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Academy Xi Blog

Group of coworkers in a meeting together with woman presenting product thinking ideas on a whiteboard

The organisations growing fastest are not simply building better products. They are building better ways of thinking.

And the mindset leading this shift is product thinking.

Across Australia, companies in finance, retail, government, education and healthcare are embedding product thinking into their strategy because it delivers one thing traditional project-driven cultures cannot: continuous, customer-centred value creation at scale.

In this blog, we explore why product thinking has moved from a specialist discipline to an organisational capability, why firms are adopting it beyond Product teams, and how leaders can build product maturity across their workforce.

 

What is Product Thinking?

Product thinking is a way of working that keeps the focus firmly on delivering real value to customers, not just completing tasks or shipping features. It’s about asking the right questions early, testing ideas before committing, and continuously learning what actually works.

In practice, it means having the ability to:

  • Understand customer problems deeply – going beyond surface-level needs to uncover what really matters.
  • Evaluate opportunities through evidence, not assumptions – using data and insight to guide decisions.
  • Design solutions iteratively – starting small, testing often, and improving over time.
  • Prioritise based on business value –  focusing effort where it will have the greatest impact.
  • Deliver outcomes, not outputs – measuring success by results, not just activity.

Many organisations have found that traditional project mindsets – with fixed scope, fixed timelines, and a “build and ship” approach – can lead to inefficiencies and disconnected customer experiences. Product thinking flips that model. Instead of starting with a solution, it starts with the value you’re trying to create, and works forward from there.

And importantly, this isn’t just for Product Managers anymore. Today, product thinking is being used across Marketing teams, Operations and Service teams, and Customer Experience functions.

It’s quickly becoming a shared capability across the business; a more consistent, effective way for teams to solve problems and deliver value together.

 

Why Organisations Are Adopting Product Thinking Faster Than Ever

Market disruption is constant and accelerating

Market conditions are shifting faster than most organisations can plan for, with evolving customer expectations, emerging technologies, and competitive pressure forcing teams to continuously reassess priorities. Firms need a workforce fluent in rapid discovery, experimentation and prioritisation (the core behaviours of product thinking) to keep up. 

Product thinking also enables this by helping organisations test ideas earlier, reduce risk, and make better decisions based on real customer insight rather than assumptions.

Customers expect seamless, end-to-end experiences

Research by PwC found that 73% of customers see experience as a key factor in purchasing decisions, and that 76% of customers would switch brands after a poor experience. Furthermore, customers who have faced positive experiences with a brand are likely to spend 140% more than those who have had a negative experience. Companies without product-led decision-making fall behind because they optimise individual touchpoints instead of whole journeys.

Organisations can no longer rely on “star” product managers

One or two talented PMs cannot scale product maturity across an enterprise. Organisations now need:

  • Product-aware stakeholders
  • Customer-centred decision makers
  • Cross-functional teams that prioritise based on evidence
  • Technical and non-technical talent who can reason through product trade-offs

This is why companies are building product thinking into every team, not just hiring for it.

Product management team discussing product decisions

 

The Business Impact: Why Product Thinking Drives ROI

Better alignment across functions

Product thinking helps teams move away from siloed decision-making by creating a shared language focused on customer outcomes and value. Instead of strategy, engineering, and operations working in isolation, teams align around the same priorities and measures of success, which reduces friction and speeds up execution.

Higher-quality decisions

When organisations embed structured discovery and data-led thinking, decisions become significantly more reliable. Research from McKinsey shows that data-driven organisations are 23 times more likely to acquire customers and 19 times more likely to be profitable compared to their peers. This reflects the impact of validating assumptions with evidence rather than relying on intuition alone.

Faster time-to-value

Product thinking shifts the focus from “how fast can we build this?” to “how quickly can we learn what actually works?”. Instead of investing heavily upfront and hoping for the best, teams test ideas early, gather feedback, and refine as they go. It creates a more iterative way of working where learning happens continuously, and decisions are based on evidence rather than assumptions. The result is less time spent building the wrong things, and more time delivering what customers actually need.

Increased revenue and customer retention

When organisations adopt stronger product and technology operating models, they tend to get much closer to their customers. Work becomes more continuous and responsive, rather than locked into large, infrequent delivery cycles. Teams stay aligned around real customer needs and can adjust more quickly as those needs evolve. Over time, this leads to better experiences, stronger trust, and more consistent growth because what’s being delivered stays relevant and valuable.

 

What Skills Make Up “Product Thinking”?

To build product maturity, organisations need capabilities across three dimensions:

1. Customer & market insight

  • Problem framing – Clearly define the right problem to solve before jumping to solutions.
  • Interviewing & research fundamentals – Gather meaningful customer insights through structured conversations and research methods.
  • Opportunity assessment – Identify and validate where the greatest value or impact lies.
  • Competitive & market analysis – Understand market dynamics, trends, and competitor positioning to inform decisions.

2. Strategy & prioritisation

  • Defining outcomes – Shift focus from outputs to measurable business and customer outcomes.
  • Data-informed decision making – Use data to guide choices while balancing context and judgement.
  • Lean business cases – Build lightweight, evidence-based cases to validate ideas quickly.
  • Product roadmapping – Align teams around a clear, evolving direction tied to strategic goals.
  • Value-based prioritisation – Focus effort on initiatives that deliver the highest impact.

3. Experimentation & delivery

  • Rapid prototyping – Quickly create low-cost representations of ideas to test and learn.
  • Hypothesis-driven design – Treat solutions as testable assumptions rather than fixed plans.
  • Iteration frameworks – Continuously refine products through cycles of testing and feedback.
  • Cross-functional collaboration – Bring together diverse teams to solve problems holistically.
  • Measuring impact – Track outcomes to understand what’s working and where to adjust.

These are now essential for teams beyond traditional Product roles including marketing, CX, operations, and service delivery.

 

Why Organisations Struggle Without Product Thinking

When product thinking isn’t in place, organisations often feel the effects in everyday ways – slower progress, duplicated effort, and teams working hard but not always in sync.

  • Siloed departments working to competing priorities – Teams can end up pulling in different directions, each focused on their own targets rather than a shared customer outcome.
  • Overreliance on intuition rather than insight – Decisions get made quickly, but not always with the backing of real customer evidence or data.
  • “Build-first” rather than “validate-first” cultures – There’s often a rush to build solutions before fully understanding the problem, which can lead to rework later.
  • Constant reprioritisation without clear value frameworks – Work shifts frequently, but without a consistent way to assess what matters most, it can feel reactive rather than intentional.
  • Lack of shared definitions of success – Different teams can measure success in different ways, making it hard to stay aligned or know if progress is really being made.

Without product thinking, this often shows up as slower delivery, repeated work across teams, and customer experiences that feel inconsistent depending on the channel or touchpoint.

 

 

How Organisations Can Build Product Capability in 2026

Hiring alone won’t close the capability gap. In most organisations, the real shift happens when product thinking becomes part of how everyone works, not just a specialist function. The fastest-growing organisations are taking a more layered, practical approach to building capability over time.

 

Step 1: Establish foundational product literacy across teams

This starts with helping everyone speak the same language. When marketers, analysts, designers, and operations teams all understand the basics of product thinking, like customer value, problem-solving, and prioritisation, collaboration becomes much easier.

It’s less about turning everyone into product managers and more about giving teams a shared mindset so decisions are grounded in outcomes, not just tasks or opinions.

 

Step 2: Train cross-functional teams in hands-on product practices

Once the foundations are in place, capability grows fastest when people learn by doing. Teams need opportunities to apply product practices in real work, not just theory.

This includes learning how to:

  • Explore customer needs through discovery, not assumptions

  • Test and validate opportunities before committing to solutions

  • Clearly define what value looks like for the customer and the business

  • Run small, fast experiments to reduce risk and learn quickly

  • Measure outcomes so decisions are evidence-based, not guesswork

This is where product thinking starts to feel real because it’s embedded into day-to-day delivery.

 

Step 3: Enable leaders with product strategy and operating model skills

At a leadership level, the focus shifts to creating the conditions for product teams to succeed. Leaders play a critical role in setting direction and removing friction so teams can focus on outcomes rather than constant reprioritisation.

This includes building capability in:

  • Portfolio thinking – balancing investments across initiatives based on value and impact

  • Outcome alignment – ensuring teams are working toward shared, measurable goals

  • Resource prioritisation – making confident decisions about where time, talent, and funding go

  • Risk and governance frameworks – enabling speed and experimentation without losing control or accountability

When leaders are aligned on these principles, product capability scales much more naturally across the organisation.

 

Future Outlook: Product Thinking as a Core Workforce Capability

Product thinking is likely to feel as essential as digital or data literacy in the near future. As AI continues to raise the bar on customer expectations, speed, and competition, organisations will need to be able to adapt quickly and confidently, and product-centred capabilities will be a big part of that.

Organisations that start investing in product thinking now are setting themselves up to move with more clarity and less friction. Over time, they tend to:

  • Innovate more quickly because ideas are tested and refined earlier

  • Reduce delivery risk by validating assumptions before committing fully

  • Create more consistent, meaningful customer experiences across channels

  • Compete on outcomes and value, not just features or output

  • Attract and retain strong product talent who want to work in modern, outcome-focused environments

The reality is the capability gap is already opening up. Organisations that delay building these skills may find it harder to keep pace with those that are already working this way.

 

How We Can Help Your Organisation Build Product Capability

Academy Xi partners with organisations across Australia to build product maturity at scale through our: 

Our programs blend product thinking, discovery, delivery and strategic alignment tailored to your organisation’s context, systems and maturity level.

If your organisation is ready to build product-led capability, our team can help you design a roadmap for lasting impact.

Reach out to our team today and see how we can help.