Surgo Health is a Public Benefit Corporation focused on building a comprehensive AI-powered data platform to enhance healthcare decision-making. The Senior Product Manager will define product strategy and roadmap for AI and data products, collaborating with cross-functional teams to develop impactful solutions.
Responsibilities:
- Define and own the product strategy and roadmap for AI and data products that power Surgo’s behavioral intelligence platforms
- Lead 0-to-1 and early-stage product initiatives, turning ambiguous problem spaces into clear product bets with measurable impact
- Partner deeply with engineering and data science to bring machine learning, generative AI, and advanced analytics into production-grade products
- Drive product discovery with customers and internal stakeholders to ensure solutions are grounded in real workflows and decisions
- Design products where AI outputs are interpretable, trusted, and actionable, not just technically impressive
- Own execution end to end, from framing the problem and defining success metrics through launch, iteration, and scaling
- Help establish product best practices and raise the bar for how Surgo builds and evaluates AI-powered products as the company grows
Requirements:
- A track record of owning and shipping complex software products in ambiguous or early-stage environments
- Experience in product management, engineering, data science, analytics, or a related role, with at least 3+ years in a product-focused capacity
- Strong technical fluency and comfort working closely with engineers and data scientists on AI, machine learning, or data-intensive systems
- Proven ability to translate complex data and models into products that users understand and trust
- Excellent product judgment and a bias toward outcomes, impact, and learning over process for its own sake
- Clear and compelling communication skills, with the ability to align diverse stakeholders around a shared product vision
- Experience in healthcare, life sciences, public health, or regulated industries, though deep curiosity and learning ability matter more than domain expertise