skills/by-role/pm/product-market-fit/SKILL.md
Assess and improve product-market fit. Use when the user says "product-market fit", "PMF", "do we have PMF", "why aren't users retaining", "we're not growing", "users aren't sticking", "PMF pyramid", "find our target customer", "are we building for the right person", or wants to diagnose why a product isn't growing or retaining - even if they don't explicitly say "product-market fit".
npx skillsauth add qa-aman/claude-skills product-market-fitInstall this skill globally with one command. Works with Claude Code, Cursor, and Windsurf.
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Based on The Lean Product Playbook by Dan Olsen. Olsen's PMF Pyramid is a structured framework for diagnosing and improving product-market fit. The pyramid has five layers - each layer must be solid before the next one matters. Most teams skip to layer 4 or 5 (features, UX) when the real problem is layer 1 or 2 (wrong customer, wrong need).
The PMF Pyramid (bottom to top):
Who exactly is this product for? Be specific:
If the answer is "everyone" or "anyone who needs X" - the target customer is not defined. Narrow it.
Test: can you describe a specific person by name and context? "A solo founder building their first SaaS product, pre-revenue, doing all support themselves." That's a target customer.
What needs does the target customer have that are not being met well today?
Olsen's importance-satisfaction framework:
These are your opportunities. Build for underserved needs, not just any need.
For the top 2-3 underserved needs: what is your specific claim about how you serve them better?
Format: "For [target customer] who [underserved need], [product name] is [category] that [key benefit]. Unlike [alternatives], we [key differentiator]."
If you can't write this cleanly, the value proposition isn't clear enough to test.
Map current features to underserved needs. For each feature ask:
Remove or deprioritize features that don't map to the top underserved needs.
Does the UX deliver on the value proposition clearly?
Sean Ellis test: survey users with "How would you feel if you could no longer use [product]?"
PMF problems are almost always in layers 1-3, not 4-5. Diagnosis:
1. Optimizing UX before validating the need Bad: Redesigning the UI to improve retention when users are churning because the core need isn't met. Good: Fix layers 1-3 before investing heavily in layers 4-5.
2. Target customer too broad Bad: "Our target customer is small business owners." Good: "Our target customer is solo consultants doing $10-100k/yr who invoice clients manually and lose track of unpaid invoices."
3. Importance-satisfaction done in a meeting Bad: Team guesses importance and satisfaction scores internally. Good: Survey or interview actual target customers for real scores.
4. Chasing the 40% number with the wrong segment Bad: Averaging "very disappointed" scores across all user types. Good: Segment by target customer. 40% among your core segment is the signal that matters.
development
Plan a webinar end-to-end using April Dunford's Obviously Awesome positioning framework to find the topic angle that makes the webinar obviously valuable to the right audience. Produces topic positioning, abstract, speaker brief, registration page, promotion sequence, day-of run-of-show, and post-webinar follow-up. Use when the user asks to plan a webinar, virtual event, online workshop, "we need a webinar on X", host a webinar, online masterclass, or any live virtual event with promotion and follow-up. Reads ICP, services, and brand voice from knowledge/.
development
Write long-form thought leadership articles, opinion pieces, industry POV essays, and CEO/founder bylines using the Made to Stick SUCCESs framework (Chip and Dan Heath). Use when the user asks for a long-form article, executive byline, opinion piece, industry POV, manifesto, "explain our point of view on X", or wants to publish an authority-building piece (1200-2500 words). Reads brand voice and positioning from knowledge/.
development
Plan a monthly content calendar across channels using the Content Marketing Matrix (Dave Chaffey, Smart Insights) - Entertain/Inspire/Educate/Convince. Every post gets a quadrant label. The monthly calendar must hit 40% Educate, 40% Inspire+Convince, 20% Entertain. Produces a week-by-week posting schedule with topics, formats, channels, and asset links. Use when the user says "content calendar", "social calendar", "plan next month's content", "what should we post", "content plan", "editorial calendar", "schedule posts for the month", or wants a structured posting plan for LinkedIn, Twitter, email, or blog. Reads brand voice, ICP, and past learnings from knowledge/.
development
Write SEO-optimized long-form articles targeting specific keywords using the They Ask You Answer Big 5 framework (Marcus Sheridan). Articles are categorized by Big 5 type (Cost, Problems, Versus, Best/Reviews, How-To) and structured accordingly. The "answer first" rule applies to every article. Use when the user asks for an SEO article, blog post for ranking, "rank for keyword X", organic content, search-optimized post, pillar page, or content for organic traffic. Includes keyword targeting, search intent matching, internal linking suggestions, and meta tags.