PMM Supper Club

How it works

A different kind of dinner.

PMM Supper Club exists to create thoughtful spaces where product marketers can speak openly, build meaningful relationships, and support one another.

From invitation to table

How an evening comes together.

  1. 01

    An invitation

    Every guest arrives through an invitation — from a host, a previous guest, or a thoughtful request. Each name is read by a human.

  2. 02

    A quiet review

    We take time to read each request properly. Tables are shaped slowly, with care for who would be sitting beside whom.

  3. 03

    Around the table

    A long dinner. One room. Intentionally curated — from intimate tables to larger community gatherings. Honest conversation that doesn't try to be anything other than honest.

  4. 04

    An ongoing community

    Most guests return. Friendships continue between dinners. The community grows quietly, in cities around the world.

An intentional room

Curation is about hospitality, not selection.

We shape the room so people feel welcomed, included, and able to have meaningful conversations with the others around the table. Voices, cities, and stages are considered slowly — never assembled at the last minute.

If a table isn't the right fit this season, we'll say so warmly and stay in touch. Tables are built for psychological safety and peer-to-peer support — not networking for networking's sake.

PMM Supper Club is intentionally vendor-neutral and community-led, creating a space where conversations can remain open, honest and focused on helping one another.

At the table

How the room holds together.

  • No selling

    No pitching anyone at the table. Ever.

  • No pitching

    We're here as people, not as pipelines.

  • No panels

    The conversation is the format.

  • No presentations

    We don't talk at each other. We talk with each other.

  • Chatham House Rules

    What's shared at the table stays at the table.

A note from your host

Each chapter is held by someone who cares deeply about the people in their city — who reads each request, shapes each table, and stays close to every guest who walks through the door.

An honest line

A lot of people arrive not knowing anyone.
Very few leave feeling that way.

An invitation

If this feels like a room you'd belong in, we'd love to hear from you.

Request a seat