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Growth Hacking Guide for Startups

This is a community driven document. If you have a great tip on growth hacking, send a pull request.

Are you surprised that your "killer" product did not get any users besides your friends and family? Then this guide is for you. Read on.

Preface

Many talented founders get demoralized too soon when they don’t see enough interest in their product a few weeks after they announce it. The good old myth that "if you build it, they will come" still exists.

It's surprising how people are still surprised that their "killer" product did not get any traffic besides their friends and family. Well, one thing I always tell them is "Don't be. It’s OK and completely normal. That’s how it is supposed to be."

Many successful companies you see today became “overnight successes” after years of work in building and tuning their product to what you see and use today.

After recovering from the above, most founders then make the next fundamental mistake: They either decide to shut down or “add more features”. Their belief is that if they keep adding more and more features, one of it will suddenly work and magic will happen. Again, it never works.

Growth is a feature. Startups and founders have to work towards it. My advice is to spend 80% time in optimizing existing features and only 20% time on building new ones, once the MVP is built.

Fortunately, with so many startups coming in everyday, this has become more science than art and many off-the-shelf techniques and strategies are now well written about and well documented.

The trick is to pick a high level growth rate and try to achieve it. Growth needs to be treated like development. If you are working in a team, delegate one metric for everyone to watch and own.

Introduction to Growth Hacking

Your users go through a virtual funnel which can be summarized in a simple acronym: AARRR (Acquisition > Activation > Retention > Referral > Revenue)

The entire "game" of growth hacking is about careful measurement and funnel optimization as your users progress in their journey.

But before we begin:

The secret mantra of any successful Internet business is to keep your customer acquisition cost (CAC) lower than the lifetime value (LTV) of the customer. If you are able to measure and successfully maintain this, you literally have a money generating machine on your fingertips.

Focus on both areas: Lowering your CAC and increasing your LTV by thinking of strategies on both sides. The wider the gap, the better off you are.

Use tools to be able to visualize funnels and identify bottlenecks.

Stage 1: User Acquisition

This section is about the users at the top of the conversion funnel - Those who have just discovered you for the first time.

What can you do to widen your reach? How can you spread the word about your brand or product as wide as possible?

Understanding where your users are looking when they and ensuring that you get found during their research is a key strategy which can be implemented using a variety of techniques.

Contact bloggers for coverage

Hire a PR company

PR companies will keep your brand presence alive and get you into some channels which are otherwise difficult to crack on a regular basis (ex. Newspapers)

Target early adopters

Social media

Be present on multiple channels

SEO

Paid marketing

Offline marketing / Direct sales

Video marketing

Content Marketing

E-Mail marketing

Using the student community effectively

Virality built inside the product

Term: Coefficient of virality

Referral system

Concept: One person brings another and gets credited with some points.

Localization and Internationalization

Misc.

Stage 2: Activation

Users in the middle of the funnel: Need nurturing because they are still not sure about their choice.

Secret mantra: Increase Desire, reduce friction. When activation happens right, the thin boundary between trying a product and using it blurs out.

Show value clearly

A/B test

Social proof

Direct the user's path instead of leaving it to him to "figure it out"

Offer a free trial without credit card

Live chat

Explain how product solves the user's problem. Don't explain "features"

Onboarding

Use remarketing effectively

Split the ask

Social sign-in

Progress indicators

Free freebies

Misc.

Stage 3: User Retention

Users will slip away if they don't use your product constantly. By staying useful and relevant to them and/or staying engaged with them, you can reduce your churn and effectively reduce your average CAC.

Allow users to leave feedback

Help and FAQ

Drip email campaign

Notifications

Create Survey's

Create a contest

Loyalty system

Conduct free webinars

Stage 4: Revenue

Make sure it works

Trial periods

Offer an affiliate program

Add live chat

Cross-selling


SquareBoat builds awesome mobile and web applications for startups. We are based out of Gurgaon, India.