I’ve learned that the fastest route to product-market fit blends ruthless focus, a tight-knit community of power users, and a clear-eyed understanding of founder psychology. As a VP of Product, I’ve seen how aligning strategy and self-awareness creates compounding advantages—especially when you commit to a vertical, build with your most advanced users, and make decisions faster than your market shifts.
Start narrow. Building for a specific customer forces clarity: one ICP, one core job to be done, one measurable outcome. That single-threaded focus removes ambiguity from product discovery, sharpens prioritization, and accelerates iteration. Only after unmistakable pull—retention, compounding usage, and customer-led expansion—do I widen the aperture to a broader customer base.
Clay is a lead-generation software that uses AI to scrape 50+ databases and help companies scale their outbound campaigns. When I evaluate products like this, I look for a crisp vertical wedge (for example, outbound sales teams or growth marketers), a clear “time-to-first-value” path, and strong affordances for advanced workflows. Winning a vertical creates a reliable beachhead for expansion without diluting the core value proposition.
Power users are the engine of product evolution. I actively identify and convene them—by analyzing power-law usage patterns, high-complexity workflows, and frequent integration touches—then invite them into hands-on feedback loops. I’ve found small, recurring sessions where we co-design in Figma and document patterns in Notion to be especially effective. These users don’t just validate; they reveal emergent use cases, inspire templates, and shape the roadmap. The result is a community that evangelizes organically and sets a high bar for everyone else.
Speed is a strategy. I front-load decisions with clear success criteria, kill-switch thresholds, and a cadence of two-to-four-week sprints. The discipline isn’t just “moving fast”—it’s committing to bounded bets, reducing work-in-progress, and measuring outcomes over output. Focus is often misunderstood as doing less; in practice, it’s doing the essential few things completely and letting the data make the hard calls. This mindset unlocks faster iteration cycles and cleaner OKRs that reflect real customer value.
My principles for product-market fit are simple but demanding: undeniable engagement (habitual use without prompts), concentrated love from a specific customer archetype, willingness to endure friction for core value, expansion motions that begin with usage not discounts, and a backlog shaped by customer pull rather than internal aspiration. When these signals converge, you don’t ask, “Do we have PMF?”—you ask, “How do we scale responsibly?”
Founder psychology shapes the product more than most admit. A company is the reflection of its founder’s personality, from appetite for risk to tolerance for ambiguity. I align my own psychology with the business through honest self-inventory, explicit constraints, and a cadence of reflection. I’ve found the life spiral framework helpful to contextualize growth phases, and techniques from Internal Family Systems to reduce reactive decision-making. The outcome is a calmer operating system that scales with the company rather than against it.
Translating this into a customer journey, I design for a sharp “aha” moment within minutes, a guided path to first successful workflow, and a clear unlock that turns a single task into a repeatable motion. From there, I build leverage: templates, automations, and integrations that accelerate outcomes for advanced users while remaining accessible to newcomers. This is how individual success becomes team adoption—and team adoption becomes the basis for expansion.
To ground strategy in practice, I often pair discovery and build cycles with tools that meet teams where they already work: Airtable: https://www.airtable.com/, Clay: https://www.clay.com/, Figma: https://www.figma.com/, Internal Family Systems: https://ifs-institute.com/, NetSuite: https://www.netsuite.com/, Notion: https://www.notion.com, Sailthru: https://www.sailthru.com/. The stack matters less than the behaviors it enables: rapid prototyping, transparent collaboration, and decision trails that survive scale.
If you’re moving from first-time to second-time founder (or leading product through that evolution), the mindset shift is profound: less attachment to ideas, more attachment to evidence; fewer bets, bigger conviction; and a deeper respect for focus as an accelerant. Lean into vertical excellence, invest in your power users, and do the inner work. That’s how you achieve product-market fit—and keep it.












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