Dilution vs PM

Dilution (Ownership Reduction) and PM (Product Manager) both come up in business conversations and get confused. Here's the plain-English difference, side by side, so you can use each one with confidence.

The key difference: Dilution refers to ownership reduction, while PM refers to product manager — they describe different things even when they show up in the same sentence.

Dilution — Ownership Reduction

Your ownership shrinks as you raise. Percentage of a bigger pie can still be a win.

Full Dilution definition →

PM — Product Manager

Owns "what we build and why." PM ≠ project coordinator.

Full PM definition →

When to use Dilution

Reach for "Dilution" when the conversation is specifically about ownership reduction. Your ownership shrinks as you raise. Percentage of a bigger pie can still be a win.

When to use PM

Reach for "PM" when the conversation is specifically about product manager. Owns "what we build and why." PM ≠ project coordinator.

FAQs

What is the difference between Dilution and PM?

Dilution stands for Ownership Reduction — Your ownership shrinks as you raise. Percentage of a bigger pie can still be a win. PM stands for Product Manager — Owns "what we build and why." PM ≠ project coordinator.

Are Dilution and PM the same thing?

No. They're often used in the same conversation because they're related, but they describe different concepts. Dilution = Ownership Reduction. PM = Product Manager.

When should I use Dilution vs PM?

Use Dilution when you're specifically referring to ownership reduction. Use PM when the topic is product manager.