Product-Market Fit: What it is, and, how to achieve it!
This writeup is a summary of a presentation made by me to Lead Tribe cohort II founders on 23 April 2022. The presentation covered why Product-Market Fit (PMF) matters, what it really means and the mechanics of PMF and achieving it. Getting to PMF is akin to an art, and the presentation detailed the key iterations and triangulations needed to perfect this art.?Please feel free to share your feedback or questions in the comments below. I will do my best to reply to each of them!
I. Why Product-Market Fit (PMF) matters?
Marc Andressen formally introduced the concept of Product-Market Fit (or PMF as it is popularly referred to) to the startup ecosystem in 2005 in a post titled ‘The Only Thing That Matters ’ stating that, for a company, the only thing that matters is getting to PMF. It is still considered to as one of the seminal pieces of writing on the topic.
Marc Andreessen’s definition is qualitative. Subsequent definitions have reiterated this aspect of PMF as hard to define, but you know it when you see it. Elizabeth Yin of Hustle Fund referenced this thinking in one of her tweets .
Andy Rachleff, the founder of the Benchmark fund as well as Wealthfront, is credited by Marc Andressen as coming up with the concept of Product-Market Fit. Rachleff says “I think that the single most important issue for an entrepreneur to succeed is to find product market fit. To me product-market fit trumps execution. You might execute really well but if the dogs don't want to eat the dog food you're going to fail. Conversely, you might be terrible at execution but if the customers want to buy your product you'll be a great success.”
Why does PMF matter? PMF is a concept defined by VCs, and over the history of venture, a convention has emerged that Series A is linked to the achievement of PMF. PMF has emerged as a gating mechanism for Series A. This is one important factor. The other factor is that without PMF, startups, even the ones that receive Series A funding, sputter and die from an inability to scale. PMF is the first point of scale. Hence, it matters.
~10% of startups get funding (below chart from the Bain Venture Capital Report 2021) and of these only 30% get Series A, traditionally the indication of PMF. Effectively 10% of startups get funding but only ~3% of startups get PMF.
A good way to understand this is by viewing different stages of financing as each covering a certain risk. See graphic below.
To clarify
PMF matters because you need to make sure that before you throw in more money, you know you have acquired the right customers. This is why early stage VCs are concerned about user acquisition strategies like cashback, which can lead to the wrong kind of customers coming on board. PMF means determining genuine demand for the product and ensuring you have a systematic way of tapping this demand.?
Before you go big, you need to get it right. This is what PMF is. It is a way of assuring yourself and your investors of the appeal of the product as well as a plan for growing it systematically. Post PMF, it is effectively a rinse and repeat strategy. PMF is effectively the nailing before the scaling.?
II. Defining PMF
If you find that a few customers are satisfied or even delighted with the product, that’s not PMF; rather it is Product to Problem Fit or PPF. PMF on the contrary demands that multiple people are satisfied. So you attain PPF and then PMF.?
Source of image: ‘Corporate Venturing’ by Dado Van Peteghem and Omar Mohout.
Or rather you can see PMF as composed of two parts - the first is Product to Problem Fit (PPF) and then GTM (Go To Market) to Scale Fit.
Caveat: Marketplaces, SaasTra and media plays have two-stage PMF. For example, in the media business, PMF has to be effected twice, first for user acquisition, as you capture customers through content, and then monetization when you sell it to advertisers. So PMF has to be achieved twice here. Priority should be given to acquiring customers; only then should you focus on monetisation.
Typically in Marketplaces, there are two sides (buyers and sellers; users and providers etc). One is easier than the other to acquire and scale. It is an art to figure out which is harder to scale. Sometimes it is the one that pays though not always. For example, in Uber and Urban Company, the supply side is harder to scale. As a first principle, the side which has more options tends to be harder to scale.
For marketplaces, PMF is figuring a repeatable plan for onboarding the harder side. For example, imagine a daycare marketplace. Parents are desperate for day care centers (they become the easier side), but these centres are harder to onboard and scale (and this is the harder side). So you need a working playbook for acquisition of daycare centres. Monetisation is the second part, though it can't lag too far behind.
Some signs of PMF are?
Broadly there are qualitative and quantitative definitions of PMF. Some popular definitions.
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A great product, and significant traction are at the heart of PMF. While they are essential, they are in themselves not sufficient. The following are equally important.
Basis the above, I propose the following definition of PMF: ‘Scalable GTM (Go to Market), enabling Predictable, Repeatable, Unit-Positive (or CM2 positive) Customer Acquisition.’
Here is how I define each of those underlined terms -
There is a popular joke in the startup world that the first time founder thinks product while the second time founder thinks distribution. A better way to put this is that the best founders do not think of product and distribution in isolation; rather they think of product and distribution as joined in the hip. They think about distribution at the time of product development. Importantly they look to identify a proprietary or untapped distribution channel. One where they have a distinct advantage, and one where channel saturation is unlikely (or at least some time away).
Let us understand GTM or Go to Market better.
Understanding PMF through the well analogy.
III. Achieving PMF: What to do, what not to do
Seek the largest market for your product, not the best product for a market. As Andy Rachleff says “Most successful new markets begin with a market-sensitive technologist recognizing an inflection point that enables a new kind of product. The next question becomes: who wants to buy my product? Start with the product and search for the market as opposed to vice versa. The truly great technology companies are the… result of an inflection point in technology that allows the founder to conceive a new kind of product. The question then is, “Who wants to buy my product?” So you start with the product and try to find the market as opposed to starting with the market to find the product.”
First, arrive at the persona, then the channel to reach them, and the message that will help you describe the product.
If something is not working, then change the message. Then channel (which is harder). Then and only if that is not working should you consider changing the? persona you are trying to reach. With this your entire GTM also changes. Do note that product and persona are somewhat integrally linked.With the change in persona, the product configuration and feature set may have to change too.
How should the founder think through his / her role?
Two frameworks that founders should keep in mind in the journey to PMF.
First is the Congruent Square. Congruent Square says there has be a broad alignment / congruency in the product you are taking to market, the team that is taking it there, the consumers / market that will consume your product and finally, the approach you are taking to get the products in the hands of the customer (Go To Market or GTM) - the four mechanisms of the startup org / machine. More details in this post .
The second framework is around the triangulation between business goals, metrics and incentives that are needed to drive behaviour towards desired outcomes.
Supportings
This writeup is based on a presentation made to Lead Tribe cohort II founders on 23 April 2022. Link to the presentation + additional readings here .
Acknowledgements
A special thanks to Amal Vats for putting together the presentation, and for Disha Sharma who helped edit and shape this note.
Fractional Leader I Strategic Advisor I Consultant I Executive Board Member ??
1 年Fantastic article and speaks to why I love doing what I do! Most the advice certainly speaks to startups however large companies should take note of this process as they often struggle to move to more transformative markets! Thanks for sharing the slides!
Internal Auditor- Environmental Compliance(Marine)
1 年Insightful as always1
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