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Why we picked it This is the sharpest answer to your exact question because it refuses to let 'pivot' mean 'any change.' It sorts pivots along one axis (product, use case, market, zoom) and anchors every one of them to the same product/market-fit hypothesis you were already testing, so a move that keeps nothing you built reads as a restart, not a pivot. It also names Ries's original eight (zoom-in, customer segment, technology, channel) so you can point at the specific type your move actually is, and if you cannot find it on the map, that is your answer.

The Taxonomy of the Lean Startup Pivot

From Kromatic Blog by Kromatic (Tristan Kromer) 12 min read

  • A pivot is a structured change to one variable while the rest of your validated learning carries over, not a wholesale reset dressed up as strategy.
  • Zoom-in, customer-segment, and technology pivots each hold one asset constant (the product, the tech, the audience) and change the others, so you can name what carries over.
  • If 'pivot' becomes a synonym for 'change,' it stops meaning anything: tie every pivot back to a specific product/market-fit assumption you are re-testing.
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