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The strongest signal of product-market fit for Artemis came when their first design partners told them they wanted to buy the product before being asked. The product had become so integral to their daily operations that customers initiated the commercial discussion to ensure enterprise-level reliability.
The clearest signal of product-market fit isn't just revenue growth; it's the shift from proactive, outbound sales to reactive, inbound interest. When potential customers start seeking you out, filling forms, and requesting quotes based on reputation and word-of-mouth, you've crossed the chasm from pushing a product to pulling a market.
Product-market fit isn't just growth; it's an extreme market pull where customers buy your product despite its imperfections. The ultimate signal is when deals close quickly and repeatedly, with users happily ignoring missing features because the core value proposition is so urgent and compelling.
Product-market fit is not a single event but a feeling of the market actively pulling you forward. This creates momentum and, crucially, a sense that success is repeatable, not just a series of one-off wins. This magnetism signals you've found a real, scalable need.
The ultimate test of PMF isn't surveys or usage metrics, but how indispensable your product is. If customers don't immediately notice and complain when it's gone, you haven't achieved true dependency. It's a visceral, high-signal test for any founder.
For enterprise startups, product-market fit isn't a gradual metrics climb. It's the moment a highly informed customer, after extensive market research, chooses your solution with unprecedented speed and for a significant contract value. This proves you are the undeniable choice.
You've achieved product-market fit when the market pulls you forward, characterized by growth driven entirely by organic referrals. If your customers are so passionate that they do the selling for you, you've moved beyond just a good idea.
The ultimate signal of product-market fit is when your go-to-market strategy simplifies to 'get a customer in a room with a prospect.' When customers become your most effective sales channel, you have found it, and your team can 'walk away'.
After experiencing numerous lukewarm responses to failed ideas, the intense, urgent demand from a customer for a successful product becomes an undeniable signal. The contrast between a polite 'maybe later' and a frantic 'how do I get this now?' makes true product-market fit impossible to miss.
Product-market fit is confirmed through repetition. For Decagon, it was when the fifth and sixth customers independently described the same core problem, cited the same failed competitors, and expressed immediate willingness to buy, proving a repeatable market need.
The clearest signal of product-market fit was not just customer expansion, but when users who left their jobs immediately requested to buy AppDynamics at their new company. This demonstrated that the product was indispensable to the individual user, not just the organization.