Catherine is a Director of Product at Stash, the personal finance app that helps make investing easy and affordable for millions of Americans. At Stash, she's overseen the brokerage products. With over seven years of product management experience, she is passionate about harnessing data and agile methodologies to create products users love. She holds a BA in History, Politics, Philosophy and Law from Binghamton University in New York.
Past Talks
7 October 2021
By reducing the cost and complexity of enterprise software, No-Code has made it accessible to a lot of people. While simple to setup, many believe no/low-code platforms can leave security risks, a siloed system with no connected way of working. While others would suggest it opens doors for new ways for teams to work.
Moderated by Catherine Cornell, the speakers will be sharing their different viewpoints, our panelists will discuss the pros and cons of no-code on the future of product delivery.
17 June 2021
By reducing the cost and complexity of enterprise software, No-Code has made it accessible to a lot of people.
Although, while simple to setup, it leaves security risks and a siloed system with no connected way of working. Sharing their different viewpoints, our panelists will discuss the pros and cons of no-code on the future of product delivery.
15 June 2021
Startups need to focus on product market fit and user acquisition before building the perfect system because things are guaranteed to change.
But what happens after a startup's found product market fit and accrued a mountain of tech debt along the way? In this session Catherine will discuss her teams work at Stash as they navigated their way through an intense growth period and how they tackled paying down tech debt that was impending hyper growth.
- How do you recognise the scaling risks in your systems?
- Trading off challenges between monoliths and microservices
- How reducing cognitive load improves the resilience of a system
- Frameworks for identifying types of tech debt and strategies for approaching them