Roadmaps tell the story from idea conception to product launch — and beyond. They show how the product will grow, align stakeholders, and make the case for resources.
Roadmapping is not just about dates and deadlines. It is a strategic artifact that tells the story of how your product will evolve to create value. The trap is to treat roadmaps like project plans — rigid Gantt charts that dictate exact timelines — instead of flexible narratives that guide decision-making.
Your actual job is to create a roadmap that shows why you are building what you are building, when you plan to deliver outcomes, and how you will marshal resources. This is what keeps your team aligned and your leadership confident.
Roadmaps are the product story in motion
Roadmaps describe three core things:
- How your product will grow over time. This means articulating the sequence of initiatives, features, and outcomes you expect to deliver.
- How you align stakeholders around priorities. Marketing, sales, engineering, leadership — everyone needs to see the path clearly.
- How you make the case for resources. A roadmap is a fundraising tool as much as a planning tool.
The roadmap is a visual narrative — a story that begins with an idea and ends with a product launch, and sometimes beyond to growth and maturity phases. It is the tangible output of your research, strategy, and prioritization work.
The research behind your roadmap
Roadmapping starts long before you open a tool. You must ground your roadmap in deep research:
- Customer research: Understand who your users are and what problems they face.
- Problem research: Validate the problem’s scale, urgency, and willingness to pay.
- Market and industry analysis: Identify trends, competitors, and white space.
- Competitive analysis: Know the next-best alternatives your customers use today.
- Resource and budget assessment: Be realistic about what you can deliver.
This research informs what initiatives make it onto the roadmap and how you prioritize them.
Prioritization: The gatekeeper of your roadmap
Your roadmap will always be longer than what you can build. Prioritization is the discipline that decides what stays and what gets cut.
You organize your work into themes, epics, user stories, and features — but the roadmap should highlight only the highest-level initiatives or themes. The details belong in your backlog or PRD.
Prioritize to achieve a minimum viable product (MVP) — the smallest set of features that solves the core problem and delivers value. This focus prevents your roadmap from becoming a laundry list of everything you want to build.
Styles of roadmapping: Timeline-based vs theme-based
Timeline-based roadmaps
Traditional roadmaps often look like Gantt charts. They show initiatives relative to each other on a calendar.
- They give stakeholders an idea of the development process and expected completion times.
- They work well for communicating progress internally to engineering and delivery teams.
- High-level time frames are advisable — avoid committing to exact dates too early.
Roadmaps without dates
When presenting to external audiences like customers or internal teams like marketing and sales, roadmaps often omit dates.
- The focus is on showing the sequence of initiatives, not the exact timing.
- This creates flexibility and prevents overpromising.
- It helps gain interest and align on themes without locking you into deadlines.
Product review meeting with cross-functional stakeholders
You (PM): “Here's the roadmap for the next two quarters. We are focusing first on user onboarding improvements, then payment integrations, followed by analytics enhancements.”
Sales Lead: “Without specific dates, how do we plan campaigns?”
You (PM): “We will share detailed timelines once we finalize development scope, but this roadmap shows the sequence and priority.”
Marketing Head: “This helps us prepare messaging aligned with themes, which is great.”
Balancing flexibility with stakeholder expectations
Tools and formats for roadmapping
Popular tools for roadmapping include Productboard, Aha!, Roadmunk, Jira, and even collaborative whiteboards like Miro and FigJam.
Formats vary:
- Theme-based roadmap: Organizes work around strategic goals (e.g., "Improve Onboarding," "Increase Retention").
- Outcome-based roadmap: Focuses on metrics or user outcomes (e.g., "Reduce churn by 5%," "Increase activation rate").
- Now/Next/Later: A simple priority bucket system without firm dates.
The choice depends on your company culture, audience, and product maturity.
| Format | Description | When to use |
|---|---|---|
| Theme-based | Organizes initiatives by strategic goals | When you want to link work to strategy |
| Outcome-based | Focuses on desired user/business outcomes | When metrics drive prioritization |
| Now/Next/Later | Priority buckets without fixed dates | When flexibility is needed or uncertainty is high |
Indian startups like Razorpay and Meesho often start with theme-based roadmaps to keep the team focused on strategic pillars like "Merchant Growth" or "Logistics Optimization."
Roadmaps and the PRD relationship
The roadmap is a high-level artifact. The Product Requirements Document (PRD) is where you detail the specifics: user stories, acceptance criteria, design mocks, and technical constraints.
The roadmap answers what and when at a high level. The PRD answers how and why in detail.
Your roadmap should inform your PRD priorities, and your PRD progress should update your roadmap status.
Aligning stakeholders with your roadmap
A roadmap is only useful if it aligns everyone who needs to execute or support your product plan.
- Engineering: Needs to understand priorities and dependencies.
- Marketing & Sales: Need to plan campaigns, messaging, and sales strategies.
- Operations & Supply Chain: Must prepare for changes in demand or product delivery.
- Leadership: Requires visibility into strategic direction and resource needs.
Alignment requires clear communication, managing expectations, and sometimes negotiation.
The roadmap is a living document
Roadmaps are not set in stone. They evolve with new information, market shifts, and learning from customers.
- Update your roadmap regularly.
- Communicate changes transparently.
- Use the roadmap as a tool to say no, not just yes.
- Avoid overcommitting by keeping long-term plans flexible.
Field exercise: Draft your first roadmap
- Pick a product or feature you want to build.
- Identify 2-3 strategic pillars or themes that guide your work.
- For each theme, list 1-2 key initiatives or outcomes you want to achieve.
- Organize these into Now, Next, and Later buckets.
- Sketch your roadmap on paper or a whiteboard, focusing on the story it tells.
- Share your roadmap with a friend or colleague and get feedback on clarity and alignment.
Test yourself: The roadmap ambush
You have built a roadmap focusing on onboarding improvements and retention. At a product review meeting, your CEO demands you prioritize a large client’s urgent feature request that was not on your roadmap.
You're two months into your PM role at a B2B SaaS startup. You've spent weeks on user research and built a roadmap focused on fixing onboarding drop-off — your biggest churn driver. Monday morning, product review meeting.
Your CEO says: "I spoke with the Jio team over the weekend. They need SSO by March. Move it to P0. They're 40% of our ARR." Your engineering lead looks to you.
You're a PM at a Series B SaaS startup focused on onboarding improvements. The CEO demands you prioritize an urgent SSO feature for a large client that was not on your roadmap.
The call: How do you respond in the meeting, and how do you communicate your decision afterward?
Your reasoning:
You're a PM at a Series B SaaS startup focused on onboarding improvements. The CEO demands you prioritize an urgent SSO feature for a large client that was not on your roadmap.
Your task: How do you respond in the meeting, and how do you communicate your decision afterward?
your reasoning:
Where to go next
- If you want to deepen your strategic thinking: Product Vision and Strategy
- If you want to master prioritization frameworks: Prioritization Techniques
- If you want to improve your stakeholder communication: Stakeholder Management and Negotiation
- If you want to learn how to write effective PRDs: Product Requirements Documents
PL alumni now work at Razorpay, Meesho, Swiggy, Flipkart, PhonePe, and many other top Indian startups.