Luke a Pro

Luke Sun

Developer & Marketer

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Scenario 8: When Marketing Can't Save the Product — PMF Failure

| , 3 minutes reading.

1. The Situation

  • Role: Marketing Co-founder.
  • Product: A geeky “AI Air Monitor” that predicts indoor smells. Price $199.
  • Status: 3 months, 50 creative tests, targeting everyone from “Allergy Moms” to “Pet Owners.”
  • Result: High CTR (people think it’s cool), decent Add-to-Cart, but abysmal Conversion Rate. You burned half the company’s cash.

2. Constraints

  1. Founder’s Ego: The technical founder believes the product is perfect and “users just need education.” He wants a more “emotional” video.
  2. Sunk Cost: 1 year of R&D, 3 months of marketing. Quitting now means zero return.
  3. Marketer’s Pride: You feel that if you were good enough, you could sell ice to Eskimos. You fear admitting “I can’t.”

3. Strategy Design

You face a choice about professional integrity:

  • Option A: Persevere. Blame the creative. Ask for more budget to shoot a “Brand Film” to cover the lack of utility with emotion.
  • Option B: Kill. Tell the team: “Marketing has done its job. The market doesn’t want this.”

The Correct Strategy: Negative Validation

Stop testing “How to sell.” Test “Why they don’t buy.”

  1. The Price Barrier: Remove all discounts. If it doesn’t sell at full price, it’s not “too expensive”; it’s “useless.”
  2. Deep Interviews: Call the 100 people who added to cart but didn’t buy. Don’t ask “Why not?” Ask “What are you using instead?”
  3. The Death Line: Allocate the last $2,000. If CPA > 50% of Margin, shut it down immediately.

4. Simulation

Week 1: The Last Dance

  • Action: Shot the emotional video the founder wanted.
  • Feedback: Comments say “Cool video!” People share it.
  • Truth: Zero orders.

Week 2: The Wake-up Call

  • Discovery: You called 10 users.
  • User Quote: “It’s cool, but I have a $20 Xiaomi purifier. It shows air quality too. I don’t need AI to ‘predict’ smells; if it smells, I open the window.”
  • Decision Point: You realize it’s a ‘Fake Need’. You are solving a 0problem(openingawindow)witha0 problem (opening a window) with a199 solution.

Week 3: The Surrender

  • Action: You play the recording in the weekly meeting. You withstand the founder’s anger and order the shutdown of all ads.
  • Conclusion: Marketing fulfilled its mission—it proved the product is not needed.

5. Debrief

  1. Marketing is an Amplifier, not a Savior: If No PMF, marketing just burns cash faster.
  2. “Cool” ≠ “Buy”: High CTR only means curiosity. Curiosity is free; budget is expensive.
  3. The Courage to Quit: A top marketer knows not just how to win, but when to admit the game is unwinnable.

The Cold Reality: You can sell an “expensive” product. You can sell a “plainly packaged” product. But you can never sell a product “nobody needs.” Admitting PMF failure is not shame; continuing to burn money on a dead horse is.