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5 Pillars of Mktg Success - 1. Product-Market Fit: How to Know You're Not Building Crap

Your brilliant idea? It might be garbage. Harsh, but true. Product-market fit isn't a nice-to-have, it's do-or-die. Here's how to nail it without breaking the bank.

Why Product-Market Fit Matters
Imagine opening a steakhouse in a vegan commune. That's what launching without product-market fit is like. You're dead before you start.

How to Find Product-Market Fit (Without Burning Cash)

  1. Talk to Real Humans (Not Just Your Mom)
    > Target: 100 potential customers. Minimum.
    > Tools: Google Forms, TypeForm. They're free, so no excuses.
    > Ask: What keeps them up at night? What solutions have they tried?
    > Listen: Like your startup's life depends on it. Because it does.


  2. Stalk Your Competition (Legally)
    > Use free tools like SimilarWeb to see where their traffic comes from.
    > Read their reviews. All of them. Especially the bad ones.
    > Find the gaps. That's your opportunity.


  3. Build a Minimum Viable Product (MVP)
    > It should solve ONE problem. Just one.
    > It doesn't need to be pretty. It needs to work.
    > Get it out fast. Perfect is the enemy of launched.


  4. Get Feedback, Rinse, Repeat
    > Launch your MVP to early adopters.
    > Gather feedback obsessively.
    > Iterate quickly. If it's not working, pivot.


  5. Measure What Matters
    > Retention: Are people coming back?
    > Engagement: How often are they using it?
    > Referral: Are they telling others?


The "Oh Shit" Moment
You'll know you've hit product-market fit when:
> Customers get angry if you take your product away.
> You're growing through word-of-mouth.
> You're making money without trying too hard.

Bottom Line
Finding product-market fit is hard work. It's messy. It's frustrating. But it's the foundation of everything else. Skip this, and you're building a house of cards.

Remember: It's better to be loved by a few than liked by many. Find your niche, solve their problem better than anyone else, and growth will follow.


Gwen Myslinskiposted 2 months ago

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