When you talk to engineers, you dive into details. When you talk to business stakeholders, you focus on impact. Adjusting your communication to your audience is what makes you a pragmatic product manager.
Communicating technical challenges to market-oriented teams is not about simplifying or dumbing down the facts. The actual job is to translate complexity into clarity and relevance for your audience. This means knowing what matters to sales, marketing, and customer success teams — and framing technical issues in terms of customer impact, business risk, or opportunity.
Without this skill, technical teams work in silos while market teams chase unrealistic promises. The result: frustration, missed commitments, and broken trust.
The trap of one-size-fits-all communication
Product managers often make the mistake of treating all stakeholders the same. You might find yourself explaining a scalability bottleneck with full engineering jargon to a sales team that only cares whether the product will be ready for a big client demo.
Talvinder says: "We cannot have just one way of communication with everybody because they all come from different backgrounds and they understand things differently. We have to adjust our levels of communication, adjust the amount of details we share — less or more depending on whom we are talking to. That puts us as a product person in a better spot."
This means:
- To engineers: technical depth, specifics about APIs, system architecture, and timelines.
- To sales and marketing: business impact, customer promises, and risks to delivery.
- To executives: high-level summaries, strategic implications, and mitigation plans.
Weekly product update call with sales, marketing, and engineering teams
You (PM): “The new payment gateway integration is delayed due to API rate limits. This means we can't onboard the Reliance client by next month as planned.”
Rahul (Sales): “How does this affect the demo scheduled for next week?”
You (PM): “The demo will use a sandbox environment, so it’s unaffected. But production rollout will slip by 6 weeks unless we get additional engineering support.”
Meera (Marketing): “Can we communicate this delay to the client proactively?”
You (PM): “Yes, I’ll draft a clear message highlighting the workaround and updated timelines.”
By tailoring the message to each audience’s concerns, you keep trust high and avoid surprises.
Balancing technical realities with sales and marketing expectations
How to translate technical challenges into business impact
The best way to explain technical challenges is to connect the dots between the issue and what it means for customers and the business. For example:
- Instead of "The database query is timing out due to inefficient indexing," say "The system is slow during peak hours, which could lead to customer frustration and increased churn."
- Instead of "We hit scalability limits on microservice X," say "Our current infrastructure can’t support more than 10,000 concurrent users, so growth beyond that will require a significant re-architecture."
- Instead of "The legacy codebase has multiple dependencies," say "Adding new features will be slower and riskier until we refactor key components."
Talvinder advises: "Market-oriented teams like sales and marketing believe they have ideas about the product, but to fulfill the gaps between development and market teams, you have to explain updates in layman’s terms focused on business impact."
Building and monitoring relationships with market teams
Communication is not a one-off event. It requires ongoing effort and empathy.
Talvinder highlights three pillars:
- Regular updates: Schedule weekly or biweekly syncs with sales and marketing to share progress, blockers, and upcoming risks.
- Listening: Understand their pain points, sales cycles, and customer feedback to anticipate questions before they arise.
- Education: Introduce market teams to key technical concepts that affect delivery without overwhelming them. For example, explain what scalability means in terms of customer experience rather than system internals.
This approach builds trust and reduces friction.
Monthly cross-functional brainstorming session
You (PM): “Let’s review the product roadmap and identify which features sales should prioritize in their pitches.”
Vikram (Sales): “We need clarity on what’s realistic for the next quarter to avoid overpromising.”
Neha (Engineering): “We have a backlog of tech debt that could slow down new features.”
You (PM): “I’ll communicate this clearly to sales and marketing, so we align on what we can deliver.”
The PM acts as the bridge, balancing optimism with realism.
Aligning expectations to prevent future conflicts
What to track and share with market-oriented teams
While brainstorming with both technical and customer-facing teams, keep track of:
- The company’s product line and how new features fit in.
- The product development plan and key milestones.
- Competitors’ sales strategies and feature sets.
- Trends and shifts in the industry that affect priorities.
Talvinder notes: "Getting regular updates from market teams, talking about their problems, and introducing them to some technical parts of development helps keep everyone aligned."
Field exercise: Craft your technical-to-business translation
- Pick a recent technical issue your team faced (e.g., performance bottleneck, deployment delay, architecture constraint).
- Write two explanations:
- One for engineers, including technical details and root cause.
- One for sales or marketing, focusing on the impact to customers, delivery timelines, and mitigation plans.
- Share your business-focused explanation with a peer and ask for feedback on clarity and relevance.
- Revise your message based on feedback.
This exercise builds your muscle for audience-aware communication.
Test yourself: Explaining a scalability bottleneck
You are the PM at a Series B fintech startup in Bangalore. The engineering team informs you that a key payment processing service will not support the expected user growth for a new client, Flipkart, delaying rollout by 4 weeks. Sales and marketing teams are preparing a big launch campaign.
The call: How do you explain the technical challenge to sales and marketing to align expectations and avoid overpromising?
Your reasoning:
You are the PM at a Series B fintech startup in Bangalore. The engineering team informs you that a key payment processing service will not support the expected user growth for a new client, Flipkart, delaying rollout by 4 weeks. Sales and marketing teams are preparing a big launch campaign.
Your task: How do you explain the technical challenge to sales and marketing to align expectations and avoid overpromising?
your reasoning:
A real conversation about technical and market alignment
The importance of empathy and listening
Talvinder emphasizes that communication is a two-way street. Listening to market teams helps you understand the urgency behind their asks, and sharing technical constraints helps them appreciate the complexity.
Regular dialogue prevents surprises. When sales knows why a feature is delayed, they can manage customer expectations proactively. When engineering understands market pressures, they can prioritize critical fixes.
Where to go next
- Master stakeholder communication: Strategic Communication for PMs
- Build negotiation skills: Negotiation Tactics for Product Managers
- Learn customer research for alignment: User Research Methods
- Understand technical depth for PMs: Technical Fluency for Product Managers
PL alumni now work at Flipkart, Razorpay, Swiggy, PhonePe, Amazon, Microsoft, and 30+ other companies.