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by AndrewKemendo
1017 days ago
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In which case PMF clearly makes marginal difference in the long term And that’s what’s playing out irl- companies that last are ones that keep investors happy The product is fungible and incidental - if you can use other means to force product adoption then PMF is irrelevant |
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And I don't think "keeping investors happy" is the key, either. Plenty of successful founders with unhappy investors.
I'm struggling to see how you could force adoption of a product in a way that matters. The example given was Pebble, who were struggling against Apple. Apple still needed PMF, despite their market dominance. If their product was so bad that it didn't solve the market need, then it would have failed despite their money and effective monopoly. I don't think PMF is irrelevant, it's just not the only necessary thing. You can still fail despite having PMF, but you have to have PMF to succeed.