Tuesday, June 9

Good morning, Alex.

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4ward gets you ready for your career advisor. Use it to arrive with direction, sharper questions, and a clearer view of your options. Your advisor takes it from there.

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Honest snapshot

You're on a promising path toward product management.

Your academics and leadership signals are strong. The current limiting factors are product-specific proof, hands-on experience, and a network that is still too small for your goal.

Paths that fit your profile

Tap a path to focus your opportunities and pay on it.

Your goal

Product Manager

Your business foundation and problem-solving interest are real assets here.

Adjacent path

Strategy & Operations

Your analytical mindset crosses over directly. Many PMs come from ops.

Also worth exploring

Technical Program Manager

If you build any technical fluency, this path opens up immediately.

Current path

Exploration → Positioning

You are moving from general business exposure into product-specific evidence.

Highest-impact next actions
Where to focus

In-Demand Skills

Highest-leverage area right now.
Focus here first

Network Strength

Highest-leverage area right now.
Focus here first

Relevant Experience

In motion — keep stacking reps.
Building

Academic Progress

Already working for you. Maintain it.
Strength
Today's move

Set your action plan to see today's move.

From your highest-impact actions.
What this path can pay
$75k–$110ktypical entry

Associate PM base runs about $75–110k; most PMs start in adjacent roles first.

An estimate from public data for your field, not a promise. Pay shifts a lot by city and employer, so check the live sources for your exact role.

O*NET (BLS) → Glassdoor → live pay data for your goal
Trajectory workspace

Where you are now → where you want to go.

FoundationsComplete
ExplorationIn progress
PositioningNext up
ImpactLong term

Where you are now

Business major, 3.45 GPA, marketing internship, case competitions, early product interest.

Where you want to go

Product manager role where you lead useful products, work with technical teams, and solve customer problems.

The bridge

Build product proof, learn core metrics, strengthen outreach, and apply to roles that value business and customer thinking.

Explore the field

Your field is bigger than one job.

Here's how it branches out. Some of these little leaves are jobs most students have never even heard of, and any one of them could be your thing.

Gap analyzer

What it takes to get there.

Skills

What to learn

Product Strategy

High impact

Data & Metrics

High impact

User Research

Medium impact

Prioritization Frameworks

Medium impact
Experience

What to do

Internship in target role or adjacent

High impact

Build and publish a real project

High impact

Lead a team initiative end-to-end

Medium impact
Exposure

What to see

Shadow a PM for a day

High impact

Attend product community events

Medium impact

Read product teardowns weekly

Medium impact
Mindset

How to think

Think in user problems, not features

Foundational

Get comfortable with ambiguity

Foundational

Build a bias toward shipping

Foundational
Personalized action plan

Your week-by-week roadmap.

One concrete move for each week, building on the last. Connect AI to tailor it to your goal.

Weeks 1–4
Week 1

Reach out to 3 alumni in your field.

Week 2

Choose a case study or project topic.

Week 3

Learn the core metrics for your goal.

Week 4

Draft an outline of your project.

Weeks 5–8
Week 5

Build the first version of your project.

Week 6

Publish it and share for feedback.

Week 7

Apply to 5 targeted internships.

Week 8

Join one community in your field.

Weeks 9–12
Week 9

Run two mock interviews.

Week 10

Refresh your profile and resume.

Week 11

Apply again with stronger proof.

Week 12

Follow up with everyone you met.

One honest note: following this raises your odds, it does not guarantee a specific outcome. Careers are rarely a straight line. The point is to keep exploring, talking to people, and adjusting as you learn, not to check a box and wait.

Résumé review

An honest read on your résumé.

Upload your résumé and 4ward reads it the way a recruiter and an ATS would, then shows exactly what to strengthen. Bring the fixes to your advisor to refine together.

Your data stays yours. Your résumé and profile are stored only in your browser, never sold, and never shared without your permission.

Upload your school's résumé template or a sample they recommend, and 4ward checks your résumé against that exact format. Skip this and it uses a standard résumé format.

or paste the written rules instead

No résumé analyzed yet. Upload a PDF or text file above and you'll get a full breakdown here: how it reads, where it's strong, weak verbs to swap, bullet rewrites, and keywords you're missing for your goal.

Connect AI (top right) to enable résumé analysis.

Networking is the fastest way to move your path forward. A reference for who to talk to: why they matter, what to ask, and a message you can send today.

Bring this to your advisor

Questions worth asking at your next appointment

  • Which of these paths looks most realistic given my background?
  • Do you know alumni in product roles I could be introduced to?
  • What experience should I prioritize before recruiting season?
  • Does my outreach message land the right way?

Showing up with specific questions makes a 30-minute appointment go much further.

After your appointment

Jot down what your advisor suggested. 4ward keeps it here so you can act on it and follow up.

🔒 Inviting your advisor to see your progress directly — coming soon

Track who you're reaching out to so nothing slips. Add anyone you want to connect with, then move them along as you go. This is exactly what career centers spend their time on.

Mentors who join 4ward will link straight to their profile here. Coming soon

Students a year or two ahead are some of the most useful people to talk to. This fills in as students join 4ward. Coming soon

Progress timeline

Your path over time.

The start

Where your path began.

Right now

Moving from exploration into positioning.

Next

Turn momentum into proof and conversations.