I’ve learned the hard way that growth isn’t about dashboards crowded with vanity metrics. When I evaluate whether a product is poised to scale, I start with one question: are new users truly activating? If not, everything else is noise.
"Forget vanity metrics. User activation is the compass that shows if your product or organization is lost or scaling."
When I say user activation, I mean the precise, observable milestone where a new user experiences core product value—often within their first session or first week. That might be launching a first campaign, connecting a CRM integration, or completing the key workflow that makes the product indispensable. Activation rate then becomes my primary KPI, far more meaningful than signups or pageviews because it ties directly to retention, expansion, and long-term revenue.
Why does activation predict scale? Because it’s a leading indicator of sustained product-market fit. High activation correlates with stronger retention curves, higher feature adoption, and healthier unit economics. If activation improves, cohorts decay more slowly and customer value compounds. If activation stalls, no amount of top-of-funnel spend or go-to-market strategy will save you from churn.
Here’s how I operationalize activation. First, I define the activation event from first principles, grounded in our value proposition and product positioning. I pressure-test that definition with real users through product discovery, then codify it as a measurable event so it’s unambiguous and auditable across teams.
Second, I instrument the end-to-end journey. Using a unified analytics platform with tools like Amplitude analytics and Pendo, I track time-to-value, drop-off points, and the exact steps users take before and after the activation milestone. I design experiments with a clear minimum detectable effect (MDE) so A/B testing yields decisions, not debates.
Third, I build onboarding that accelerates value realization. In-app guides, contextual product tours, and thoughtful tooltip design reduce friction while keeping users focused on the critical path to activation. Every element in onboarding earns its place by improving activation rate or shortening time-to-value—otherwise, it goes.
Finally, I align the organization around outcomes, not outputs. I set outcomes vs output OKRs tied to activation, run weekly reviews with empowered product teams and product trios, and ensure our product-led growth motion reinforces the activation moment. This creates a shared language from product to sales to customer success.
When activation rises, the path forward gets clear: retention strengthens, expansion opportunities emerge, and scaling becomes a matter of capacity rather than guesswork. When activation falters, it’s a signal to pause, refine the value narrative, and fix the experience. Either way, activation tells the truth. If you want to build a product that truly scales, make user activation your north star.
Inspired by this post on Product School.












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