The actual job is to measure what matters — not just what’s easy to measure. If you cannot quantify your release’s impact, you cannot call it a success.
Product releases are not just about shipping features on time. The actual job is to measure whether your release moves the needle on the business and user experience. Without clear metrics, you are flying blind — hoping that new features will magically deliver value.
You will see many teams obsess over launch checklists, marketing campaigns, and bug counts — but neglect the fundamental question: how will we know if this release succeeded? The trap is shipping without measurement, which means you cannot learn, iterate, or justify your next investment.
This lesson teaches you how to plan your releases with measurement baked in. You will learn which metrics matter, how to apply structured frameworks, and how to connect product activity to business growth.
Why metrics matter for release planning
Every release changes the product, and every change affects users. Your job is to understand those effects quantitatively and qualitatively.
Metrics help you:
- Validate hypotheses about user behavior and preferences
- Identify blockers to adoption and retention
- Justify resource allocation and future roadmaps
- Communicate success and challenges clearly to stakeholders
Without metrics, you only have anecdotes and opinions. That is not product management — that is guesswork.
Metrics are your compass post-release. They tell you where to double down and where to pivot.
The two knobs of sustainable growth: CAC and CLV
Two metrics govern the health of your product’s growth engine: Customer Acquisition Cost (CAC) and Customer Lifetime Value (CLV).
-
CAC is how much you spend to acquire one paying customer. This includes marketing, sales, and onboarding costs.
-
CLV is the total revenue you expect to earn from that customer over their entire relationship with your product.
The simple rule: CLV must exceed CAC for your business to be viable.
But the equation is more complex. You must also consider:
-
The time to breakeven — how long before a customer pays back their acquisition cost.
-
The growth rate — how quickly you acquire new customers relative to churn.
If you spend ₹5000 acquiring a customer who pays ₹6000 over 3 years, that’s profitable — but if it takes 2 years to recoup the cost, you face cash flow problems.
Indian startups often face this challenge. The cost of acquiring customers can be high, and retention is critical to improve CLV.
The AARRR framework: measuring the customer lifecycle
One of the most practical frameworks for release planning and measurement is AARRR, also known as Pirate Metrics, introduced by Dave McClure.
It breaks down the user journey into five stages, each with its own metrics:
| Stage | What it measures | Key Metrics | Indian Context Example |
|---|---|---|---|
| Acquisition | How users find and arrive at your product | Visits, traffic sources, cost per visit | SEO, Facebook ads, WhatsApp groups |
| Activation | First-time user experience and conversion | Signup rate, onboarding completion | Signup flow for Razorpay merchant app |
| Retention | Users coming back over time | Day 1, Day 7 retention, churn rate | Swiggy daily active users |
| Revenue | Monetization of users | Conversion to paid, ARPU (Average Revenue Per User) | Subscription revenue at Meesho |
| Referral | Users recommending your product | Referral rate, viral coefficient | ShareChat’s invite incentives |
The AARRR framework helps you pick the right metrics for your release goals. For example, if you launch a new onboarding flow, focus on activation metrics. If you launch a loyalty program, retention and referral matter more.
Indian startups like Meesho track activation and retention closely because acquisition costs are high and users are price sensitive.
The HEART framework: measuring user experience quality
Business metrics are necessary but not sufficient. You also need to measure user experience, which drives long-term success.
Google Ventures developed the HEART framework to measure UX quality across five dimensions:
| Dimension | What it means | How to measure | Example for Indian products |
|---|---|---|---|
| Happiness | User satisfaction and sentiment | NPS (Net Promoter Score), surveys | NPS for PhonePe’s app experience |
| Engagement | Frequency and depth of use | Session length, visits per user | Average sessions per user on Flipkart |
| Adoption | Uptake of new features or product | % of users using a feature | Feature adoption of Swiggy’s new payment method |
| Retention | Users returning over time | Retention rate, churn | Retention of new users on Razorpay |
| Task success | How well users complete core tasks | Completion rate, error rate | Successful order placement on Zepto |
HEART complements AARRR by focusing on qualitative aspects that impact metrics downstream. For example, low happiness (NPS) will eventually hurt retention.
Use HEART to define your acceptance criteria for feature releases. If a new feature reduces task success, it’s a red flag.
Connecting metrics to your release plan
Your release plan should explicitly state:
- The hypothesis you are testing (e.g., “Improved onboarding will increase activation by 15%”)
- The key metrics to track before and after launch (e.g., onboarding completion rate, Day 7 retention)
- The data sources and tools you will use (e.g., Google Analytics, Mixpanel)
- The expected impact on business outcomes (e.g., reduce CAC by improving conversion)
- The time window for measurement (e.g., 30 days post-release)
This structure forces you to think beyond features and deadlines. It aligns product development with measurable value.
Feature usage: the pulse of your product
Feature usage is a critical metric to understand how users interact with your release.
Track:
- The percentage of users who try a new feature (adoption)
- Frequency and depth of use (engagement)
- Drop-off points or error rates (task success)
For example, if you launch a new payment option on PhonePe, measure how many users switch, how often they use it, and whether it reduces payment failures.
Low feature usage despite high marketing spend signals a disconnect between feature design and user needs.
Retention and churn: your growth lifelines
Retention measures how many users return after their first visit. Churn is the inverse — how many users leave.
Retention is the best predictor of sustainable growth. Facebook’s early success was driven by exceptional retention and stickiness.
Indian startups face unique retention challenges:
- Users with limited data plans may uninstall apps quickly
- Language and regional preferences affect engagement
- Price sensitivity means users may churn if value isn’t clear
Measure retention at multiple intervals: Day 1, Day 7, Day 30. This reveals where users drop off and which cohorts are most valuable.
Conversion rate: context matters
Conversion rate measures the percentage of users who complete a desired action.
It can refer to:
- Website visitor to signup
- Signup to paid customer
- Trial user to subscriber
- Feature usage conversion
Conversion rates vary widely by context. A 5% signup conversion on a high-traffic landing page may be excellent. A 70% conversion on a targeted feature adoption flow may be expected.
Indian companies like Razorpay focus on optimizing conversion funnels carefully because CAC is high and margins are tight.
Revenue metrics: MRR, ARR, ARPU
If your product is subscription-based, track:
- Monthly Recurring Revenue (MRR): Revenue expected monthly from subscriptions
- Annual Recurring Revenue (ARR): Annualized MRR
- Average Revenue Per User (ARPU): Average revenue generated per user or customer
These metrics quantify business health and help forecast growth.
Indian SaaS startups like Postman and BrowserStack watch MRR and ARR closely to plan funding and hiring.
Quality metrics: NPS and customer satisfaction
Net Promoter Score (NPS) is a widely used measure of customer loyalty.
Ask users: “How likely are you to recommend this product to a friend?”
Scores range from -100 to +100. Positive scores above 30 are considered good.
High NPS correlates with higher retention and referral rates.
Collect qualitative feedback alongside NPS to identify pain points.
The Lean Analytics cycle: Hypothesize, Measure, Learn, Act
Metrics are not just numbers to report. They are tools for continuous learning.
The Lean Analytics cycle is:
- Hypothesize: Define what you expect to happen
- Measure: Collect data to test the hypothesis
- Learn: Analyze results and identify insights
- Act: Make decisions to improve or pivot
This cycle turns metrics into a growth engine.
Indian startups with limited runway must run this cycle efficiently to survive.
Planning your launch marketing with metrics in mind
Marketing activities should be tied to measurable goals:
- Acquire: Drive visits and awareness via channels like Facebook, LinkedIn, SEO, influencer partnerships
- Activate: Convert visitors to signups or trials
- Retain: Engage users via emails, push notifications, newsletters
- Revenue: Track pre-orders, orders, and payment completions
- Referral: Encourage sharing and word-of-mouth
Each channel and tactic should have clear KPIs.
For example, a webinar campaign should track registrations, attendance, and follow-up conversion.
Positioning your product release for maximum impact
Geoffrey Moore stresses that positioning is the largest influence on buying decisions.
Use this formula to craft your positioning statement:
For [target customer] who [need/opportunity], the [product name] is a [product category] that [key benefit]. Unlike [competitive alternative], our product [primary differentiation].
Clear positioning helps your entire team align messaging and metrics.
Test yourself: Planning a feature release for a fintech app in Bangalore
You are the PM at a Series B fintech startup in Bangalore. You plan to launch a new instant loan product feature aimed at salaried millennial users. Marketing wants to run a campaign, engineering promises a 6-week release timeline. You have 3 months before the next funding round.
The call: What key metrics do you define before launch? How will you measure success post-release? What frameworks will guide your analysis?
Your reasoning:
Where to go next
- Master user research to inform metrics: User Research Methods
- Learn to translate metrics into product vision: Product Vision and Strategy
- Deepen your understanding of analytics: Metrics and KPIs
- Explore product marketing frameworks: Product Launch and Marketing
- Build skills in growth hacking: Growth Product Management
PL alumni now work at Razorpay, Swiggy, Meesho, PhonePe, Flipkart, and other leading Indian tech companies.