A pivot is a structured course correction in product, customer, business model, or technology strategy in response to learning from the market. It is made deliberately rather than by drift, and aimed at preserving what's working while changing what's not. It was popularized by Eric Ries in The Lean Startup (2011) and adopted as standard vocabulary across modern startup work. It is one of the most misused words in the founder lexicon because every change gets called a pivot regardless of whether it's actually structural.
Ries identified ten specific pivot types, each describing a different dimension of change: zoom-in (a single feature becomes the whole product), zoom-out (the original product becomes a single feature of a bigger one), customer-segment (same product, different customer than originally targeted), customer-need (same customer, different problem solved), platform (move from app to platform or vice versa), business-architecture (high-margin/low-volume vs low-margin/high-volume), value-capture (different revenue or pricing model), engine-of-growth (viral, sticky, or paid growth model), channel (different distribution path), and technology (same problem, different technical approach). Famous examples: Slack pivoted from Glitch, a multiplayer game, when the team realized the internal chat tool they built was more valuable than the game. Instagram pivoted from Burbn, a location-based check-in app with too many features, by zooming in on the photo-filter component. YouTube pivoted from a video-dating site to general video sharing. Twitter spun out of Odeo when the podcasting market got eaten by Apple. The defining property of a pivot versus a quit: the team preserves the validated learning from the original effort and applies it to a new direction. Quitting throws everything out and starts over. A well-timed pivot is one of the more reliable ways to dodge the patterns in Why Startups Fail.
The word "pivot" gets thrown around as cover for two completely different things: a real structural change in strategy based on hard-earned customer evidence, and a panicked thrash because the original idea isn't working fast enough. The first is what The Lean Startup meant and what produced Slack, Instagram, YouTube, and Twitter. The second is what kills most startups that "pivot" three times in eighteen months. A real pivot starts with "we've learned X" and changes one dimension to test what X implies. A fake pivot starts with "this isn't working" and changes everything at once. If you can't say in one sentence what you've learned and what dimension you're changing, you're not pivoting, you're just panicking.
What founders get wrong: Pivoting too soon, before the original direction has produced enough learning to know what to pivot toward. A pivot informed by one quarter of soft traction is a guess; a pivot informed by 18 months of customer evidence is a strategy. Pivoting on insufficient data is just expensive direction-shuffling.
Related: Product Market Fit · Product Strategy · Product Discovery · MVP · Product Management
What is a pivot in business?
A structured course correction in product, customer, business model, or technology strategy in response to learning from the market, made deliberately rather than by drift, and aimed at preserving what's working while changing what's not. Popularized by Eric Ries in The Lean Startup (2011).
What are examples of successful pivots?
Slack pivoted from Glitch (a multiplayer game). Instagram pivoted from Burbn (a location check-in app) by zooming in on photo filters. YouTube pivoted from a video-dating site. Twitter spun out of Odeo when Apple ate the podcasting market. Each preserved validated learning while changing one strategic dimension.
What is the difference between a pivot and quitting?
A pivot preserves the validated learning from the original effort and applies it to a new direction; one strategic dimension changes while the rest of the team's knowledge transfers. Quitting throws everything out and starts over. If a "pivot" doesn't reuse what was learned, it isn't a pivot.
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