In 2021, my journey into product wasn’t intentional rather it was inevitable.
I had just transitioned into product after working on my first major project with one of the world’s tech giants and their partners across Africa, then moved to a foreign-based African startup. At the time, I didn’t care about job titles; I cared about understanding how things work. Why products succeed. Why teams collapse. Why strategy breaks. Why execution fails.
Funny thing? Most rooms I stepped into, I was invited as the “marketing guy.” Strategy meetings, growth reviews, brand planning, that was my doorway in. But somehow, the conversation would tilt, and I’d end up leading product decisions. Not by force, but by instinct and the next thing you will hear is: “We need to get a new marketing guy so that you can focus on the product.”
Somewhere along that journey, I discovered something deeper: product is not a role, it’s a worldview. It is ownership. It is resilience. It is vision. It is leadership. It is strategy. These weren’t skills I learned; they were traits I already lived.
Eventually, I internalized what I now call the four pillars every real product operator must master — Purpose, Process, People, and Product (Read more in my next article this weekend). These pillars shaped how I worked, how I thought, and how I led. They also shaped the products I built; some that launched and flew, some that died because of poor GTM, and some that never left the founders’ fears.
But 2024 was the turning point for me.
I was deep in the trenches with three different founders, can’t remember if I did have a life at all last year and fate still took everything from me for something new and real.
- One secured angel funding immediately after I built and scaled GTM and partnerships.
- Another had a check on the table but walked away because ego overshadowed forward thinking.
- The third refused critical advice because internal politics mattered more than survival, and the products died quietly.
I remember sitting in a strategy session one day when a colleague looked at me and said to everyone, “If JT can do all this for us, then what exactly is stopping him from doing it for himself?”
That statement marked the shift. To others, it was just a comment but to me, it was a confirmation. It wasn’t just time to build, it was my own’ “It’s Showtime.” I was ready to have fun. And stepping into that founder identity made one thing clear: PMs are uniquely wired to become high-leverage founders, but only when the mindset shifts.
Here are the five that changed everything for me.
1. Ownership Over Tasks
PMs deliver outcomes. Founders live with consequences.
Ownership moved from “Did the feature ship?” to “Will this product survive?” And that shift comes with weight.
A 2023 Mind the Product survey showed that 62% of PMs say they already operate like mini-founders, but without the authority. The day you become an actual founder, that authority arrives and so does the responsibility.
Ownership is your real KPI.
2. Resilience Over Expertise
Expertise is entry-level. Resilience is leadership-level.
African startup ecosystems are unforgiving. According to the Briter Bridges 2024 Insight Report, 54% of early-stage African startups fail due to operational fatigue, not lack of ideas.
Resilience is the differentiator. It’s the ability to keep moving, especially when everything else stops.
As Ben Horowitz famously said,
“The hardest skill for any founder is the skill of endurance.”
PMs who understand this early make the smoothest transition.
3. Vision Over Features
A PM improves the roadmap. A founder creates the direction.
Vision forces you to think in horizons, not sprints.
Product School’s 2024 industry report noted that 39% of PMs who became founders cite “vision clarity” as the single biggest unlock when transitioning into leadership.
Vision is not an idea. It’s the ability to connect market reality with long-term value.
4. Leadership Over Coordination
PMs align people. Founders inspire people.
Leadership is no longer cross-functional coordination, it’s cultural design.
You stop managing stakeholders and start managing belief systems, survival instincts, and organizational DNA. In early-stage Africa startups especially, leadership is the difference between chaos and continuity.
A founder’s real job? Make people believe, consistently.
5. Strategy Over Execution Alone
Execution builds products. Strategy builds companies.
This shift is subtle but transformational. It demands market sensing, capital intelligence, distribution design, and survival planning.
A 2022 YC insight showed that startups led by PM-founders had a 25% faster path to product-market fit compared to engineering-only founding teams, because PMs think holistically.
Strategy becomes oxygen.
African PMs Becoming Founders: A New Wave
Over the last five years, Africa has quietly produced a strong wave of PM-turned-founders redefining what is possible.
A 2023 Product Leadership Index report highlighted that PMs are 3x more likely to become founders than any other tech role except engineering, and in Africa, that multiplier is even higher due to ecosystem constraints requiring multi-disciplinary thinking.
PMs make great founders because they already operate with a founder mindset long before they claim the founder title.
If You’re a PM Considering the Founder Path
Here’s the truth no one tells you:
- You already know more than you think.
- You’ve been practicing founder instincts for years.
- Every backlog, every user interview, every tough tradeoff has been training.
- The real barrier is not capability; it’s courage.
The mindset shift always comes before the decision.
And once that shift happens, the founder identity becomes inevitable.
Which mindset shift are you working on right now?