Product managers and the signal-to-noise problem: Making sense of scattered feedback

PMs have plenty of feedback. The problem is turning it into a decision you can defend.

Most companies collect signals across many places: support tickets, sales notes, call summaries, internal threads, surveys, and one-off docs. Each source is useful. None of them is complete.

Roadmap planning becomes a recurring scavenger hunt to find, categorize, and make sense of it all so you can make informed decisions.

Why the noise keeps winning

Feedback is hard to use when it is:

  • High volume.

  • Unstructured.

  • Duplicated across channels.

  • Missing the “why” behind the request.

  • Split across teams that do not share the same view.

This is how a PM ends up with strong opinions and weak evidence, potentially making decisions off gut instinct instead of being data driven.

What this looks like during roadmap planning

A PM starts with a basic question: “What are enterprise customers asking for this quarter?”

The answers exist, but they are scattered. The PM either spends days assembling a dataset or makes a call based on the loudest input.

Both outcomes are expensive because it's either time consumed on repeatable tedious work, or discarding and ignoring valuable information.

Four failure modes

Additionally, trying to parse large amounts of information regularly results in these 4 failure modes:

1. Recency bias

Three pings this week can feel louder than six months of steady signals.

2. Volume without segmentation

A request shows up 12 times, but most mentions are from one customer. Without context, it is hard to weigh impact.

3. The “request” hides the problem

“Better notifications” can mean routing, defaults, noise reduction, or missing critical alerts. Without the underlying reason, teams ship the wrong fix.

4. Internal opinions stand in for evidence

Support, sales, and engineering each see a slice. The PM becomes a referee.

What changes when search spans feedback sources

The job is not “search faster.” The job is “find and verify the signal.” When search spans the systems where feedback lives, a PM can:

  • Ask a question in plain language.

  • Pull results from multiple sources.

  • Spot repeated themes.

  • Open the original artifacts to confirm.

That reduces time spent assembling context and increases confidence in trade-offs.

A practical workflow

  1. Start with the recurring questions.

  2. Use search to gather evidence across sources.

  3. Promote a canonical summary page that links to the raw inputs.

  4. Assign an owner for the summary.

Bottom line

PMs do not need more feedback. PMs need a reliable way to retrieve, group, and verify the feedback they already have.

Discover how Enterprise Search can span all your tools and provide you the insight you need.

關於Nicholas Lui

Software Engineer at Notion

編輯日期:2026年2月20日

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