Agent skill
marketplace-liquidity
Help users build and manage marketplace liquidity. Use when someone is working on a marketplace business, struggling with supply/demand balance, trying to improve match rates, or asking how to reach critical mass in a two-sided market.
Install this agent skill to your Project
npx add-skill https://github.com/RefoundAI/lenny-skills/tree/main/skills/marketplace-liquidity
SKILL.md
Marketplace Liquidity Management
Help the user build and manage marketplace liquidity using frameworks from 4 product leaders.
How to Help
When the user asks for help with marketplace liquidity:
- Understand the marketplace type - Ask about their supply/demand dynamics, how fragmented the market is, and whether needs are uniform or heterogeneous
- Diagnose the constraint - Determine if they're supply-constrained, demand-constrained, or facing a matching problem
- Define liquidity metrics - Help them establish clear measures of marketplace reliability and fill rates
- Design interventions - Guide them on where to focus to improve liquidity (geographic focus, supply acquisition, demand generation, matching quality)
Core Principles
Liquidity is how marketplaces win
Benjamin Lauzier: "Liquidity is how marketplaces win. It's this measure of your ability to match buyers and sellers efficiently." Focus on the core metric of how reliably you can connect supply with demand. This is the foundational metric that determines marketplace success or failure.
Liquidity = reliability of the marketplace
Dan Hockenmaier: "How reliable is the marketplace? If the consumer is looking for something or supplier is looking to sell something, how often can they do that thing they're trying to do?" Define liquidity as fill rate - the percentage of times buyers find what they want and sellers find buyers. Make this your number one metric.
Marketplace management is whac-a-mole
Ramesh Johari: "Marketplaces are a little bit like a game of whac-a-mole... a lot of marketplace management is moving attention and inventory around." Expect constant rebalancing between supply and demand across different segments and geographies. Build systems to reallocate attention and inventory dynamically.
No supply without demand, no demand without supply
Tim Holley: "If you've got supply without demand, then you don't really have a marketplace. If you've got demand and no supply to meet it, then you also don't have a marketplace." Watch for the "graduation problem" where successful sellers leave the platform. Use data to guide supply toward areas of unmet demand.
Questions to Help Users
- "How do you define liquidity for your marketplace? What's your fill rate?"
- "Are you currently supply-constrained or demand-constrained? Does this vary by geography or category?"
- "How fragmented are the needs in your marketplace - are they uniform or highly heterogeneous?"
- "What happens when you add more supply? Does it immediately get absorbed by demand?"
- "Are you seeing a 'graduation problem' where successful suppliers leave your platform?"
Common Mistakes to Flag
- Growing both sides equally - Usually one side is the constraint. Focus resources on the bottleneck
- Ignoring geographic/category fragmentation - National liquidity metrics can hide severe local imbalances
- Not measuring fill rate - Without a clear liquidity metric, you can't manage toward it
- Over-expanding before reaching local density - It's better to be highly liquid in one market than illiquid across many
Deep Dive
For all 4 insights from 4 guests, see references/guest-insights.md
Related Skills
- Measuring Product-Market Fit
- Designing Growth Loops
- Pricing Strategy
- Retention & Engagement
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