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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'.

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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.

Product-market fit isn't a sudden switch but a palpable shift in momentum. As a founder, you feel the change from pushing against the current (hard selling with little traction) to suddenly being pulled by it (easier sales, inbound interest). This directional change in velocity is the clearest signal that you're onto something.

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.

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.

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.

The ultimate validation of product-market fit isn't retention or satisfaction scores, but the percentage of new revenue driven by customer referrals. When 30% or more of your new top-line monthly revenue comes from existing customers recommending your product, you've built something people genuinely love and need.

Founders without product-market fit constantly optimize small things, believing better execution is the key. In contrast, with PMF, solid execution yields disproportionate results. Sales calls close without "Jedi mind tricks" because customers want the product.

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.

Product-Market Fit isn't just any hockey-stick growth. The founder of Jeeves defines it as the moment your target customers—the ones you want to grow with long-term—start coming to you organically. Early growth from non-ideal customers can be a false positive.