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Escaping Product Purgatory

Why Everyone Loves It But Nobody Buys

Product Purgatory is when customers genuinely like your product but ultimately don't buy. Founders easily mistake positive feedback for actual validation.

Use the 'Magic Wand Test' to verify real demand: even if completely free with all installation, training, and security issues resolved, if many customers still say 'no,' the product's value doesn't exceed adoption costs (risk, time, change burden).

Even if the Magic Wand Test passes but purchases don't happen, the key is Urgency. Customers always have 1-3 top priorities, and your product may be outside those priorities.

The solution is not 'is it valuable?' but 'who needs it right now?' Narrowing your target to '...and needs it right now' is the key to escaping Product Purgatory.

Execution Steps

1

Run Magic Wand Test โ€” Check if customers would use it even with all barriers removed

2

Identify Urgency โ€” Find situations where product falls within customer top 1-3 priorities

3

Define urgent customer profile โ€” Trigger conditions like regulatory compliance, lawsuit risk, competitor pressure, budget deadlines

4

Establish urgent customer discovery channels โ€” Monitor CEO statements, customer complaint reviews, new hires, industry reports, regulatory changes

5

Reset marketing target โ€” Shift message from "good product" to "product for people who need it right now"

Pros

  • Narrowing target dramatically increases marketing message conversion
  • Even starting from small segment, word-of-mouth effect is expected
  • Early product-market fit (PMF) validation with Magic Wand Test

Cons

  • If urgent customer segment is too small, business viability itself is at risk
  • Urgency-based targeting has high variability depending on market conditions
  • Psychologically difficult to give up positive feedback and focus on narrow target

Use Cases

SaaS product with lots of positive feedback but low conversion B2B with many demo requests but no actual contracts New service with long waitlist but low sign-ups after launch Freemium model where free trial doesn't convert to paid