Eve knew they had product-market fit when customers found a bug that let them bypass invite restrictions. Users onboarded their entire firms months ahead of schedule, demonstrating an urgent, unmet need for the product.

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After setting a modest goal of signing 10-20 hotels at their first major conference, Canary Technologies signed over 200 in just eight hours. This massive, unexpected pull from the market served as the definitive, visceral signal that they had achieved strong product-market fit.

Runway's founder knew he had found product-market fit not just from revenue, but when a major customer, AngelList, began running its business on the platform and became an evangelist. Deep adoption by a respected company is a far stronger signal of PMF than early sales traction alone.

Metrics can be misleading. The founder's true "aha" moment for product-market fit came from solving a complex, real-world problem posed by a skeptical expert during a live demo. When the product solved in seconds what took the customer's team two weeks, it provided undeniable proof of value in a high-stakes environment.

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.

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.

Hux's founder measures success not just by retention, but by the passion of retained users. When users start writing in daily, angrily demanding bug fixes, it's a strong positive signal. It means the product has become so essential to their routine that they care deeply about its improvement.

In the early days, Canary's pitch received mixed reactions. However, the strong, visceral "I need this now" response from a few customers was a more valuable signal of product-market fit than getting a polite "that's cool" from everyone. This validates the "10 true fans" principle in B2B.

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 unambiguous signal of Product-Market Fit (PMF) isn't a magic number in your analytics. It's when customer pull becomes so strong that it breaks your supply chain, logistics, and team capacity, forcing uncontrollable growth even without marketing spend.