Product-market fit

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Product-market fit, also known as product/market fit, is the degree to which a product satisfies a strong market demand.

Product-market fit has been defined by its inventor as "a unique product offering that people desperately want."[1] It is a first step to building a successful venture in which the company meets early adopters, gathers feedback and gauges interest in its product(s).

History[edit]

According to Benchmark Capital co-founder Andy Rachleff, Sequoia Capital founder Don Valentine developed the thinking behind product-market fit,[2] but it was Andy who first put a name to it.[3] Venture capitalist Marc Andreessen of Andreessen Horowitz would later popularize the term in the mid-2000's. Andreesen credits Rachleff for the concept, referring to the idea as Rachleff's Corollary of Startup Success: "The only thing that matters is getting to product/market fit."[4][5]

Marc Andreessen defined the term as follows: "Product/market fit means being in a good market with a product that can satisfy that market."[6][7] Many people interpret product-market fit as creating a so called minimum viable product that addresses and solves a problem or need that exists.

Steve Blank referred to the concept of product-market fit as a step in between customer validation (step #2 in his book The Four Steps to the Epiphany) and customer creation (step #3).[8][9][10]

Interpretations[edit]

Product-market fit might be interpreted in terms of Alexander Osterwalder's Business Model Canvas paradigm as comprising value proposition, customer segment, relationship, and channel. Achieving product-market fit implies these are set without requiring additional changes or pivots.

Popular metrics[edit]

The 40% rule[edit]

One metric for product-market fit is if at least 40% percent of surveyed customers indicate that they would be "very disappointed" if they no longer have access to a particular product or service. Alternatively, it could be measured by having at least 40% of surveyed customers considering the product or service as "must have". Sean Ellis is noted for popularizing this heuristic after examining many startups.[citation needed][according to whom?]

Analytics metrics[edit]

There are five metrics any online business can measure to empirically verify if they achieved product-market fit. They are 1. Bounce Rate, 2. Time on Site, 3. Pages per Visit, 4. Returning Visitors, 5. Customer Lifetime Value.[citation needed] Low bounce rates means a visitor's expectation is being met. High Time on Site and Pages per Visit indicate that the experience of the user is satisfactory. High Returning Visitor reflects the lasting impact a product has on their customers, causing them to come back, and Customer Lifetime Value measures the profitability each customer brings to the company. If these 5 metrics are above average and your 40% rule is met, you'll know you have a product-market fit company.[according to whom?]

Common mistakes[edit]

Andy Rachleff says there are four common product-market fit mistakes:[11]

  1. Prioritizing well-known customers over desperate ones: “The counterintuitive thing is that you should not go after the big market first. It's the exact opposite of what everyone tells you.”
  2. Iterating on the what instead of the who: If a product doesn't resonate with an audience, founders often want to change the product. But Andy says founders should instead focus on shifting the customer they’re creating the product for.
  3. Pursuing growth before value: Many founders are tempted to engineer growth with ads and other scale tactics too early, but that artificial growth can cause them to wrongly assume they've truly found product-market fit.[12]
  4. Slowing down on innovation: Product-market fit is a process, not a one-time achievement. As markets, customers, and competitors shift, product-market fit must be continually reassessed and pursued.


It is important to differentiate between product-market fit and problem/solution fit when measuring a company's customer base. More specifically, when gauging a customer's desire, companies need to be sure they are measuring desire for the product or service—not just for a solution. Misinterpreting customers' desire for a solution as desire for a company's product or service will end up being a false positive for product-market fit.

Product-market fit is not binary. For a fledgling startup, a minimum degree of product-market fit will not be adequate in order to achieve market traction and success. Rather, what is actually required is a high degree of product-market fit, or extreme product-market fit.[citation needed]

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ "How to find product market fit: the counterintuitive secrets". www.unusual.vc. Retrieved 2023-06-27.
  2. ^ "Andy Rachleff on "How to Know If You've Got Product Market Fit"". Retrieved 24 September 2020.
  3. ^ Andy Rachleff on coining the term product-market fit, 2022-10-31, event occurs at 3:58, retrieved 2022-11-08
  4. ^ Andreesen, Marc. "Part 4: The only thing that matters". Pmarchive. Retrieved 24 September 2020.
  5. ^ Griffen, Tren. "12 Things about Product-Market Fit". Andreessen Horowitz. Retrieved 24 September 2020.
  6. ^ Andreesen, Marc. "Product/Market Fit - EE204". Stanford University. Retrieved 6 December 2018.
  7. ^ Kenny McQuarrie. "Evaluating Product-Market-Fit".
  8. ^ Steve Blank. "The Four Step to the Epiphany - 2006" (PDF).
  9. ^ Blank, Steve and Dorf, Bob (2012). The Startup Owner's Manual, K&S Ranch (publishers), ISBN 978-0984999309
  10. ^ Blank, Steve (May 2013). Why the Lean Start-Up Changes Everything, in Harvard Business Review
  11. ^ "How to find product market fit: the counterintuitive secrets". www.unusual.vc. Retrieved 2023-06-27.
  12. ^ Andy Rachleff from VC to Entrepreneur, 2023-03-22, retrieved 2023-06-27