The term was entered by investor and entrepreneur Mark Andressen in 2007. He is a co-founder of the IT venture fund called Andreessen Horowitz. In his opinion, product-market fit is the thing that determines the viability of a startup. Marketer Sean Ellis, the one who “invented” growth hacking, considers product-market fit a key step in building a highly profitable company. Dan Olsen, product management expert and author of Lean Product Playbook, understands PMF as the end result — when the startup finally created a product that has value for consumers. The product meets the real needs of customers and is in an advantageous position in comparison with analogues on the market.
Literally, product-market fit translates as “product-to-market fit.” If we delve into the theory, then PMF can be defined as the presence of a product that meets the needs of a particular market and has value for the consumer. PMF — customer awareness of product value: the consumer will be disappointed if your product suddenly disappears. Achieving product compliance with the market is one of the most important goals for a startup. At the same time, usually no one knows how it can be achieved.
Product-market fit is achieved by creating a value proposition and cannot be born from the minor amendments in a product — for instance, changing a product design or colours, etc. Three PMF components — Client (you know who needs your product), Problem (you solve a client’s specific problem) and Solution (Client is ready to pay for this Solution).
However, you should not stop at this step: user reactions should be studied regularly because competitors also do not stand still and they will create a better analogue of your product at some point. Thus, achieving PMF is a cyclical process consisting of creating/improving a certain value of a product, its scaling, attracting customers and studying their reaction.
I know it when I see it — this statement suits perfectly when it comes to product-market fit measurement. One of the reasons why it is hard to define PMF is that it does not present some specific metric, which you can track via Google Analytics or Yandex. Metric, in some time period, as it is, for instance, in Aha Moment, when the customer gets a profit from your product for the first time. PMF is the state of a product when customers are satisfied with it and recommend it to friends and the business itself. In our case, the startup is growing multiple times. Let’s figure out how to understand that you got to this state. Product-market fit cannot be measured according to some specific rules However, there are some approaches to measure this metric.
The way of achieving product-market fit is not calculated with formulas. However, there is a metric, which signifies how close is your startup to achieve PMF. This is retention — a stage when a client has developed a habit to use a product or service, which your startup offers. A growing customer base is a key indicator that your product has reached PMF. How to use this metric correctly?
First of all, you have to choose the correct time period for tracking: how often a client comes back? If your product is more orientated on a B2C market then the time period for retention tracking will be smaller (from one day to a week), if it is orientated on a B2B market then the time period will be bigger (from a few weeks to a few months). Secondly, it is necessary to identify the reason: why does your client come back? Why are you valuable to him? Question yourself: which mechanisms will help me to bring back more users? How can I use them for a product advertising? Knowing the cyclical nature of regular customers’ appeals to the product and their goals — why they do this — you can increase your customer base since satisfied users will subsequently recommend you to their friends, as well as shorten the customer return period.
Actually, any successful project can be taken as an illustration of product-market fit. For example, one year after launch, Uber received one driver for every seven trips, and no marketing expenses were spent; Instagram received 25,000 signups on its first day; Dropbox moved from 5,000 to 75,000 registrations to the waitlist in one day after launching the beta video. we’ll look at a few real cases below. Basically, how companies achieved their PMF.
1. Touchstone Semiconductor: winning the clients’ loyalty
Touchstone Semiconductor is an American company — manufacturer of integral micro scheme components for industrial control, household appliances, medical appliances, telecommunications. This is an example of how they have achieved PMF. As soon as the production began, the company set a goal to convey the information that the product already exists and can solve their specific problem to the maximum number of potential users . Google Adwords was chosen as a tool, and thanks to a well-tuned advertising campaign, traffic to the site increased significantly. Task No 1 — informing potential customers — has been solved successfully. The next step was the conversion of site visitors to product users. The latter could be obtained for free by placing an order on the site and providing some personal information about yourself as a user. The reaction of real users was more than positive. So the company received its first customers — Problem number 2 has also been solved. As a result, over time, as the product met customers’ needs and solved their problem perfectly, it achieved PMF. Thanks to a competent product and marketing strategy of the company, the project continues to develop and maintain its PMF.
2. Airbnb: work with referrals
In order to achieve PMF, the famous Airbnb booking company has come up with a special referral program with a step-by-step analysis of users’ actions. The essence of the program was that all users who recommended the service received $25 in their account after paying for the reservation. The same amount was credited to the account of those who were invited to the application by the previous users. As a result of the campaign, the number of users has grown multiple times.
3. Slack: personalized advertising campaigns
Slack is one of the leaders among apps for teamwork, also Trello and Basecamp competitor. It is successful at maintaining the PMF thanks to the segmentation of users. So, they are divided into 3 big groups:
The Slack team carries out a regular analysis of who uses the program, defining what functionality is lacking for regular customers. They offer updates and additional features to the first group, to the second and third groups — the benefits of the application in comparison with competitive programs.
Imagine the situation: customers like your product, they are ready to recommend it to friends and acquaintances, respectively, you have good retention and NPS. However, the expected significant growth of the project is not observed. You may have truly achieved PMF, but your market is not large enough for the product. In order to avoid this, analyse your market at the very beginning of the project. Is it big enough? Won’t you find yourself in the situation of a dealer who opened a car sales office on a tiny island?
Another situation: you and the whole startup team has a great mood. You have invested in promoting your product and — cheers! — Traffic to landing pages has increased, potential customers are actively registering. Can you assume that you have almost achieved PMF? I hasten to disappoint you, but no. Traffic, the number of registrations, orders for free product samples are weak metrics for product-market fit. They do not guarantee that the user will eventually buy your product and become a regular customer or will recommend you to friends.
Every startup strives to achieve product-market fit regardlessly whether it develops special methods for this or just perfectly analyses the market. Actually, the path to PMF begins with the latter: you study your market and your customers, their problems and then make your product in a way that it maximally corresponds to the market and solves customer problems. PMF is not a metric and not a specific moment, it is a state when the market started to “like your product”. Product-market fit is the basis for hyper-growth of the product, therefore the main factors indicating that you have reached this state are significant growth in sales and, accordingly revenue, satisfied customers who are ready to use your product regularly.
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1. What is PMF entrepreneurship? |
2. How can entrepreneurs determine if they have achieved PMF? |
3. Why is PMF important for entrepreneurs? |
4. What are the key factors that contribute to achieving PMF? |
5. How can entrepreneurs pivot if they are unable to achieve PMF? |
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