Back to jobs
New

Director of Product

New York, NY, USA

Oula delivers maternity care built around our patients—offering comprehensive support before, during, and after pregnancy. With fewer C-sections and higher VBAC success rates, our research-backed approach is delivering better outcomes. Our team of trusted midwives, OBGYNs, and dedicated care navigators ensure our patients get the type of care they need in the moments that matter most.

Since launching in 2021, we’ve expanded to include Preconception and Miscarriage Care, Pregnancy Care, Postpartum Support, and Gynecology. We currently have 4 clinics in the tri-state area, with three new clinics opening in 2026! Come join our team of clinicians, innovators, operators, and technologists passionate about setting a new standard in maternity care.

About Oula

Oula is rebuilding maternity care from the ground up. We're the first modern maternity clinic to combine the best of midwifery and obstetrics — a collaborative, team-based model that pairs OB-GYNs, certified nurse-midwives, and dedicated care navigators under one roof (and one app). Since opening our Brooklyn clinic in 2021, we've supported over 2,700 deliveries, achieved C-section rates 29% below NYC averages, and earned an NPS above 90 — all while accepting most major insurance plans including Medicaid.

We're now expanding nationally, growing our tech-enabled care platform, and launching new services across the full reproductive lifecycle. That ambition requires product leadership that is equal parts clinical intuition, strategic operator, and relentless patient advocate.

The Role

As Director of Product, you will own the product roadmap for Oula's patient- and clinician-facing technology — including the EHR, Oula Portal, care navigation tools, and any new services we build for patients in their reproductive years. You will work directly with clinicians, care navigators, engineers, and leadership to define what we build, why we build it, and whether it worked.

This role is part product strategist, part systems designer, part cross-functional operator. You will zoom into the weeds — shadowing care navigators, sitting in on clinical huddles, tracing a patient's path through our EHR — and then zoom back out to propose practical, scalable solutions that hold up under the complexity of a regulated care environment. You thrive when the problem is ambiguous and the org chart doesn't have a clean answer. You're the person teams turn to when something is messy and needs an owner.

This is a high-ownership, high-visibility role at a Series B company on the Inc. 5000 fastest-growing list. You'll report to senior leadership and operate as the connective tissue between our clinical model, our operations team, and our engineering team.

What You'll Own

Product Discovery

  • Run structured interviews with patients across every stage — preconception, prenatal, postpartum, gynecology
  • Maintain ongoing feedback loops with midwives, OBs, and care navigators
  • Synthesize qualitative research, portal engagement data, and NPS into clear statements of unmet need
  • Observe clinical workflows firsthand; surface manual workarounds and inefficiencies no one has had time to name
  • Treat process problems and product problems as the same problem, and own the line between them

Roadmap Ownership

  • Own and defend the product roadmap; decide which boulders engineering commits to each quarter
  • Ensure initiatives ladder up to company OKRs on growth, outcomes, and clinical efficiency
  • Run quarterly planning; keep a decision-ready backlog
  • Communicate tradeoffs clearly to stakeholders with competing priorities

Cross-Functional Problem Solving

  • Own the messy problems that don't start as feature requests — breaking workflows, dropped handoffs, operational decisions with downstream care effects
  • Build alignment across clinical, ops, and engineering; synthesize conflicting inputs
  • Spot cross-functional risks before they become incidents
  • Know when the fix is process, tooling, or both

Feature Specs and Product ROI

  • Work with Product Ops to write detailed PRDs, acceptance criteria, and rollout strategy
  • Hold two realities at once — the consumer experience patients expect and the clinical/business constraints of a regulated setting
  • Partner with clinical leads so every feature is evidence-based
  • Own the full lifecycle beyond ship: role responsibilities, communication and change management, training, documentation, and downstream performance
  • Define launch metrics (portal engagement, conversion, clinical time saved) and own the post-launch analysis
  • Consider a spec done when the clinical team is operating confidently and the data confirms impact

Competitive & Market Analysis

  • Track the women's health and maternity tech landscape
  • Bring structured competitive intelligence into roadmap discussions
  • Identify white space Oula can occupy first
  • Keep the care experience a reason patients choose Oula over a traditional OB practice

What We're Looking For

Must-haves

  • 6+ years of product management experience, with at least 2 years in a senior or lead role
  • Demonstrated experience shipping patient-facing or clinician-facing products in a healthcare or health-adjacent setting
  • Genuine fluency with clinical workflows — you can map a care journey, read an EHR configuration, and immediately spot where the tech and the process are out of sync
  • Experience navigating HIPAA requirements, EHR integrations, and the operational realities of a regulated care environment
  • A track record of building alignment across departments that don't share a natural common language — ops, clinical, and engineering each have different languages, and you speak all three
  • Strong discovery and research skills — you have a methodology for talking to users and turning qualitative insight into prioritized bets
  • Experience owning a roadmap end-to-end, including stakeholder alignment, sprint planning, and retrospective analysis
  • Clear, precise writing — your specs are unambiguous; your roadmap is legible to a clinician and an engineer alike
  • Relentless focus on proactive, continuous communication and change management: drive stakeholder alignment and transparency to ensure no surprises before any rollout.
  • Comfort operating in ambiguity — you don't need a fully scoped problem to get started, and you don't need consensus to move forward

Strong signals

  • Experience at a venture-backed digital health company in an expansion phase, or in healthcare consulting with an operator's mindset
  • Familiarity with women's health, reproductive care, or maternal health specifically
  • Exposure to hybrid care models (in-person + virtual) or multi-site clinical operations
  • Comfort with data — SQL or equivalent, product analytics tools (Mixpanel, Amplitude, Looker), and building outcome dashboards
  • Located in New York/Connecticut/New Jersey, Chicago or Charlotte

This Role is Right for You If

  • You're the person teams flag when a process is unclear, broken, or scaling past its limits — and you find that energizing, not exhausting
  • You think in systems and swimlanes, but you're also effective in a room: running working sessions, drawing out pain points from clinicians who are too busy to articulate them, and building trust with people who are skeptical of tech
  • You've worked in fast-paced, ambiguous environments — consulting, startups, growth-stage healthcare — and still delivered structure, clarity, and shipped work
  • You're not just a strategist: you write the spec, you attend the rollout, you check the metrics two weeks later, and you follow up when the numbers are off
  • You think of yourself as a translator — between operations and product, between clinicians and engineers, between today's workaround and tomorrow's scalable system

What Success Looks Like in Year One

  • You've embedded with the clinical team — attended huddles, shadowed care navigators, mapped the patient journey firsthand — and have a working mental model of where the workflows are strong and where they're held together by duct tape
  • You've untangled at least one major cross-functional problem that was previously owned by no one, and shipped a solution that ops, clinical, and engineering all point to as a win
  • Engineering is running quarterly boulders with clear product owners, measurable success criteria, and fewer mid-quarter redirects because discovery was done well upfront
  • At least two major features have shipped with full pre/post ROI analysis
  • You've identified and socialized the two or three biggest product opportunities ahead of Oula's next market expansion

Compensation & Benefits

  • Competitive salary commensurate with experience
  • Equity participation
  • Comprehensive health coverage (medical, dental, vision)
  • Mission-driven team that has personally experienced the gaps in maternity care and shows up every day to fix them

Oula is an equal opportunity employer committed to building a team that reflects the diversity of the patients we serve.

Oula offers a competitive total rewards package which includes base salary, and  comprehensive benefits. Exact compensation inclusive of salary and any bonuses is determined based on a number of factors including experience and skill level, location, and qualifications which are assessed during the interview process. Oula is committed to fostering an inclusive workplace where everyone's contributions are valued.

Salary Range

$175,000 - $200,000 USD

Oula's Commitment as an Equal Opportunity Employer:

We want you to know: You can be a great candidate even if you don't fit everything we've described above. You can also have important skills we haven't thought of. If that's you, don't hesitate to apply and tell us about yourself (especially in your cover letter – this is where you can really state your case for *why you*). We are committed to fostering diversity in our organization and building an equitable and inclusive environment for people of all backgrounds and experiences. We're taking steps to meet that commitment. We especially encourage members of traditionally underrepresented communities to apply, including women, people of color, LGBTQ people, veterans, and people with disabilities.

 

Create a Job Alert

Interested in building your career at Oula? Get future opportunities sent straight to your email.

Apply for this job

*

indicates a required field

Phone
Resume/CV*

Accepted file types: pdf, doc, docx, txt, rtf

Cover Letter

Accepted file types: pdf, doc, docx, txt, rtf


Select...
Select...
Select...
Select...

U.S. Standard Demographic Questions

We invite applicants to share their demographic background. If you choose to complete this survey, your responses may be used to identify areas of improvement in our hiring process.
Select...
Select...
Select...
Select...
Select...
Select...

Voluntary Self-Identification

For government reporting purposes, we ask candidates to respond to the below self-identification survey. Completion of the form is entirely voluntary. Whatever your decision, it will not be considered in the hiring process or thereafter. Any information that you do provide will be recorded and maintained in a confidential file.

As set forth in Oula’s Equal Employment Opportunity policy, we do not discriminate on the basis of any protected group status under any applicable law.

Select...
Select...
Race & Ethnicity Definitions

If you believe you belong to any of the categories of protected veterans listed below, please indicate by making the appropriate selection. As a government contractor subject to the Vietnam Era Veterans Readjustment Assistance Act (VEVRAA), we request this information in order to measure the effectiveness of the outreach and positive recruitment efforts we undertake pursuant to VEVRAA. Classification of protected categories is as follows:

A "disabled veteran" is one of the following: a veteran of the U.S. military, ground, naval or air service who is entitled to compensation (or who but for the receipt of military retired pay would be entitled to compensation) under laws administered by the Secretary of Veterans Affairs; or a person who was discharged or released from active duty because of a service-connected disability.

A "recently separated veteran" means any veteran during the three-year period beginning on the date of such veteran's discharge or release from active duty in the U.S. military, ground, naval, or air service.

An "active duty wartime or campaign badge veteran" means a veteran who served on active duty in the U.S. military, ground, naval or air service during a war, or in a campaign or expedition for which a campaign badge has been authorized under the laws administered by the Department of Defense.

An "Armed forces service medal veteran" means a veteran who, while serving on active duty in the U.S. military, ground, naval or air service, participated in a United States military operation for which an Armed Forces service medal was awarded pursuant to Executive Order 12985.

Select...

Voluntary Self-Identification of Disability

Form CC-305
Page 1 of 1
OMB Control Number 1250-0005
Expires 04/30/2026

Why are you being asked to complete this form?

We are a federal contractor or subcontractor. The law requires us to provide equal employment opportunity to qualified people with disabilities. We have a goal of having at least 7% of our workers as people with disabilities. The law says we must measure our progress towards this goal. To do this, we must ask applicants and employees if they have a disability or have ever had one. People can become disabled, so we need to ask this question at least every five years.

Completing this form is voluntary, and we hope that you will choose to do so. Your answer is confidential. No one who makes hiring decisions will see it. Your decision to complete the form and your answer will not harm you in any way. If you want to learn more about the law or this form, visit the U.S. Department of Labor’s Office of Federal Contract Compliance Programs (OFCCP) website at www.dol.gov/ofccp.

How do you know if you have a disability?

A disability is a condition that substantially limits one or more of your “major life activities.” If you have or have ever had such a condition, you are a person with a disability. Disabilities include, but are not limited to:

  • Alcohol or other substance use disorder (not currently using drugs illegally)
  • Autoimmune disorder, for example, lupus, fibromyalgia, rheumatoid arthritis, HIV/AIDS
  • Blind or low vision
  • Cancer (past or present)
  • Cardiovascular or heart disease
  • Celiac disease
  • Cerebral palsy
  • Deaf or serious difficulty hearing
  • Diabetes
  • Disfigurement, for example, disfigurement caused by burns, wounds, accidents, or congenital disorders
  • Epilepsy or other seizure disorder
  • Gastrointestinal disorders, for example, Crohn's Disease, irritable bowel syndrome
  • Intellectual or developmental disability
  • Mental health conditions, for example, depression, bipolar disorder, anxiety disorder, schizophrenia, PTSD
  • Missing limbs or partially missing limbs
  • Mobility impairment, benefiting from the use of a wheelchair, scooter, walker, leg brace(s) and/or other supports
  • Nervous system condition, for example, migraine headaches, Parkinson’s disease, multiple sclerosis (MS)
  • Neurodivergence, for example, attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), autism spectrum disorder, dyslexia, dyspraxia, other learning disabilities
  • Partial or complete paralysis (any cause)
  • Pulmonary or respiratory conditions, for example, tuberculosis, asthma, emphysema
  • Short stature (dwarfism)
  • Traumatic brain injury
Select...

PUBLIC BURDEN STATEMENT: According to the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 no persons are required to respond to a collection of information unless such collection displays a valid OMB control number. This survey should take about 5 minutes to complete.