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A startup's evolution is not a linear execution of a plan. It's an "unfolding" process where the pain from misaligned sales (selection pressure) forces you to change one core assumption. This change then ripples through your entire business, forcing it to evolve into a more coherent form that fits the market's "Pull."
Treat your startup not as separate departments (sales, product), but as one cohesive organism. The unifying force is customer "Pull," which acts as an evolutionary selection pressure, shaping every aspect of the business to fit what customers urgently need.
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.
PMF isn't a one-time achievement. Market shifts, like new technology or major events, can render your existing model obsolete. Successful companies must be willing to disrupt themselves and find new PMF to stay relevant.
The idea that startups find product-market fit and then simply scale is a myth. Great companies like Microsoft and Google continuously evolve and reinvent themselves. Lasting success requires ongoing adaptation, not resting on an initial achievement.
Founders often create complex plans and documents to avoid the simple, hard, and uncomfortable task of selling. Just as getting stronger requires consistently lifting heavier weights, finding product-market fit requires consistently doing the core work of talking to customers and trying to sell.
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.
Founders must distinguish between persistence and fighting a losing battle. If you constantly feel like you're pushing a boulder uphill to convince the market, you're on the wrong path. Genuine product-market fit feels like the market is pulling you, and your job is to sprint to keep up.
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.
Scaling a company isn't linear. Founders first achieve Product-Market Fit. The next stage is "Company-Market Fit," building organizational structures for growth. Crucially, they must then cycle back to reinventing the product to stay ahead, rather than just managing the machine they built.
The most successful founders rarely get the solution right on their first attempt. Their strength lies in persistence combined with adaptability. They treat their initial ideas as hypotheses, take in new data, and are willing to change their approach repeatedly to find what works.