u/Loud_Commission_1694

Will connected context and perfect AI memory help PMs do their work better?

I have been working on something for quite sometime. I am myself into product management having worked across multiple companies and industries.
I was wondering if you have an AI workspace which remembers everything you discussed, all your notes and your tools data, will it help you?
For example, remembering what each stakeholder wants, follow ups etc.

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u/Loud_Commission_1694 — 3 days ago

AI is killing the craft of PM. I got tired of it and built something

Hey fam,
I'm Dishant. 11+ years in product, head of product at a few companies.
And honestly? I'm a little frustrated.
AI was supposed to help us build better products. Instead it's turned most of us into feature-churning machines. Company wants more output, faster cycles, more dashboards. And somewhere in all of that - the actual thinking part of the job just... disappears.
I genuinely believe product is a craft. You have to put a piece of yourself into it. That's what separates good products from forgettable ones.
But right now, I'm drowning. Meetings, stakeholder updates, board prep, follow-ups. Every single day. By the time I get a moment to actually think about the product — I'm out of energy.
So I started building ThinkBridge.
Not because I had a grand vision. Because I was tired of my best hours going to the most repetitive parts of the job.
It's an agentic AI with perfect memory that handles the daily grind — meeting prep, stakeholder recaps, the stuff that's important but doesn't need you specifically. The goal is simple: get back 1-2 hours a day to actually do the work you became a PM for.
Got 12 PMs using it actively right now. Early days, but the feedback has been real. Opening up 25 more invites before this gets more structured.
Here's what you get:
🎙️ Unlimited meeting recording & MoM
🤖 Unlimited access to GPT-5.5 & Claude models (please don't bankrupt me 🙏*)*
🧠 An infinite second brain, natively AI
⚙️ Agents customised for PM work & automation
Drop a comment saying "Interested" or DM me — I'll reach out personally.
Or request access directly 👉 https://thinkbridge.pro
What's the most soul-draining part of your day right now?

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u/Loud_Commission_1694 — 4 days ago

I talked to 50 product managers about their AI setups… and it’s complete chaos (but the good kind)

A couple weeks back I got this wild idea: I’d chat with a bunch of PMs and finally figure out the “right” way everyone’s using AI in their workflow. I figured we’re all structured, process-driven people who ship complex stuff daily — surely by now we’d have landed on a handful of killer setups I could steal from.
Nope. Total miss on my part.
I ended up hopping on calls with 50 PMs from media companies, fintechs, social apps, consumer tech — you name it. And honestly? Zero overlap. Everyone’s doing their own completely different thing:
• One guy built this whole custom Claude “memory network” with dozens of .md files tracking strategy, stakeholder notes, open decisions… the works.
• Another just opens a fresh Claude tab every single time, no history, no system prompt, nothing.
• One PM basically ignores AI and is 100% happy living in Notion with plain old notes.
• And a ton more are somewhere in the messy middle.
Nobody’s “doing it wrong.” PM work is still so much personal judgment and gut feel that it hasn’t standardized yet. That actually surprised me.
The one line that stuck with me came from a PM who said, “Chat is too limiting. That’s not how humans think.”
It hit hard because he’s right. My best thinking happens in the ugly, private mess — half-sentences in a random note, voice memos while driving, 11pm brain dumps, random meeting scraps. Only after that do I want AI to help shape it.
But every AI tool I’ve used forces the opposite: clean prompt first, thinking second.
I felt that pain myself the other day — had a half-baked idea pop into my head between meetings and nowhere quick to dump it before the AI could actually help later. Super frustrating.
Anyway, I’m genuinely curious about you guys — where does your best thinking actually happen? Not the clean PRD version… the ugly, “no one else would understand this” version.​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​

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u/Loud_Commission_1694 — 11 days ago