Glossary • Marketing & Business Leadership
Product-market fit (PMF) is the degree to which a product satisfies a strong market demand. A company achieves product-market fit when its product solves a real problem for a well-defined customer segment — and those customers demonstrate this through repeat usage, low churn, and organic referrals.
The concept was popularized by Marc Andreessen, who defined it as "being in a good market with a product that can satisfy that market." In practice, it's the point where your product, your customer, and the problem you solve all align.
Product-market fit is when your product solves a problem that enough people have, care enough about to pay for, and find your solution clearly better than alternatives — demonstrated by retention, referrals, and organic growth.
You cannot scale a GTM strategy before achieving product-market fit. Pouring marketing spend into acquisition before PMF amplifies churn, not growth. A fractional CMO's first responsibility in an early-stage engagement is to validate PMF — or help the company find it — before scaling demand generation.
Common PMF measurement methods include the Sean Ellis survey (40% threshold of users who'd be 'very disappointed' without the product), Net Promoter Score (NPS), and retention curves. Ultimately, strong PMF shows up in the metrics: low churn, high NRR, and organic growth.
Yes. PMF is segment-specific. A product might have strong PMF with Series A SaaS companies but poor PMF with enterprise. This is why ICP definition is so critical — you need to know which segment you have PMF in before scaling GTM.
After PMF, the focus shifts to scaling the GTM motion: investing in demand generation, building the sales team, optimizing unit economics (CAC, LTV), and expanding into adjacent segments. This is typically when hiring a CMO or fractional CMO becomes a high-priority.
Mark Gabrielli is a Fractional CMO and COO serving B2B companies in healthcare, SaaS, fintech, and beyond. Results in 30 days.
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