Tim Rice

B2B SaaS · construction technology

Tim Rice

Product leader

Hey there!

You found my corner of the internet 😃

I'm a product manager with deep roots in AEC software, a workshop full of furniture in progress, and a curiosity that keeps pulling me toward the next hard problem.

Keep reading to see the work, the builds, and everything in between.

Boston, MA

Work

Deeper write-ups on product work: problem framing, discovery, what shipped, and what I would do differently. Skewed toward construction software, estimating, payments, and complex multi-stakeholder launches. Each tile opens as a full page.

About

I'm a product manager with roughly ten years in B2B SaaS, mostly in construction technology and mechanical design software. I lead through the whole stack: discovery, PRDs, delivery, and GTM.

My process starts in the field. Hundreds of on-site and remote interviews with trade contractors taught me that the best requirements come from watching people work. I'm comfortable going deep on complex domains like estimating, procurement, fintech, and partner integrations, and I have enough technical depth to build working prototypes in Claude Code and Cursor for immediate validation before a sprint is ever planned.

Away from the roadmap I still build physically. Form & Grain is my part-time furniture brand: custom pieces, fabrication, and a product line of watch stands with trademark and IP work end to end. I hike for reset and tinker with cars. Both keep me honest about what it actually takes to finish something well.

Connect on LinkedIn for my latest resume!

Form & Grain

Woodworking & craft

Form & Grain is my Boston-area woodworking practice: custom furniture from sourcing through fabrication and delivery, plus a line of watch display stands that became bestsellers, with trademark registration and IP handled from concept to launch. Same eye for detail as in product work, different material.

Personal projects

What fills the weeks alongside product work and the shop.

  • Home renovation

    Building sweat equity, and the emphasis is on sweat. There is always something to do in a hundred-year-old house.

  • Travel

    I love being immersed in other cultures, trying new food, and seeing the amazing diversity of our earth.

  • Wrenching

    Why pay someone else when you can use the job as an excuse to buy a new tool? What you can tell from the mess below is the smell of gas while changing injectors on my 80s sports car.

Let's be social!

Connect on LinkedIn so we can chat more.