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Product-Market Fit Measurement: The Complete Framework from Sean Ellis
Product-market fit is the moment when your product solves a real customer problem so well that customers keep using it, recommend it, and are willing to...
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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.
Product-Market Fit Measurement: The Complete Framework from Sean Ellis
Product-market fit is the moment when your product solves a real customer problem so well that customers keep using it, recommend it, and are willing to pay for it. But how do you measure it?
Sean Ellis, who coined the term "product-market fit" and built several companies to scale, has developed the most practical framework for measuring PMF. It's not about vanity metrics. It's about signals that prove customers can't live without your product.
I agree, however, most teams confuse growth with product-market fit. Just because you're growing fast doesn't mean you've achieved PMF. You might be riding a marketing wave that's unsustainable.
Here's what we learned: The best indicator of product-market fit is not revenue. It's the answer to one question: "How disappointed would you be if you could no longer use this product?"
What Is Product-Market Fit?
Product-market fit occurs when your product meets a strong market demand. Customers use it regularly, retain it, and expand usage. The company experiences sustainable growth.
It's the inflection point between product development (finding the right solution) and company scaling (selling that solution).
Sean has identified three stages of product-market fit:
Stage 1: Initial Fit
You've found a customer segment that needs what you built. They're using it regularly. Retention is positive. But growth is still manual (you're doing most of the selling).
Stage 2: Repeatable Fit
You've proven the sales process can be repeated. Customers acquire themselves through word-of-mouth or inbound. Retention holds at 50%+ monthly for cohorts. Growth accelerates.
Stage 3: Scalable Fit
Your unit economics work. Customer acquisition cost divided by lifetime value is profitable. You can scale spend and grow proportionally. This is when venture capital becomes valuable.
The PMF Measurement Framework
Sean's framework uses four core metrics:
Metric 1: The Desirability Question
"How disappointed would you be if you could no longer use this product?"
Options:
- Very disappointed (40%+)
- Somewhat disappointed (25-40%)
- Not disappointed (0-25%)
When 40%+ answer "very disappointed," you've likely achieved PMF. Below 30%, you haven't.
Metric 2: Retention Cohorts
Track what percentage of users from each cohort (acquired in the same month) are still active 12 months later.
Target:
- 30-40%+ retention = strong PMF signal
- 10-30% = might still achieve PMF
- Below 10% = no PMF yet
Metric 3: Growth Rate
Measure month-over-month active user growth.
Target:
- 5-7% MoM growth = sustainable
- 10%+ MoM growth = strong PMF
- Below 5% = need to optimize
Metric 4: NPS Score
Net Promoter Score (surveys asking "How likely to recommend on 0-10 scale?").
Target:
- 50+ NPS = strong PMF signal
- 30-50 = approaching PMF
- Below 30 = need significant work
Common Mistakes in Measuring PMF
Mistake 1: Using Revenue as Your Primary Metric
Revenue can be misleading. You might have high revenue but low retention (churn hiding behind sales).
Sean has seen companies with $10M ARR that haven't achieved PMF. They're just good at sales.
Fix: Lead with retention and desirability metrics. Revenue follows PMF, not the other way around.
Mistake 2: Measuring Too Early
You need a meaningful sample size before measuring PMF. If you've only shipped to 50 users, measuring desirability is premature.
Wait until you have 100+ active users, ideally 500+.
Mistake 3: Ignoring Segment-Level Fit
PMF isn't binary. You might have achieved fit for one customer segment (enterprise) but not another (SMB).
Measure PMF by segment. One segment might have 70% desirability while another has 20%. That tells you where to focus.
How to Improve Your PMF Metrics
Once you've measured and found gaps, here's how to improve:
Improving Desirability
- Talk to your lowest performers: Why aren't they very disappointed?
- Identify the core outcome they value most
- Deepen that one outcome
- Measure again
Improving Retention
- Analyze churn: When do users leave?
- Track feature adoption: Which features correlate with retention?
- Implement onboarding improvements
- Create retention loops (automation, notifications, community)
Improving Growth Rate
- Don't optimize growth until you've nailed retention
- Once retention is solid, invest in acquisition
- Prioritize word-of-mouth channels (they indicate true PMF)
- Measure acquisition cost vs. lifetime value
The Timeline to PMF
Based on my experience working with early-stage companies:
- Months 1-3: Build MVP, get first 50 users, measure baseline metrics
- Months 4-6: Improve core value, target one customer segment, hit 40% desirability
- Months 7-9: Expand within that segment, achieve 30%+ retention
- Months 10-12: Scale carefully, maintain unit economics
Jury's still out on whether this timeline applies to all categories. Marketplaces and B2C products might be faster. Enterprise B2B might take longer.
Key Takeaways
Product-market fit is measurable. It's not a feeling. It's not revenue. It's the answer to: "Would customers be very disappointed if they lost this?"
Measure it with:
- Desirability survey (target: 40%+)
- Retention cohorts (target: 30%+)
- Growth rate (target: 5-7% MoM minimum)
- NPS (target: 50+)
Improve it by deepening core value, understanding churn, and focusing on one segment first.