North Star Metric (NSM)

1) Definition

A North Star Metric (NSM) is the single, best measurable indicator that your product is delivering core value to customers and, when it grows sustainably, the business grows too.

2) Why it matters

3) Core components / principles

Pattern: NSM = # of [core value actions] by [qualified users] per [time window], meeting [quality bar].

4) How to apply it (step-by-step)

  1. Name the value moment: What is the smallest action after which customers say “that was worth it”?
  2. Choose the qualified unit: Individual, team, or account? Pick the one that best maps to revenue/retention.
  3. Set the time window: Daily/weekly/monthly—match normal usage and sales cycles.
  4. Add a quality bar: Count only actions that meet success criteria (e.g., completed, on-time, accurate).
  5. Validate with data: Check historic correlation with retention/revenue; avoid vanity spikes.
  6. Decompose into inputs: Define 3–5 leading indicators (activation rate, W2→W4 retention, p95 latency in budget).
  7. Instrument & publish: Create a single NSM chart + input dashboard; review weekly.
  8. Tie to bets: Every bet proposes an expected NSM delta (with confidence) and declares a kill line.

5) Examples & analogies

6) Common mistakes to avoid

7) Quick NSM checklist / mini-framework

8) Actionable takeaways (3–5)

  1. Write your NSM in one sentence using the pattern: action + unit + window + quality bar.
  2. Prove correlation with retention/revenue before you lock it; adjust if weak.
  3. Publish a living dashboard (NSM + inputs + guardrails) and review it every week.
  4. Make every bet state an expected NSM delta and a pre-declared kill criterion.
  5. Protect guardrails—never trade NSM gains for reliability, security, or runaway cost.

Use this to align your portfolio: if a bet can’t explain how it moves the NSM (and by how much), it doesn’t ship.