Product management has traditionally been framed as a coordination function responsible for feature prioritization and delivery alignment. However, in scalable technology enterprises, roadmap decisions increasingly determine how financial and human capital are allocated across competing growth initiatives. This paper advances the thesis that product management functions as an internal capital allocation system—structuring investment decisions, shaping revenue architecture, and influencing long-term enterprise value. By integrating perspectives from corporate finance, internal capital markets, and strategic management, the study reconceptualizes product roadmaps as investment theses rather than operational artifacts. It develops a governance model that links prioritization logic, portfolio segmentation, risk-adjusted decision-making, and revenue system design. The paper argues that scalable enterprises achieve durable growth when product leadership institutionalizes capital discipline within innovation systems. This reframing elevates product management from feature ownership to enterprise-level economic stewardship, with implications for executive governance, organizational maturity, and strategic resilience.
Atakan Bolukbasi (Wed,) studied this question.