I’m about six months into my first real venture, and I’m starting to hit a wall with my initial product roadmap. My early adopters are asking for features that would take us in a totally different direction than I’d planned, and I’m honestly torn between sticking to my vision or pivoting to follow this early demand. I keep hearing about product-market fit, but how do you know when you’re actually chasing it versus just reacting to every piece of feedback?
I hear you. chasing every new feature can feel like losing the map you drew for your team. product market fit is the lighthouse you want but the fog keeps thickening.
A practical way is to treat product market fit as a signal not a deadline. run tiny tests that preserve your core value and watch if new users stick around after you try a feature.
Maybe the request is not about the product but about a different audience or a different way to reach them. sometimes a shift is about messaging or packaging rather than a full pivot.
Maybe the framing is wrong the question might be who is this for rather than what feature is next and that shift can keep your original vision intact while testing a new path.
I suspect product market fit fantasies can sound neat but the real test is whether paying customers rise and churn stays low after you release the next version not after you chase a hype cycle.
Think of your roadmap like a scene list with a few high stakes moments the feedback loop you build can reveal what readers care about rather than what they say they want in the moment.
Retention and engagement metrics can feel boring yet they tell you more than a flashy feature list and that may redefine what growth means in practice.