What does a typical day look like for you?
In the morning I’ll read emails and continue to work on assigned tasks like market research, deposit analyses, regulatory change analysis, and project requirements.
At noon I love to have lunch in the office or outside, go downstairs for a walk (at the Lujiazui Park if you are luckily located in Shanghai) and bring a cup of coffee back to work. Sometimes there will be company events hosted at noon (seminars, roundtable discussions, or sharing sessions) which allow you to meet new colleagues from all businesses.
As a product manager, you will get calls from many departments seeking your professional advice and judgment. For instance, client service may seek your help to explain a report for an inquisitive client, sales from a regional team wants to understand more about account structures and local regulations in China, compliance gets a survey from regulator and directs for your input, or the technology team is building system capability for the bank that requires your testing efforts to enhance client experience.
What skills are important for a product manager?
Hard skills that are important include product knowledge, local regulation, market intelligence, and Excel and PowerPoint skills to efficiently analyze and present data.
Important soft skills are communication and prioritization skills, and having teamwork spirit.