In industries dominated by legacy players for decades, buyers lose the 'muscle' to evaluate new vendors. If you see low initial pull despite a strong value proposition, it may mean you need to educate the market on how to buy again, not that your product is wrong.

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When a business gets high visibility but low conversions, the impulse is to blame the platform or marketing tactic (the 'sink'). However, the real issue is often the core offering—the product, pricing, or value proposition (the 'well'). People obsess over front-end fixes when the back-end is the actual problem.

When introducing a disruptive model, potential partners are hesitant to be the first adopter due to perceived risk. The strategy is to start with small, persistent efforts, normalizing the behavior until the advantages become undeniable. Innovation requires a patient strategy to overcome initial industry inertia.

When launching an innovative product, the cost of educating consumers is a direct hit to margins. Many great products fail not because they are inferior, but because the expense of explaining their value is too high to sustain profitability, a concept described as "education eats margins."

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.

A core investment framework is to distinguish between 'pull' companies, where the market organically and virally demands the product, and 'push' companies that have to force their solution onto the market. The former indicates stronger product-market fit and a higher potential for efficient, scalable growth.