#GrowthHacking: Fad or for real?

#GrowthHacking: Fad or for real?

There’s a new kid in the startup community sandbox known as a “growth hacker.” According to Andrew Chen, a growth hacker is a hybrid of a marketer and a developer, someone who looks at the traditional question “How do I get customers for my product?” and answers it with A/B testing, landing pages, viral factor, email deliverability and more.

Growth Hacking explained by Bill RiceThere are a couple of key differences between a traditional digital marketer in a tech startup and a growth hacker. Mainly, before a startup has product/market fit (that is, when people know they want your product and are happy with your offering), virality must be built into the core of your product. Why? With the advent of superplatforms, startups can now access over 100 million consumer markets.

Discovery-stage startups now have the opportunity to quickly access their identified beachhead customer segment and to go from zero users to tens of millions of users in just a few years. It would be remiss not to build virality into the core code. MaRS clients MyShoebox, Bitstrips and, more recently, Woof are great examples of startups that were able to build virality into the core code of their products and drive very high traction early on without having extensive marketing budgets or marketing staff.

Once product/market fit is achieved, growth hackers can help “spin up the flywheel” on what is already working well with the product. This doesn’t mean that the continuous testing and planning of “get, keep, grow” tactics (listening to customers) are not important; but it does mean that a lot more emphasis must be placed on building virality into the product’s core code early in the startup lifecycle to acquire users, while continuously evolving to support retention and loyalty of users. See “Startup marketing: Get, keep and grow” for more information on digital tactics and metrics that matter.

What are the implications of growth hacking for startups? 

There is now a blurred line between a startup’s marketing, product and engineering roles. All of these roles must now work together to ensure that the product markets itself. Developers who lack big budgets in their early stages must learn growth-hacking skills to earn their startups a greater chance of success and to reduce the risk of failure until enough funding is in place to hire a digital marketer. (Steve Blank refers to growth hackers as “Data Chiefs.”)

No longer are founding teams under the illusion that they are launching a blockbuster technology with press releases and an opening launch party and by throwing as many resources as possible into vanity metrics. Their jobs are not to bring in potential customers, but to create lifelong users. And, as it turns out, dedicated and happy users are marketing tools in and of themselves. As Ryan Holiday mentions in his book Growth Hacker Marketing:

“Virality isn’t luck. It’s not magic. And it’s not random. There’s a science behind why people talk and share. A recipe. A formula, even.”

Research by Nielsen solidifies this idea. According to a 2012 study: 92% of people globally trust word-of-mouth recommendations from friends and family members. The easier that a startup makes it to share its product (delivering more value than they get) the more the growth hacker has to continuously test tactics in the product and marketing funnel. We recommend setting up a weekly growth-hacking meeting where you identify to-be-tested, in-testing and pass/fail tactics as a team and then constantly driving tactics into the funnel each week, which drive growth aligned to cost-per-user acquisition and lifetime value metrics.

Achieving product/market fit doesn’t mean your technology is flawless or that there are not huge areas that still need to be tweaked and improved. Most importantly, the business model surrounding the technology must be continuously updated to match its growth, so that its scaleable, cost and recurring revenue structures are in place and it is protecting itself from competition. According to Bain & Company:

“A five percent increase in customer retention can mean a 30 percent increase in profitability for the company.”

Therefore, growth hacking fundamentally reduces the costs of being wrong and allows startups the freedom to experiment and try new things. Rather than waiting for it to happen magically, marketers need to contribute to this process. Isolating who your customers are, figuring out their needs and designing a product that will blow their minds—these are marketing decisions, not just development and design choices.

So, is growth hacking a fad or for real? I believe the evidence is clear that it is for real. Growth hacking may be interpreted or named differently depending on who you talk to, but I feel that it’s here to stay. Below you’ll find a list of resources, including whole communities (like Quora), that are evolving around the topic to help guide you on your growth-hacking adventures.

Growth-hacking resources

Feature photo credit: Sketchnote: Growth Hacking by Bill Rice, used under CC BY 2.0 / cropped