Related Posts
Who has bad law April Fool's jokes?
Additional Posts in Product Marketing
New to Fishbowl?
Download the Fishbowl app to
unlock all discussions on Fishbowl.
unlock all discussions on Fishbowl.
Who has bad law April Fool's jokes?
This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.
Download the Fishbowl app to unlock all discussions on Fishbowl.
Copy and paste embed code on your site

Scan your QR code to download
Fishbowl app on your mobile

That is not a great reason to make a role switch. Do you have deep messaging experience? Run a team of stakeholders across marketing. Have you worked with product managers and engineers? Are you able to take complex concepts, features and deliverables and condense them in to impactful, persuasive customer benefits? Can you train and brief sellers on those benefits? That’s what you should look at. That can get you a foot in the door. I see no trend in the role being remote… Maybe look at small to midsize companies. They may be more flexible in hiring. Good luck!!
By all means, if you want to focus on a remote role, have at it. I would caution you, though, against getting into something solely for that. The reason is, remote changes all the time now. What is remote this month might be hybrid or full RTO the next.
From what you are putting out so far, my question is why you want to get into Product marketing? Is it purely because PMMs work remotely?
What about the PMM role do you enjoy?
There are remote roles out there, they are getting harder and harder to come by. Either it’s you must live in the same time zone or the same state as the company. I’m on Pacific Time in a smaller metro area and found it difficult because a lot were out in Boston or New York that I was “not qualified for” because time zones.
I just got 2 job offers in 2025 that work remotely. One was hybrid by HR standards but the PMM team only went into the office 1-2x a month.
There’s definitely momentum behind remote product marketing roles these jobs have grown a lot, especially in tech and SaaS. From my experience and what peers share, working remotely in product marketing makes collaboration easier across global teams, and there's more autonomy to juggle deep work and meetings. If you're considering the move, there are plenty of positions (thousands, in fact, across all seniority levels), and remote product marketing is here to stay. The key challenge is balancing cross-functional input, but tools and workflows are getting better all the time