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PMF in Early-Stage Startups: Todd Jackson's Framework for Finding Your First Real Customers
Product-market fit in early-stage startups is different from PMF in scale-stage companies. You have fewer resources, less data, and more uncertainty. Bu...
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Steve Saper
Founder & CEO of PM33. Building the agentic-PM platform and writing about how product management is being remade in the AI era.
PMF in Early-Stage Startups: Todd Jackson's Framework for Finding Your First Real Customers
Product-market fit in early-stage startups is different from PMF in scale-stage companies. You have fewer resources, less data, and more uncertainty. But you also have advantages: speed, flexibility, and the ability to talk directly with every customer.
Todd Jackson, founder of Rapid and formerly at Stripe, has built multiple products from zero to PMF. His insight: early-stage PMF isn't about perfect measurement. It's about customer obsession and rapid iteration.
I agree, however, many early-stage founders waste time optimizing before they've nailed the core problem. They build features, polish UI, and hire sales before they've proven anyone actually needs what they're building.
Here's what Todd has learned: The path to PMF in early-stage startups follows a specific pattern. Get it right early, and scaling becomes straightforward. Skip steps, and you'll chase ghosts for months.
The Four Stages of Early-Stage PMF
Todd breaks early-stage PMF into four distinct stages:
Stage 1: Problem Validation (Weeks 1-4)
Your job is simple: prove the problem is real and people care about solving it.
How:
- Talk to 20-30 people in your target market
- Don't sell. Just listen.
- Ask: "What's your biggest frustration with [domain]?"
- Look for emotional reactions (frustration, anger, urgency)
- Document exact words they use
Success metric: 80%+ of people describe similar frustrations. You should hear the same complaints repeatedly.
Stage 2: Solution Validation (Weeks 5-8)
Now you test whether your solution actually solves the problem.
How:
- Build the minimal version (wireframes, not code)
- Show 10 target customers your solution
- Ask: "Would you use this?"
- Listen to their objections
- Iterate based on feedback
Success metric: 7 out of 10 customers say "Yes, I would use this." Below 70%, iterate more.
Stage 3: Usage Validation (Weeks 9-16)
You give your MVP to real customers and measure actual usage.
How:
- Get 20-30 customers to use your product
- Make it free or heavily discounted
- Track: activation (are they using it?), retention (do they come back?), engagement (how often?)
- Talk to them weekly about their experience
Success metric: 30%+ weekly active users. 50%+ come back after one week.
Stage 4: Willingness to Pay (Weeks 17-24)
Finally, test if customers will actually pay.
How:
- Ask your active users: "Would you pay $X/month for this?"
- Start with a price you think is too low
- Increase gradually
- Track how many say yes at each price point
Success metric: 30%+ of active users willing to pay at a profitable price point.
Once you've hit Stage 4, you've achieved early-stage PMF. Scale becomes a sales and marketing problem.
Todd's Rules for Early-Stage PMF
Based on my experience building products from zero, here are the principles that matter:
Rule 1: Talk to Customers First, Build Second
Most founders want to skip straight to building. Big mistake.
You should spend Week 1 talking to customers before writing a single line of code. You might learn the problem isn't what you thought.
Rule 2: One Segment at a Time
Don't try to serve everyone. Pick one customer segment and obsess over their problem.
Examples:
- Not "marketers," but "B2B SaaS marketers with 5-50 employees"
- Not "developers," but "frontend developers building mobile apps"
Jury's still out on whether you should expand to adjacent segments before achieving PMF. But what we know: narrow focus = faster PMF.
Rule 3: Measure What Matters
Early stage, you can't measure everything. Pick three metrics and obsess:
- Activation: What % of new users complete the key action?
- Retention: What % come back after 7 days?
- Engagement: How often do active users use the product?
Ignore vanity metrics (total users, pageviews). They lie.
Rule 4: Speed > Perfection
Your first version will be wrong. That's okay. Ship it anyway.
You learn more from real customer usage than from 100 design meetings. Ship, measure, iterate. Repeat weekly.
Rule 5: Unit Economics Matter from Day One
You don't need profitability yet. But you do need to understand: Can this business work at scale?
Calculate:
- Customer acquisition cost (CAC)
- Lifetime value (LTV)
- LTV/CAC ratio (target: 3:1 or better)
If your economics don't work at small scale, they won't work at large scale either.
The Biggest Difference: Speed
Early-stage PMF is about speed of iteration. You should complete Stages 1-4 in 6 months max. If you're still searching after 9 months, you're either:
- Solving a problem nobody cares about
- Not iterating fast enough
- Building too much instead of validating
Fix: Cut scope. Get to market faster. Let real customers tell you what matters.
Common Mistakes
Mistake 1: Building Too Much Before Launch
You spend 6 months building the "perfect" product. When you launch, you learn nobody wanted what you built.
Fix: Ship in 6 weeks. Validate in the market, not the office.
Mistake 2: Not Charging Early Enough
You want to grow users first, monetize later. That's backward.
Charging early tells you which customers truly value your product. Free users are cheap signals.
Fix: Charge from day one, even if just $1/month. It filters for real customers.
Mistake 3: Chasing the Wrong Customers
You're gaining users, but the wrong kind. They're not your target segment.
Growth looks good on a chart. But if retention is 5%, you're wasting energy.
Fix: Define your customer segment precisely. Talk to 10 of them deeply before talking to 100 of them broadly.
The 6-Month Early-Stage PMF Plan
Weeks 1-2:
- Define customer segment precisely
- Interview 20 potential customers
- Validate problem exists
Weeks 3-4:
- Sketch solution
- Get feedback from 10 customers
- Refine based on feedback
Weeks 5-6:
- Build MVP (bare minimum)
- Launch to 30 customers
- Measure: activation, retention, engagement
Weeks 7-12:
- Iterate based on metrics
- Talk to customers weekly
- Fix top 3 reasons for churn
- Improve core value
Weeks 13-16:
- Implement payment
- Charge users for first time
- Measure: price sensitivity, willingness to pay
Weeks 17-24:
- Refine pricing
- Optimize unit economics
- Prepare to scale
If you execute this plan tightly, you'll know whether you have PMF by month 6. If not, you'll know what to fix.
Key Takeaways
Early-stage PMF is about rapid validation through four stages:
- Problem: Do customers care? (Weeks 1-4)
- Solution: Does yours work? (Weeks 5-8)
- Usage: Will they actually use it? (Weeks 9-16)
- Monetization: Will they pay? (Weeks 17-24)
Speed matters more than perfection. Measure what counts: activation, retention, engagement. And remember—early-stage PMF is a sprint, not a marathon.