When testing a new, potentially higher-value customer segment, the single most important data point to validate is revenue retention. Focus initial efforts on confirming that new customers reorder quickly, as this proves the long-term viability and stacking revenue model of the new market.
While doubling down on a proven strategy is usually wise, this rule can be broken when a new market offers exponentially greater (e.g., 100x) value per customer for the same operational effort. The potential upside is too significant to ignore, justifying the risk of a strategic test.
Marketers often struggle to find a direct ROI for trust-building activities. The reality is there is no simple framework. Trust is the foundation for any B2B relationship; without it, no commercial success is possible. Therefore, metrics like revenue, renewals, and customer growth are the most direct indicators of trust.
Everyone obsesses over Net Revenue Retention (NRR), but Gross Revenue Retention (GRR) is the real indicator of product health. GRR tells you if customers like your product enough to stay, period. A low GRR signals a core problem that expansion revenue in NRR might be masking.
Founders often mistake $1M ARR for product-market fit. The real milestone is proven repeatability: a predictable way to find and win a specific customer profile who reliably renews and expands. This signal of a scalable business model typically emerges closer to the $5M-$10M ARR mark.
Investors and acquirers pay premiums for predictable revenue, which comes from retaining and upselling existing customers. This "expansion revenue" is a far greater value multiplier than simply acquiring new customers, a metric most founders wrongly prioritize.
To combat renewal fatigue, DaaS vendors must guide customers to a single, measurable business win within the first 60 days. This aggressive timeline forces prioritization of the most tangible use case, creating an "anchor point" of proven value that makes future renewal conversations significantly easier.
Sales are a vanity metric for product-market fit. The real test is having ~25 customers who have successfully implemented your product and achieved the specific ROI promised during the sales process. If you don't have this, you have a product problem, not a go-to-market problem.
Instead of broad surveys, interview 10-12 satisfied customers who signed up in the last few months. Their fresh memory of the problem and evaluation phases provides the most accurate insights into why people truly buy your product, allowing you to find patterns and replicate success.
In subscription or repeat-purchase businesses, the customer relationship begins at the point of sale, it doesn't end. The funnel metaphor is limiting because it ignores the crucial post-acquisition phases of adoption, expansion, and loyalty, where most value is created.
Stop thinking of validation as a one-time step before you build. True validation is an ongoing process that applies to every business decision, from adding a feature to launching a new marketing channel. You are constantly validating until you sell the company.