//pragmatic leaders

What Is Your Most Important KPI?

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Nobody cares about a KPI number if it is not meaningful. The value is in explaining why that number matters and how it reflects the real success of your product.
Talvinder Singh, from a Pragmatic Leaders PM interview prep session

You will get asked in interviews: what is your most important KPI? Your actual job is not just to name a metric. It is to make a judgment call on which number best reflects the true value your product delivers — and why.

If you cannot explain why a KPI matters, you have not thought through your product’s value proposition deeply enough. That is the entire profession in one line: measuring what matters and ignoring everything else.

Why interviewers ask about KPIs

The recruiter or interviewer wants to know two things:

  • Do you have the analytical skills to identify meaningful metrics, not just vanity numbers?
  • Do you understand the product initiative or feature enough to link metrics to outcomes?

Most candidates fail this test because they recite popular metrics without context — “DAU, MAU, retention” — but cannot say why these matter for their product or business.

If you want to stand out, your KPI answer should be a mini product strategy.

MeetingScene: The KPI interview question

// scene:

PM interview panel, Bangalore-based fintech startup

Interviewer: “Tell us, what is the most important KPI for your product? And why?”

You (candidate): “The most important KPI is average session time. Because our product’s core value is user engagement, and longer sessions correlate strongly with conversion and retention.”

Interviewer: “Can you explain how you arrived at that metric?”

You (candidate): “We analyzed user behavior and found that users who spend more than 10 minutes per session are 3x more likely to convert to paid plans. So focusing on engagement drives revenue.”

Interviewer: “Good. What secondary metrics do you track?”

You (candidate): “We track daily active users and churn rate to balance growth and retention.”

// tension:

This question tests your ability to connect metrics to business outcomes

KPIs vs metrics: the difference that matters

You will often hear KPIs and metrics used interchangeably. But they are not the same.

  • Metrics are any measurable data points — page views, clicks, installs.
  • KPIs are the small set of metrics that truly indicate whether your product is achieving its goals.

The trap is treating all metrics as KPIs. That leads to distraction by vanity metrics — numbers that look good but don’t drive decisions.

For example, a social media app may track “likes per post” as a metric but treat “daily active users” as the KPI because it better reflects user engagement and revenue potential.

SlackChat: PM and Data Analyst discuss KPIs

// thread: #product-analytics — Choosing KPIs based on impact, not just availability of data
Rahul (PM)What should be our north star KPI for the new payments feature?
Neha (Data Analyst)We have session length, transaction success rate, total volume, and customer NPS.
Rahul (PM)Session length is interesting, but does it correlate with revenue?
Neha (Data Analyst)Yes, users with longer sessions tend to transact more and have higher retention.
Rahul (PM)Then let’s make average session time our primary KPI, and track transaction success as a health metric.

The KPI must align with your product’s core value

The first step is to identify your product’s fundamental value to users. What problem does it solve? What outcome does it deliver?

Your KPI should measure that outcome directly or as closely as possible.

For example:

  • For a mobile app focused on engagement, average session time or daily active users are good KPIs.
  • For an e-commerce marketplace, conversion rate or GMV (Gross Merchandise Value) matter most.
  • For a SaaS product, monthly recurring revenue or churn rate are critical.

If you pick a KPI disconnected from your product’s core value, you will optimize the wrong thing.

FromTheField: Why average session time mattered for a fintech app

How to craft your KPI answer

Your answer should have three parts:

  1. Name the KPI clearly and precisely.
  2. Define the KPI in simple terms.
  3. Explain why it matters — link it to your product’s value and business goals.

Example:

“The most important KPI is average session time, which measures how long users spend in the app per session. This matters because longer sessions correlate with higher conversion rates and better retention, which drive our revenue growth.”

Avoid vague or generic answers like “user engagement” without a concrete metric.

FieldExercise: Define your KPI

// exercise: · 10 min
Identify your product’s key KPI

Pick a product you know well — your current product, a past project, or a popular app like Swiggy or Flipkart. Write down:

  1. What is the core value your product delivers to users?
  2. What is one metric that best measures that core value?
  3. Why does that metric matter more than others?
  4. How would you explain this KPI to an interviewer in 2-3 sentences?

If you struggle, start with a simple product like a local chai stall: what is the core value? How would you measure success?

Common mistakes when answering KPI questions

MistakeExplanation
Naming vanity metricsSaying “number of downloads” or “page views” without linking to value.
Being too vagueSaying “engagement” or “growth” without specifying a measurable KPI.
Ignoring contextGiving a generic KPI that does not fit your product or business model.
Not explaining whyFailing to justify why the KPI matters or how it drives decisions.

The trap is optimizing for sound bites rather than substance. Interviewers want to see your thinking process.

JudgmentExercise

// learn the judgment

You are interviewing for a PM role at a Series B Indian e-commerce startup. The interviewer asks: 'What is your most important KPI for our mobile app? And why?' You know the app’s main goal is to increase repeat purchases.

The call: Which KPI do you choose, and how do you explain its importance?

Your reasoning:

// practice

You are interviewing for a PM role at a Series B Indian e-commerce startup. The interviewer asks: 'What is your most important KPI for our mobile app? And why?' You know the app’s main goal is to increase repeat purchases.

Your task: Which KPI do you choose, and how do you explain its importance?

your reasoning:

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Why context matters: The Indian market example

KPIs vary by market and user behavior. In India, for example, fintech apps often track number of UPI transactions as a critical KPI because UPI is the dominant payment rail.

Swiggy focuses on delivery time as a KPI to improve customer satisfaction in a crowded food delivery market.

Understanding your market’s specifics helps you choose KPIs that reflect real value.

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