The actual job of a PM working with AI is to translate what the model can do into what the user actually needs — not to become a data scientist.
AI and machine learning are reshaping product management. They are not just technologies to add but tools that change how you understand users, predict behavior, and create value. The trap is to treat AI as magic or a checkbox instead of a capability that must be connected to real user problems.
Your actual job as a PM in AI products is to bridge the gap between technical teams and customers. You do not need to become an engineer or data scientist, but you must understand the basics well enough to ask the right questions, challenge assumptions, and make trade-offs.
This lesson lays out the fundamentals, the team dynamics, and the strategic mindset you need to succeed with AI-powered products.
AI and machine learning are not the same thing
AI is a broad term describing machines that perform tasks traditionally requiring human intelligence. Machine learning (ML) is a subset of AI — techniques that allow computers to learn patterns from data and improve over time without explicit programming.
For product managers, the focus is on machine learning models — algorithms trained on data to make predictions or decisions. Examples include recommendation engines, predictive analytics, and natural language processing.
Understanding this distinction helps you set realistic expectations. AI is not a monolith; it consists of multiple techniques with different trade-offs.
Why PMs must understand AI fundamentals
You will work with data scientists, ML engineers, and analysts who speak a different technical language. Without a baseline understanding, you risk:
- Misinterpreting model capabilities and limitations
- Setting unrealistic goals or timelines
- Failing to identify key risks or failure modes
- Over- or under-investing in AI components
What I tell PMs is: learn enough to ask questions like "What data does the model need?", "How do you measure success?", and "What happens when the model is wrong?"
You don’t need to build the model yourself, but you must own the product outcomes that depend on it.
The AI product lifecycle and your role
AI product development follows a cycle similar to traditional products but with key differences:
-
Problem definition and data collection
Define the user problem and identify relevant data sources. Data quality often limits model success. -
Model building and training
Data scientists create and train models on labeled data. This requires iteration and experimentation. -
Integration and UX design
PMs work closely with engineers and designers to embed AI capabilities seamlessly into the product. -
Evaluation and monitoring
Measure user impact, monitor model drift, and plan updates. AI models degrade over time without retraining.
Your role is strongest in problem framing, prioritizing data quality, designing the user experience around AI outputs, and defining success metrics that matter to users.
Common AI use cases for products
Indian startups and enterprises are adopting AI across sectors. Some common AI-powered features include:
- Recommendation systems (e.g., personalized content on ShareChat)
- Predictive analytics (e.g., churn prediction at Razorpay)
- Natural language processing (e.g., chatbots for customer support at Swiggy)
- Computer vision (e.g., automated document verification in fintech)
- Fraud detection (e.g., transaction monitoring at PhonePe)
Each use case requires different data, team skills, and product integration strategies.
Understanding your AI team
AI product teams differ from traditional product teams:
| Role | Responsibility |
|---|---|
| Data Scientist | Designs and trains models, experiments with algorithms |
| ML Engineer | Builds scalable model pipelines, handles deployment and monitoring |
| Data Engineer | Manages data ingestion, cleaning, and storage infrastructure |
| Data Analyst | Analyzes data trends, supports hypothesis testing |
| Product Manager | Defines user problems, prioritizes AI features, aligns teams, owns outcomes |
Your job is to translate business and user needs into clear AI requirements and ensure the model’s outputs integrate well into the user experience.
The data challenge in India
Data quality is a major bottleneck for AI success in India. Unlike Western markets, Indian enterprises face:
- Multilingual and code-switched content (Hindi-English, Tamil-English, etc.)
- Inconsistent or incomplete data formats
- Limited labeled datasets for specialized domains
- Privacy and compliance considerations
The PM must prioritize data collection, cleaning, and labeling as first-class product activities, not afterthoughts.
Leading AI product development
Best practices for PMs leading AI teams include:
- Set clear, measurable success criteria in user terms (e.g., task completion rates, error tolerance) rather than model metrics alone
- Design feedback loops so user interactions improve the model continuously (e.g., corrections, explicit ratings)
- Manage expectations about AI’s probabilistic nature — be transparent with stakeholders and users about errors and uncertainty
- Understand and own the AI cost model — inference, storage, and retraining add ongoing expenses that impact unit economics
You are the glue between technical teams and business leaders, balancing innovation with feasibility.
The cost of AI is real and must be managed
Many Indian B2B companies discover the hard way that AI inference costs can skyrocket usage expenses. If pricing does not reflect these costs, the company subsidizes AI features.
PMs must monitor:
- API call volumes and costs
- Infrastructure costs for model training and deployment
- Impact on customer acquisition and retention economics
Cost optimization strategies include caching, batching requests, and selective feature rollout.
AI product strategy: avoid the common traps
Talvinder identifies three strategic traps that kill AI initiatives:
-
AI as a press release
Adding AI buzzwords without solving meaningful problems. If you remove AI, no customer notices. -
Building what model providers will build
Replicating basic features available via APIs like OpenAI or Google. Without proprietary data or workflows, you have no moat. -
Optimizing model metrics instead of user outcomes
Focusing on technical accuracy while ignoring user experience and adoption.
Indian startups often fall into these traps by chasing the latest models or building complex ML teams without a clear product strategy.
How to identify high-impact AI opportunities
The cleanest way to think about AI product opportunities is:
-
What user problem does AI solve better than non-AI alternatives?
Be specific about the improvement in speed, accuracy, or cost. -
Where does AI fit into the user workflow?
Is it the primary interaction or a background optimization? -
What is your data advantage?
Proprietary data is your moat, not the model architecture. -
What happens when AI is wrong?
Define failure modes and design graceful fallbacks. -
What is the cost model and pricing strategy?
Ensure sustainability at scale. -
What is your 18-month defensibility story?
Foundation models improve rapidly; your advantage must be sustainable.
The AI product roadmap: what to prioritize
Start with quick experiments using existing APIs to validate user interest and value. For example, build a prototype with OpenAI API before investing in custom models.
Use user feedback and metrics to decide if fine-tuning or proprietary models are justified.
Indian startups like Razorpay and Meesho succeed by integrating AI incrementally, focusing on user workflows, and avoiding over-engineering.
Practical AI product skills for PMs
- Basic statistics and data literacy to understand model outputs and metrics
- SQL and data querying skills to explore datasets and support hypotheses
- Familiarity with AI platforms like Google Cloud AI, AWS SageMaker, and open-source tools
- Ability to write clear AI acceptance criteria focusing on user impact
- Collaboration skills to manage cross-functional AI teams
Building these skills will help you lead AI products confidently.
AI ethics and bias awareness
AI systems can perpetuate biases in training data, leading to unfair outcomes. PMs must:
- Ensure diverse, representative datasets
- Monitor for biased behavior post-launch
- Design transparent user communications about AI decisions
- Collaborate with legal and compliance teams
Ethical AI is a competitive advantage and a regulatory necessity.
Case study: AI in Indian fintech
Consider a mid-stage fintech startup in Bangalore planning to add AI-powered fraud detection.
The PM’s job:
- Define clear user problems (reduce false positives, speed up approvals)
- Work with data engineers to access transaction data with proper anonymization
- Collaborate with ML engineers on model training and evaluation
- Design UX to explain AI decisions to customers and support staff
- Monitor cost impact and adjust pricing accordingly
This disciplined approach leads to measurable business impact without overhyping AI.
Test yourself: AI product decision at an Indian HRtech startup
You are PM at a mid-stage Indian HRtech company (500 B2B clients, Series B). Your engineering lead proposes building a custom LLM fine-tuned on Indian job descriptions and salary data to power a compensation benchmarking feature. It requires 4 months and 2 ML engineers. A competitor just launched a similar feature using the OpenAI API.
The call: Do you approve the fine-tuning project? How do you advise the CEO?
Your reasoning:
Where to go next
- Build your AI product strategy skills: AI Product Strategy
- Learn user research methods for AI products: User Research Methods
- Master data-driven decision making: Metrics and KPIs
- Understand ethical considerations in AI: Ethical PM
- Develop technical fluency with AI tools: Technology for PMs
PL alumni now work at Razorpay, Swiggy, PhonePe, Meesho, and other leading Indian tech companies.