Markets as Currents: Building Enduring Products & Marketplaces
Sarah Tavel
Partner at Benchmark; Ex-PM at Pinterest
FEATURED EPISODE
Framework
The River Current Metaphor
"Markets aren't bodies of water. They're currents. You want to find where momentum is already flowing, put your plank on the river, and let it pull you forward."
Market momentum matters more than market size
Founder job is easier when you ride existing currents
Without momentum, you build something big & complex to move
Change dynamics reveal where to place your bet
The Hierarchy
Three Levels of Consumer Product Success
3
levels to build endurance
Level 1: Core Action. The one action that defines an active user (pinning on Pinterest, friending on FB, snapping on Snapchat)
Level 2: Retention. Product gets better the more you use it; you have more to lose by leaving
Level 3: Network. User actions create value for others, triggering organic growth & re-engagement loops
Key insight
Focus is brutal. Pick the ONE action that matters. If you optimize for everything, you optimize for nothing.
Marketplace
Happy GMV: The Marketplace Playbook
Happy Path. Map the experience that makes buyers AND sellers want to return
Minimum Viable Happiness. Constrain geography or category to perfect the experience before scaling
The Tipping Point. Reach saturation in your focused market; network effects begin accelerating organic growth
Level Two. Scale the flywheel through things that do scale (product, pricing, supply activation)
Why constraint wins
Postmates started in SF with limited categories. REKKI focused on London restaurants. Etsy began with craft goods. Constraint creates clarity on who you're serving and what happiness looks like.
The REKKI story
Sales team knocked on restaurant doors, showed chefs the app instead of WhatsApp, cornered the supply side. Eventually, network effects took over—suppliers joined to reach restaurants, restaurants adopted to access suppliers.
Retention Secret
Better the More You Use It
Pinterest: Every pin you save trains the algorithm. Your feed becomes more personalized. You accumulate "too much to lose."
Evernote: Thousands of notes means you'll never leave. Search always works. The lock-in is built in.
Clubhouse/Houseparty: Push notification fatigue broke the flywheel. Too many followers = too many alerts = user ignores all.
Product signal
Use Sean Ellis's question: "How disappointed would you be if this product disappeared?" If 40%+ say "very disappointed," you have product-market fit.
Contrarian
What Founders Get Wrong About Growth
✗Go national, launch many categoriesINSTEAD →✓
Pick one city & category. Nail the experience. Scale when happy path is proven & repeatable.
✗Optimize for all metrics equallyINSTEAD →✓
Define the ONE core action. Make all product decisions feed into it. Focus is the founder's job.
✗Marketplace success = more supply + demandINSTEAD →✓
Success = happy buyers repeat without prompting. Build for the happy path, not volume. Happiness drives retention & network effects.
✗NPS tells you if you have product-market fitINSTEAD →✓
Ask: "How disappointed would you be if this disappeared?" 40%+ very disappointed = real fit.