What you can learn from my Growth Hacking answers on Quora + A collection of some of my best answers.
I decided to collect some of my best answers on Quora and republish them on Medium all in one post. Enjoy!
Originally published by our MD, Rishabh Dev, on Medium.
I decided to collect some of my best answers on Quora and republish them on Medium all in one post. Enjoy!
Short Answer: Growth Hacking is finding who your target audience is, identifying where they hang out and targeting them using creative campaigns on these channels.
Simple right? If you want an in-depth explanation, check out my Long Answer here.
This was a really good question primarily because Growth Hackers may know how to run Facebook Ads or Growth Hack Reddit, Slideshare, etc. but don’t know the exact process a Growth Hacker follows which is in my opinion more crucial than anything else. Putting things into process makes it impossible to fail.
Answer: 1. Define the main goals for your business. These are called KBGs or Key Business Goals. Make sure you don’t define more than 3. For startups, keep it to 1.
2. Define who your target audience is. Essentially who is buying/would like to buy what you have to sell. This helps you to be very focused in terms of who to market to and helps you save time, energy and resources all of which are extremely valuable and scarce in a startup.
3. Identify where your target audience hangs out, or rather identifying which channels they are likely to be active on. For example: Airbnb in their early days identified that most of their customers were using Craigslist and through a really smart integration acquired customers without spending any money. They did this by simply identifying their channel personas.
4. Start brainstorming small growth experiments you can run on these channels. List down a few of them. Assign an OMTM to each of them which would be the most important metric for that experiment.This OMTM will be derived from the KBGs and can directly or indirectly impact the KBGs.
5. You probably have a list of small experiments you can run by now. Now comes, prioritising it. Determine which experiment to run based on the ease of implementation and potential impact.
6. Execute the Highest Priority experiment for a period of 7 days. This is your first cycle of execution. Read the entire answer here.
Another brilliant question. It’s important to understand what growth hacking is and what growth hacking isn’t. For example: Growth Hacking isn’t a long term solution. (Write more)
Answer: I would say Growth Hacking isn’t clever marketing. Rather technically speaking, growth hacking is a science (so is cooking) and does seem more complicated than it actually is (just like cooking).
As a growth hacker, you explore these unconventional approaches to achieve your objective, you use the relevant technology and rely on data and metrics — and that’s the science behind it.
Growth hackers also work on a lot of things that digital marketers don’t like customer retention, product development, working with APIs, customer development, etc as compared to a digital marketer whose prime focus is customer acquisition.
Read my entire thoughts here. This one was really fun to write.
Interesting Fact: “Smaller armies defeat larger armies more than 60% of the time with Guerrilla warfare as per a study on the last 200 years of wars.”
Answer: Just like Guerrilla warfare allowed smaller armies to succeed without the same amount of resources as larger armies, growth hacking allows startups to succeed. And both of them are all about having the right MINDSET.
The growth mindset helps you build growth hacking workflows and processes.
Let me share with you a very unconventional example of real-life growth hacking in action:
We will consider the example of a Hot Dog Eating Contest, which is an annual American hot dog eating competition held each year on US Independence Day (coming Soon if you’re planning to participate!)
For now, Let’s say you’re participating in a Hot Dog Eating Contest. How would go about it? As a regular participant, you would try to eat as many hot dogs in a given time.
But if you put your growth hat on, you will come up with a process to beat the usual participants. This is exactly what Kobayashi did when he set his first record at his rookie appearance on July 4, 2001 & ate 50 hot dogs in 12 minutes at the Hot Dog Eating Contest, doubling the previous record of 25.
Here’s the exact process he followed (and you should too!):
Now this process can only come from a growth mindset. Kobayashi found loopholes in the contest rules, came up with a creative process, and also ran experiments until he found the right fit.
This is exactly how a growth hacker thinks and works everyday! Read more about my Paypal example and the full answer here.
The term “Growth Hacker” has become so trending today, that everyone from marketing managers to digital marketers like to call themselves “Growth Hackers”.
Answer: The fact is Growth Hacking goes much further ahead than any of the above jobs for a couple of reasons:
1. Growth Hackers are data-oriented and let the data do the talking instead of taking random guesses.
2. Growth Hackers have some sort of technical skills be it knowing how to make landing pages using Bootstrap, Working with APIs or even Web Scraping, etc. Essentially growth hackers also have some sort of a background in engineering, though this is not necessary as you can learn any kind of technical skill online.
3. Growth Hackers are process oriented and run tiny and lean experiments to validate their ideas. Once validated, they scale those growth hacks and automate them. They also focus on running experiments that have the most potential impact and consider the ease of implementation to gauge which experiments should be prioritised.
Want to learn growth hacking yourself? Check out the resources I recommended in this answer here.
“Marketers create user personas, Growth hackers create Channel personas.”
Answer: A growth hacker thinks beyond the default marketing channels to get better results, with less time and money.
Doubting the Default is a key characteristic of a growth mindset.
While creating user personas is an essential step of a marketing strategy, traditional digital marketers tend to be blind toward exploring channel personas limiting them to the most common channels for executing their campaigns.
Now let’s look at what a typical digital marketing process looks like:
Digital Marketing Process
Though there might be various steps in the process on different blogs and website, but this is what really happens. The channel set is usually defined based on where the brand is already active if it has an existing digital strategy OR a new set of channels is defined based on if it’s a B2B or B2C target.
Digital marketers usually play around with a common & popular set of channels like Facebook, LinkedIn, Twitter, Instagram. Rarely social media campaigns are executed beyond this set while SEM campaigns run across the major advertising platforms like SM Ads and Google Adwords from data gathered across most digital marketing campaigns.
In comparison, let’s have a look at the growth hacking process:
Growth Hacking Process
Step 3 in the above process is the real differentiator between a digital marketer’s approach and a GROWTH MINDSET.
The growth hacker thinks beyond the default marketing channels to get better results, with less time and money.
To know Why Growth Hackers create Channel Personas, some example of successful growth hacks startups did by creating Channel Personas check out my full answer here.
I also wrote about this on Medium a while back. Check out my full posthere.
Hopefully, you learnt a lot about growth hacking, how growth hacking is a science, why Growth Hackers should create channel personas instead of user personas as well as how Growth Hacking is different from Digital Marketing.
Got a question you’d like me to answer? Ask away on Quora and put down your question link in the comments.
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