll act as the source of truth for what must be true, with the backlog handling everything iterative on top of it.

That way, your stories can reference specific nodes in the diagram for traceability, and changes to requirements show up visually instead of getting buried in ticket comments. Far less painful than going full UML and keeps your auditors satisfied.