Partner with us

Register now

Call to action
Your text goes here. Insert your content, thoughts, or information in this space.
Button

Back to speakers

Aaron
Eckelt
Former PMM
Beamery
Aaron Eckelt is a Product Marketing leader specialising in B2B SaaS and growth-stage companies, most recently serving as a PMM at Beamery. He helps organisations define clear, differentiated stories, build strong go to market foundations, and drive adoption of AI powered products. With a career that began in sales, Aaron brings a customer-first lens to product marketing, ensuring value is not only compelling but easy to understand and easy to sell. He has deep experience across positioning and messaging, launch strategy, enablement, and competitive intelligence, and is known for translating customer insight into product direction. At his best working cross functionally with Product, Sales, and Customer Success, Aaron makes complex ideas simple and commercial outcomes clear, helping teams scale with confidence.
Button
18 June 2026 09:15 - 10:00
Earn the headline slot: How to build a PMM career that commands the stage
Great work doesn’t always mean great recognition, just ask Morgan Freeman, Harrison Ford, or Maya Angelou, who found their breakout moments later than most people expect. Product Marketing is no different. Talent alone won’t land you the headline slot, and in a role with no clear ladder, inconsistent scope, and multiple paths, it’s easy to feel stuck or overlooked. Join our three PMM leaders as they unpack the real inflection points that shaped their careers, from moving into PMM and earning promotions to choosing between super IC and management, and reveal the visibility, positioning, and leverage moves that actually accelerate momentum. Key takeaways: - How to position your strengths so leadership sees you as strategic, not just supportive - The real tradeoffs between IC and management paths, and how to choose with intention - How to build cross-functional credibility that leads to promotion - The signals hiring managers look for when deciding who gets the headline slot