The term “product-market fit” (i.e. PMF) is used by both VCs and startups. The definition, however, can vary depending on your perspective. For investors, it’s a key metric—allowing you to remove one risk factor and giving you something to measure beyond intuition, personal experience with a beta version, or the length of a waitlist (or some other loose indicator of demand.) As a founder, it gives you the confidence that consumers value your product or service, letting you focus on accelerating growth.
Product-market fit: Does your company have it?
As a core Series A firm, we measure PMF by considering the following:
As an investor, we need to have a high level of confidence that charging or introducing a revenue model does not change the consumer experience or demand. Take a look at Pinterest, for example. Its first years were spent focused on product and user growth. Only after they amassed 100M MAUs in 2015 did they turn to an advertising model.
Engagement is key
Engagement is critical—without this, it’s difficult to build a sound business. And it doesn’t matter how small the engaged group is. If there is recurring, organic engagement and the math on a per unit basis works (or we have confidence that it can work), investors will pay attention. We often make investment decisions by extrapolating from early, limited cohort data. In fact, this stage is our sweet spot. Valuations tend to be (more) reasonable when we are required to extrapolate off of a small base of engaged users. We are also looking at the data driving the engagement. After all, not all customers are created equally; the market you find may not be the one you expect.
Commerce and marketplace businesses
Are people actually spending money to buy the product or service? If so, why? Is it truly a better offering, or are sales driven by a large marketing campaign backed by introductory pricing?
Rally Rd, a NY-based alternative asset platform focused on democratizing access to hard assets through fractionalized ownership, has reached significant adoption with the average age of a customer being 26. Yes, age 26. I was also surprised—thinking the average age would be much higher given the first offering was collectible cars. I realized the company had found product-market fit. However, the market was different (and more interesting) than one would expect: young people looking for alternative assets. This indicated a larger market for fractional ownership of other unique assets such as trading cards, memorabilia, and art.
Software businesses
How quickly are paid and free daily active users growing? How is conversion from free to paid changing over time?
Slack is an incredible software business that found traction early on through significant word of mouth via the development teams at tech companies. The story of its origin is well known. CEO Stewart Butterfield’s original business was focused on developing multiplayer video games. When this did not succeed, he focused on some interesting messaging technology that had arisen out of the ashes of the gaming business. The business instantly found PMF. It only began to spend real marketing dollars to secure large enterprise accounts after it reached a multibillion-dollar valuation and was ubiquitous among major startups worldwide.
The lesson? Serendipity can play a role. You may stumble upon PMF in the most unexpected places.
In the end, finding product-market fit will feel like a “eureka” moment. You’ll know when it happens. First comes fit, then comes real growth.
The term “product-market fit” (i.e. PMF) is used by both VCs and startups. The definition, however, can vary depending on your perspective. For investors, it’s a key metric—allowing you to remove one risk factor and giving you something to measure beyond intuition, personal experience with a beta version, or the length of a waitlist (or some other loose indicator of demand.) As a founder, it gives you the confidence that consumers value your product or service, letting you focus on accelerating growth.
Product-market fit: Does your company have it?
As a core Series A firm, we measure PMF by considering the following:
As an investor, we need to have a high level of confidence that charging or introducing a revenue model does not change the consumer experience or demand. Take a look at Pinterest, for example. Its first years were spent focused on product and user growth. Only after they amassed 100M MAUs in 2015 did they turn to an advertising model.
Engagement is key
Engagement is critical—without this, it’s difficult to build a sound business. And it doesn’t matter how small the engaged group is. If there is recurring, organic engagement and the math on a per unit basis works (or we have confidence that it can work), investors will pay attention. We often make investment decisions by extrapolating from early, limited cohort data. In fact, this stage is our sweet spot. Valuations tend to be (more) reasonable when we are required to extrapolate off of a small base of engaged users. We are also looking at the data driving the engagement. After all, not all customers are created equally; the market you find may not be the one you expect.
Commerce and marketplace businesses
Are people actually spending money to buy the product or service? If so, why? Is it truly a better offering, or are sales driven by a large marketing campaign backed by introductory pricing?
Rally Rd, a NY-based alternative asset platform focused on democratizing access to hard assets through fractionalized ownership, has reached significant adoption with the average age of a customer being 26. Yes, age 26. I was also surprised—thinking the average age would be much higher given the first offering was collectible cars. I realized the company had found product-market fit. However, the market was different (and more interesting) than one would expect: young people looking for alternative assets. This indicated a larger market for fractional ownership of other unique assets such as trading cards, memorabilia, and art.
Software businesses
How quickly are paid and free daily active users growing? How is conversion from free to paid changing over time?
Slack is an incredible software business that found traction early on through significant word of mouth via the development teams at tech companies. The story of its origin is well known. CEO Stewart Butterfield’s original business was focused on developing multiplayer video games. When this did not succeed, he focused on some interesting messaging technology that had arisen out of the ashes of the gaming business. The business instantly found PMF. It only began to spend real marketing dollars to secure large enterprise accounts after it reached a multibillion-dollar valuation and was ubiquitous among major startups worldwide.
The lesson? Serendipity can play a role. You may stumble upon PMF in the most unexpected places.
In the end, finding product-market fit will feel like a “eureka” moment. You’ll know when it happens. First comes fit, then comes real growth.
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