| Hello HN, In short: Is there any way to become a part-time PM (or similar)? You helped me tremendously getting my first properly paid and interesting full-time PM job at a bigger company (and luckily with little overtime, but part-time is probably no option).¹ I plan to do this job for at least a year (for vita, experience and money), but ultimately I want to work part-time. I could easily live on my current salary (just with less savings) and want to have more free time for side-projects and a generally better work/life balance. All I have right now is vague plans on how to find something part-time: I will stay on the lookout on job-offers, hoping for startups that can't afford full-time positions. Alternatively I thought of freelancing, but here the generalist qualities of a PM (project or product) might make it a bit harder to sell myself and I'm not the very best at networking either. And freelancing is never part-time, right? Should I apply for full-time positions and try to convince them of doing part-time? With product management, or more precisely writing concepts and non-technical requirements I could imagine contract work. But I don't really know if this is a thing. About me: 30yo; in Germany; OK with leaving the country for a while; with a slightly off masters degree; If you got any ideas or took a similar path in the past, let me know! Thanks you :) ¹ https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=13409239 (thank you so much for all the answers here) |
I actually think having a fully part time PM could be a very good thing for lots of very small startups (< 10 employees). I think many companies at that size don't fully realise the benefits of having a member of the team with those sorts of responsibilities, and in fact, might not have enough other people to saturate a PM's time.
The main downside I can foresee is that, as a developer, I often need to contact my PMs in order to clarify requirements or discuss issues that come up during implementation. This communication would be limited by a PM working part time, but a tendency to "over-communicate" as many do in fully remote companies could help to overcome this.