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Reflect Orbital's market for "sunlight at night" didn't exist. They had to talk to thousands of users to help them imagine what they could do with it. This process actively co-created the market, culminating in 264,000 applications for sunlight.

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The biggest opportunities often address needs that don't appear on a customer's "calendar" because no good solution exists. Products like Lovable for web design unlock latent demand by finally providing an accessible way to accomplish a goal that was previously too difficult.

True innovation requires building features customers don't yet know to ask for. Bloomberg's success came from providing functionality users hadn't imagined was possible with computers, rather than just reacting to their explicit requests.

Successful startups tap into organic customer needs that already exist—a 'pull' from the market. In contrast, 'conjuring demand' involves a founder trying to convince a market of a new worldview without prior evidence. This is a much harder and less reliable path to building a business.

Some of the largest markets address needs customers have completely given up on because no viable solution existed. This powerful latent demand is invisible if you only observe current activities. You must uncover the high-priority goals on their mental "to-do list" that they have quit trying to achieve.

The biggest market opportunities often exist in solving problems consumers have learned to live with. Success requires educating the market that a solution is possible, rather than capturing existing search demand for a known product type.

When a startup finally uncovers true customer demand, their existing product, built on assumptions, is often the wrong shape. The most common pattern is for these startups to burn down their initial codebase and rebuild from scratch to perfectly fit the newly discovered demand.

This reframes the fundamental goal of a startup away from a supply-side focus (building) to a demand-side focus (discovery). The market's unmet need is the force that pulls a company and its product into existence, not the other way around.

Your audience will dictate your product roadmap if you listen. Porterfield's evolution was a direct response to customer feedback. They finished her webinar course and asked what to sell. They finished her product course and asked how to market it. The path to her flagship product was paved with their questions.

The strongest signal of product-market fit wasn't just sales. It was when early pre-sale customers started explaining how the doorbell would serve as a security device—the core, unmarketed vision. This confirmed that the market instinctively understood the product's deeper value proposition.

To find PMF, founders should embed themselves with the most discerning, representative buyer they can find. The goal is to live in their world, understand their mental model, and uncover the non-obvious points of friction that consensus software misses.