Tag Archives: product manager

Product Manager vs Product Owner: Roles, Differences and Salaries

If you have spent time in agile or project management, you have probably come across both the product manager and product owner titles. They sound similar, they are often described in similar ways, and both are sometimes called the CEO of the product. But they are not the same role, the responsibilities differ and as it turns out, so do the salaries quite significantly.

The Salaries

Product managers earn between $272,000 and $326,000 a year, and more in high-growth environments where stock and bonus considerations come into play. Product owners earn an average of $107,000 a year in the US. Both are strong salaries, but the gap is significant and comes down to scope.

What a Product Manager Does

Sharif Mansour spent 16 years as a product manager at Atlassian, the company behind Jira. He describes the role as driving the development of a product, defining its strategy and building out its roadmap and features.

In practice that means identifying and understanding user needs, monitoring the market, developing competitive analyses and aligning those insights into a clear product vision. From there the product manager prioritizes features and capabilities to deliver on that strategy, aligning stakeholders and teams to turn it into reality.

What a Product Owner Does

The product owner role comes primarily from agile and scrum. The Scrum Guide describes the product owner as accountable for maximizing the value of the product resulting from the work of the scrum team.

In practice the responsibilities look similar to a product manager: developing and communicating the product goal, creating and prioritizing product backlog items and ensuring the team is always working on the highest-value features. The key difference is scope. A product owner typically works with one team on one product. A product manager often oversees multiple projects or multiple teams, operating more like a program manager across the product landscape. That broader scope is largely what drives the salary difference.

Both roles require a strong understanding of the user, the technology and the business. If you are closer to a single agile team, product owner is likely the more relevant path. If you are thinking about product strategy across a broader organization, product manager is the direction to explore.

– David McLachlan

You can see what people are saying about David McLachlan here: REVIEWS

Navigate to Free Project Management and Leadership Articles through the links on the right (or at the bottom if on Mobile) 

PMI PMP 35 PDUs CourseThe Ultimate PMP Project Management Prep Course (35 PDUs)
Agile Certified Practitioner (PMI-ACP 28 PDUs)The Complete PMI-ACP Course: (28 PDUs) 
PgMP Program Management CourseLearn Program Management – the PgMP Prep Course
Full PMP Exams to Pass on the First TryFour Full PMP Practice Exams (180 Qs each) to pass your PMP on the First Try!
Scrum Master Course PSMScrum Master Course (PSM)
Product Owner Course PSPOProduct Owner Course (PSPO)
Business Analyst CourseBusiness Analyst Course

Also available are my Project Management Templates – these don’t have a coupon code but they’re a great way to save 100s of hours when you’re first starting out:

50 Project Management Templates Gantt Chart Risk Matrix and more Excel50+ Project Management Templates in Excel and PowerPoint (Gantt Chart, Risk Matrix and more!)
Project Management Plan TemplatesPre-made Project Management Plan Templates: Save 100 HOURS!