"The best product managers don't get hired for their frameworks. They get hired for the stories they tell about decisions they made under uncertainty."
Shipped
Weekly · Every Tuesday
Waitlist
1,847
Offers Tracked
214
The Thesis
The PM interview market has a content problem. There's an enormous amount of advice about how to answer product sense questions, and almost nothing about what the people who actually got the job said when they answered them.
Shipped closes that gap. Each issue profiles one PM who landed an offer at a company known for a rigorous bar — Stripe, Figma, Notion, Linear, Anthropic — and reverse-engineers the specific artifacts, framings, and decision narratives that moved them through the panel.
This is not career coaching. It's forensic journalism applied to the PM hiring process. We find the evidence, we annotate it, and we let you draw your own conclusions about how close your own work is to the standard that gets you hired.
"We're not telling you what to do. We're showing you what was done — and precisely why it worked."
— Editorial Position, Issue Nº 001
We read the actual submissions
Not Reddit threads about what worked. Not LinkedIn posts about lessons learned. We tracked down the portfolios, case study documents, and take-home exercises that were actually in the room when the hire was made.
The hiring manager's lens, not the candidate's
Every profile we run is annotated from the panel's perspective — what they were looking for, where the candidate exceeded it, and the one thing that tipped the decision. It reads like a debrief, not a brag sheet.
Specificity is the whole product
We don't say "strong narrative." We show you the exact sentence structure, the precise metric framing, the specific moment in a portfolio walk-through that made the interviewer write "strong hire" in their notes.
214
PM offers tracked across 38 companies since 2024
Stripe · Figma · Notion · Linear · Anthropic · Google · Meta · Amazon
Inside an Issue
A deconstructed table of contents from Issue Nº 002 — "How a PM from McKinsey landed L6 at Stripe." Hover each section to read the editorial annotation.
The Hire
Who they are, where they landed, what the role was
The Portfolio Anatomy
Three projects, annotated with what each was doing for the narrative
The Case Study, Frame by Frame
The take-home exercise prompt, their response structure, the panel's reaction
Three Answers That Moved the Room
Verbatim reconstructions of the product sense, estimation, and behavioral answers
The Replication Brief
Four things you can apply to your own work this week
Editorial annotation
Hover a section to read the editorial thinking behind each structural choice.
Issue Nº 002
"How a PM from McKinsey landed L6 at Stripe in 4 rounds"
73%
of strong-hire candidates opened their case study with a constraint, not a solution
Based on 89 case study transcripts reviewed in Issues 001–007
Who Reads This
The Midnight Rewriter
Mid-career PM at a Series B, 4 years in. Has rewritten their resume eleven times this quarter. Knows their work is good — can't figure out why the portfolio isn't landing. Needs a reference point, not another template.
Typically targeting L5–L6 at growth-stage or FAANG. Has shipped. Needs to prove it differently.
The L6 Candidate
Senior IC — engineer, designer, or researcher — preparing for the FAANG PM panel. Has the product instinct. Doesn't yet have the vocabulary, the framing, or the artifact structure that reads as "PM-native" to a hiring committee.
The hardest reader to serve. Knows everything about building; needs to learn how hiring panels read builders.
The Career Switcher
Consultant or engineer who thinks in products but can't yet prove it on paper. Has strong analytical bones and weak narrative muscle. Reads Shipped to understand what a PM story actually looks like when it's working.
Needs case studies more than anything. Shipped's archive is their reference library.
"I've read every PM interview guide published in the last three years. Shipped is the first one that made me feel like I was actually reading primary sources."
Priya Mehta
PM · Waitlist reader · Actively interviewing
38
companies whose hiring bar we've mapped from the inside
Updated with each new issue · Growing weekly
From the Archive
Three excerpts from past issues. Drag the slider to lift the redaction and read the full analysis — then decide if this is worth a seat on the waitlist.
The portfolio had no metrics until page 7. Here's why that was the right call.
████████████ opened her portfolio walk-through with a constraint, not an outcome. "I want to show you how I think about ████████," she said, "not what I shipped." The panel noted this framing in ████████ of the five scorecards.
Editorial note
The decision to delay metrics was deliberate. Figma's L6 rubric weights strategic framing above execution evidence at the portfolio stage. Aiko had read the room.
Reveal the excerpt to read the annotation.
The case study answer that used three words where everyone else used thirty.
When asked to estimate the number of ████████ in ████████, ████████ paused for four seconds and said: "I'd start with the ████████." The room went quiet. The hiring manager later said it was the ████████ answer they'd heard to that prompt in two years.
Editorial note
The pause was real. Four seconds is long in an interview. What Okafor was doing was identifying the frame before the calculation. That single move signaled systems thinking more clearly than any framework slide could.
Reveal the excerpt to read the annotation.
She came from engineering. The portfolio showed it. The panel loved it anyway.
The portfolio was structured like a ████████ document, not a PM deck. There were ████████ diagrams, ████████ traces, and exactly zero slides about ████████ strategy. The panel hired ████████ because the ████████ was the strategy.
Editorial note
This is the career-switcher case study. The engineering background wasn't a liability — it was the entire thesis of the hire. Linear was building for developers. Sofia could think like one. The lesson isn't to hide your background. It's to understand what the company is actually hiring for.
Reveal the excerpt to read the annotation.
Free sample issue
Read Issue Nº 001 in full — no strings.
22 pages. The McKinsey PM who landed L6 at Stripe. Your email in exchange for the PDF — and we'll add you to the waitlist at the same time.