Lenny's Podcast: Product | Career | Growth - The original growth hacker reveals his secrets | Sean Ellis (author of “Hacking Growth”)
Episode Date: September 5, 2024Sean Ellis is one of the earliest and most influential thinkers and operators in growth. He coined the term “growth hacking,” invented the ICE prioritization framework, was one of the earliest peo...ple to use freemium as a growth lever, and, most famously, developed the Sean Ellis Test for product-market fit (which a large percentage of founders use today to track if they’ve found PMF). Over the course of his career, Sean was head of growth at Dropbox and Eventbrite; helped companies like Microsoft and Nubank refine their growth strategy; was on the founding team of LogMeIn, which sold for over $4 billion; and is the author of one of the most popular growth books of all time, Hacking Growth, which has sold over 750,000 copies. In our conversation, he shares:• The proper use of the Sean Ellis Test for measuring product-market fit• How to increase your activation and retention rates• How to select the right North Star metric for your business• Case studies from his work growing Dropbox and other products• How growth strategy has changed over the past decade• How AI is impacting growth efforts• Much more—Brought to you by:• Gamma—A new way to present, powered by AI• CommandBar—AI-powered user assistance for modern products and impatient users• Merge—A single API to add hundreds of integrations into your app—Find the transcript and show notes at: https://www.lennysnewsletter.com/p/the-original-growth-hacker-sean-ellis—Where to find Sean Ellis:• X: https://x.com/seanellis• LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/seanellis/• Website: https://www.seanellis.me/• Substack: https://substack.com/@seanellis—Where to find Lenny:• Newsletter: https://www.lennysnewsletter.com• X: https://twitter.com/lennysan• LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/lennyrachitsky/—In this episode, we cover:(00:00) Sean’s background(02:18) The Sean Ellis test explained(06:28) The 40% rule(08:06) Case study: improving product-market fit(12:34) Understanding and leveraging customer feedback(16:50) Challenges and nuances of product-market fit(22:22) When to use the Sean Ellis Test(23:46) When not to use the Sean Ellis Test and other caveats(27:13) Defining your own threshold and how the Sean Ellis Test came about(36:13) Tools for implementing the survey (37:30) Transitioning from surveys to retention cohorts(39:13) Nubank’s approach(40:18) Case study: Superhuman’s strategy for increasing product-market fit(45:18) Coining the term “growth hacking”(48:24) How to approach growth(57:25) Improving activation and onboarding(01:05:17) Identifying effective growth channels(01:10:28) The power of customer conversations(01:12:43) Developing the Dropbox referral program(01:14:47) The importance of word of mouth(01:15:23) Freemium models and engagement(01:19:21) Picking a North Star metric(01:24:30) The evolution of growth strategies(01:27:12) The ICE and RICE frameworks(01:30:11) AI’s role in growth and experimentation(01:32:52) Final thoughts and lightning round—Production and marketing by https://penname.co/. For inquiries about sponsoring the podcast, email podcast@lennyrachitsky.com.—Lenny may be an investor in the companies discussed. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.lennysnewsletter.com/subscribe
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The Sean Ellis test, such a seemingly simple idea that has had such a profound impact on the startup world.
The question is, how would you feel if you could no longer use this product?
Once you got a high enough percentage of users saying they'd be very disappointed, most of those products did pretty well.
If you fell too low, those products tended to suffer.
Say someone is listening and they're like, okay, man, I'm getting like 10%.
I don't know what to do. What do you find often works?
Just ignore the people who say they'd be somewhat disappointed.
they're telling you it's a nice to have.
If you start paying attention to what your somewhat disappointed users are telling you,
and then you start tweaking, onboarding, and product based on their feedback,
maybe you're going to dilute it for your must-have users.
Moving retention often is really hard, but I guess it sounds like there's often something you can do.
It's usually much more a function of onboarding to the right user experience
than it is about the kind of the tactical things that people try to do to improve retention.
What are like three or four things that you think people should definitely try to help improve activation?
my experience. Today, my guest is Sean Ellis. Sean is one of the earliest and most influential
thinkers and operators in the world of growth. He coined the term growth hacking, invented the
ICE prioritization framework, was one of the earliest people to use freemium as a growth strategy,
and maybe most famously developed the Sean Ellis test to help you understand if you have product
market fit, which a large percentage of founders used today and profoundly impacted the way
startups are built. Over the course of his career, Sean was head of growth at Dropbox and
Eventbrite, helped companies like Microsoft and NewBank refine their growth strategy, was on the
founding team of Log Me In, which eventually sold for over $4 billion, and he's the author of one of the
most popular growth books of all time called Hacking Growth. In our conversation, we dive deep into
two topics. One, how to know if you've got product market fit and what to do if you don't,
and two, how to figure out how to grow once you found product market fit. If you're a
in the early stages of a new product wrangling with product market fit or trying to figure out
how to jumpstart or further accelerate growth for your product. This episode is for you. If you
enjoy this podcast, don't forget to subscribe and follow it in your favorite podcasting app or
YouTube. It's the best way to avoid missing future episodes and it helps the podcast tremendously.
With that, I bring you Sean Alice. Sean, thank you so much for being here. Welcome to the podcast.
Thanks, Lenny. I'm super excited to be on with you. There's so much that I want to talk about.
there's so many directions we can go.
But to keep it focused, I want to spend time on two areas.
I want to talk about how to know if you have product market fit
and what to do once you have product market fit
in terms of figure out how to grow.
Yeah.
And I know these things are very linked.
I know you spend a lot of time on these things.
How does this feel?
Sounds perfect. Yeah.
Let's do it.
Okay. Okay. Amazing.
Let's talk about, first of all, the Sean Ellis test
slash something people call sometimes the product market fit test.
such a seemingly simple idea that has had such a profound impact on the startup world.
I've never actually seen you talk about the history of this thing.
How you came up with these questions, how you came up 40% the whole journey of this thing.
So let's talk about this.
But first of all, can you just tell people what is the Sean L's test for folks that aren't exactly familiar with this?
It's a simple question that helps you figure out, you know, does anyone consider your product that must have or, you know, ideally who and how many people consider it?
But ultimately, it's about trying to figure out, you know, is your product that must have, which could be equated to having product market fit.
And so the question is, how would you feel if you could no longer use this product?
And I give them the choice, very disappointed, somewhat disappointed, or even not disappointed or not applicable, have already stopped using the product.
And what I'm trying to find are those people who say I would be very disappointed if I could no longer use this product.
And that's a really powerful vein to dig into when you discover that you actually have some people who would give a crap if your product disappears.
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And the idea is that if you 40% or more of people say they'd be very disappointed if they can no longer use the product, you essentially have product market fit.
I would say it's a leading indicator of product market fit.
The lagging indicator is do they actually keep using it?
So probably retention cohorts are more accurate.
But the problem is like if you, you know, like your time at Airbnb.
be how long you have to look at a retention cohort before you know that you've actually long-term
retained someone.
And so with this question, you can kind of find out day one.
You don't actually even need to be, you don't need a good analytics system in place to
be able to see if product market fit exists.
And so, yeah, the 40% was not something I originally had in there.
I was also originally I was trying to have just a filter so that I was not.
treating all feedback from customers the same, but I was trying to find feedback from
customers who actually really cared about the product. And then was over time, at the time I was
working for a couple of YC back companies. And so those companies were all pretty connected. And so I
would share the question with a lot of other startups in Silicon Valley. And so over time,
I started to see there was a pattern that, you know, once you got a high enough percentage of
users saying they'd be very disappointed.
Most of those, very disappointed without the product, most of those products did pretty
well.
And then if you fell too low, those products tended to suffer.
Okay, there's two things I want to definitely follow up on here.
The first is such an important point that you made at the beginning when I introduced this
test is that you described as a leading indicator of product market fit and actually retention.
People actually using your product.
The product actually being used by the market is the actual ultimate test.
Right.
So the idea here is this is a good way to get a sense of before you actually have data,
are we headed in a good direction?
Can you just speak more about that, but like how to, when to use this and when it's most
useful.
Yeah.
So for me in particular, when I come into a company, my goal is to help them grow.
And so I don't want to put myself in a situation where I'm going to fail because no one
actually cares about the product.
And so it can really be asked at a company of any stage.
It's helpful to understand who your must have users are.
But essentially, once you have an MVP, like a very first MVP on the product,
you can still get some useful feedback about the product if it's resonating with anyone.
So I actually had a company where I had committed to work with them.
It was right after I left Dropbox and I committed to work with these guys for six months to help them grow.
I ran the question and I came back.
at only 7% of users saying they'd be very disappointed without the product. And so I'm like,
I have six months to help them grow and they're only at 7% right now. It might take six months
to get to 40%. Am I doing them a disservice by being in a growth role and being on payroll
during this period of time? But fortunately, with the signal and the information we got from the
initial survey, we were able to get them at 40% in two weeks. Wow. What did you do there just as a
case study? Yeah. Yeah. So the company called Lookout, it's a mobile security company. And,
you know, now most of the things in Lookout were, are like built into iPhones and
androids. But at that time, the product had had everything from like backup my data to find
my lost phone to protecting your phone from, you know, with a firewall and antivirus.
And so when we ran this initial survey, I dug into the 7% who said they'd be very disappointed
without the product and found that most of that 7% were focused on the antivirus functionality.
So they were like, they know they need to protect their computer from viruses.
Smartphones were becoming more like computers.
So it just made a lot of sense for them that they'd need to protect their phone.
And interesting at the time, I think there was only like one kind of phone virus that
had ever even happened.
But it was a pretty easy mental leap for people.
And so now we knew, okay, it's antivirus that people really valued.
And so step one was just reposition the product on antivirus.
So that kind of creates a filter.
So anyone who now is coming in to sign up for the product who,
doesn't care about antivirus is not going to convert. And those who are excited about
antivirus are going to convert. We already know from the initial survey that that people value that
after they convert. So by setting the right expectations around it up front, you're going to bring
people in with the right expectations. But then the second thing that we did was we streamlined
onboarding so that the first thing that they did after signing up for the product was to set up the
antivirus and then get a message you're now protected from viruses. And so it's really the
combination of those two things. It's set the right expectations and then speed to value. And so
the next cohort of people that we surveyed were at 40% saying they'd be very disappointed without
the product. So that was literally took two weeks to make those changes. Six months later,
it was 60% on the score. And then I think they hit the billion dollar valuation.
and four or five years later on ultimately being one of the,
one of the early unicorns.
And interestingly, they, you know,
as all of those things were built into mobile phones now,
they've completely changed the business,
but they continue to do really well,
but they've continued to iterate the business.
I think that having that kind of finger on the pulse early in the business
was important to build the muscle in the business
to be really responsive as the market change.
Sean, this is already amazing.
There's just like a fractal of topics I want to explore from this very short conversation already.
So the first is just following this thread of basically you're sharing kind of a growth strategy that I imagine you execute is look for the percentage of people that would be very disappointed if your product went away, see who they are, see what they're excited about, and lean into that both positioning wise, onboarding wise, and probably also cut out stuff from your product that they don't care about.
Yeah, and I was coming at it from a marketing perspective initially.
You know, over time, I position myself more in a growth role with product and
marketing as areas I could influence.
But as a marketer, I probably didn't have a lot of influence on a engineering founded
company to say, let's cut out stuff.
So it made more sense to say, let's just sequence the onboarding so that we're
highlighting this and onboarding to this.
That was a little easier to sell.
And just hearing that you can move this score so quickly without even changing the product substantially,
I imagine what surprised a lot of people when you think about, like, moving retention often is really hard.
And maybe we talk about that.
But I guess it sounds like there's often something you can do that's not very hard that might significantly shift this product market fit test.
Right.
And then that ultimately, like, yeah, moving retention is really hard.
but it's usually much more a function of onboarding to the right user experience than it is
about the kind of the tactical things that people try to do to improve retention.
Okay, I want to put a pin in that and come back to that because that's a really important topic.
I want to come back to say someone runs this survey and they get 40%.
What should they have in their mind of like this is what this is telling me?
Because I think a lot of people are like, I got product market fit.
I got this. Let's go, go, go.
What's the best way to think about what this tells you?
Yeah, I mean, it tells you something really important, which is, you know, you haven't created something that people don't care about.
So that's, that's an important insight.
But until you deeply understand that product market fit, you kind of don't have the tools to be able to grow the business.
So that's really the next step is to dig in and figure out, you know, who considers it a must have?
How are they using the product?
What did they, what did they use before?
What problem are they solving?
One of my favorite questions is, so I tend to have a lot of questions that I build off of, that I'm using that filter of, you know, trying to drill into the users who say they'd be very disappointed without the product.
And one of my favorite questions is, what is the primary benefit that you get?
And then I use that initially as an open-ended question to kind of crowdsource different benefits people are getting.
but then I run another survey where I turn it into a multiple choice question,
force them to pick one of four kind of distinctive benefit statements,
and then the question that follows on that next survey is,
why is that benefit important to you?
And then I start to get really good context.
So I actually came up with this question when I was working with an early YC company
called Zobni, which is inbox spelled backwards,
And I, when I, when I ran the question, basically the people who said they'd be very disappointed
without the product were focused on Zobni helps me find things faster in my email.
So it's great to know, okay, that's the benefit.
But when I asked, why is that benefit important to you?
They said, I'm drowning an email.
Like I just, I kept seeing that statement as a written statement.
And so when I then was trying to figure out how to acquire customers, when I tested,
drowning in email question mark.
That set such a good hook that was the context that people were living in,
that they were really responsive to the message of find things faster with Zobni
and then a description of what Zobni is.
So I think when you can really dig into the context of why that must have benefit is important to people,
you start to get the ingredients to build that flywheel that leads to long-term sustainable growth.
So what I'm hearing is whether you have 40%, whether you have 60% or even 7%, the actual best use of this tool is look at that percentage of highly disappointed and see what they're looking for, what they're excited about.
Start drilling in, start peeling back that onion and just deeply understand them and make sure that you're ultimately your product roadmap is doubling down on the things that are important to your must-have customers.
your onboarding is bringing new people to the right experience.
Your messaging is setting the right expectations.
Your acquisition campaigns are targeting people who actually have the need.
And so it's all about getting the right people to the right experience.
And then even in your engagement loop is about just reinforcing how to get people to experience
that benefit more often.
Awesome.
And the 40% threshold, so what you shared is you basically merged from just looking at tons of
startups doing the survey and finding a pattern. How firm is that 40%? Like how big of a deal is at
39 versus 41? I don't think it's that firm. To me, I think the real power is having some kind of,
some kind of target for the team to be shooting for that basically says, we're not going to aggressively
start to grow until we hit this target. And I think that as just a focusing piece is really,
really important because I think one of the one of the biggest challenges in an early stage
startup is half the people feel like you know we're years from from having this product ready
to grow and half the people are like what are we waiting for where if you can actually get people
on the same page of what is what does product market fit look like for our business and and it's
at that point that we're going to yeah and before I ever heard the term product market
fit. I remember the conversations back at Log Me In and the mid-2000s of kind of like,
when do we step on the gas? What is the combination of factors that need to be in place
before we start pouring fuel on the early fire? And so, yeah, I think that kind of nail it,
then scale it. It's probably been a term that's been around for decades now. But it's all kind
of pointing to that same concept of product market fit. How often do you have you seen false positives
with this test or someone gets 40% and something is not right.
They're actually far from it.
Or is it generally pretty accurate?
If you're having people say that they'd be very disappointed without your product,
that's a really good sign.
What I can tell you is that not just not necessarily a false positive,
but like what is driving people to say they'd be very disappointed?
One of my favorite books is hooked by Neri All.
and he talks about in the kind of engagement loop that your last step is investment.
And so I ran the survey on a business that I thought was a fairly commoditized business.
And part of that I wanted to see could I use the same go-to-market approach on a later stage company and use it to accelerate growth?
And so this was a business called webs.com.
And they eventually got acquired by VistaPrint.
But they'd been pretty flat for the year before I went in there.
And then I started to kind of use this approach to try to dial in their growth engine.
And I ran the survey thinking, you know, you've had products like Wix and Webley that have come on to the market since this, you know, more legacy website building product has been around.
And I personally think they're a little easier to use.
They're a little better.
And so I didn't have high hopes when I ran the survey, but it came back with one of the highest.
scores I'd ever seen. And it was like, like 90% of the people saying they'd be very disappointed
and they could no longer use the product. I've never seen that. And I was like,
how could that be possible? This product is, it's kind of a commoditized category. I wouldn't even
say it's one of the best. And then when I want to dug into it, again, it comes back to that
Nuriall hooked model is that the investment people have made in building that website, they put
so much into, you know, that they, they know exactly how to make the changes and in the kind of the
the CMS kind of side of things.
They have spent a lot of time just making it beautiful.
And so ultimately it was something that that was why they were saying they'd be very disappointed.
I mean, but for kind of fast forward and on when I initially went in,
still doing these things help the business resume growth and have significant growth
over the next 12 months after we did these things.
So still the signal we got from why people would be very disappointed without the product was important and speed to value and kind of all of the other things I think about in go to market for an early stage product still were relevant, but just the, I think they were a little stronger on the percentage.
You'd be very disappointed.
Even Eventbrite when I was there when we ran it was probably the second highest I'd ever seen.
but with event organizers,
if they've already set their event up on that platform
and they've sent it out to their list
and all those people are coming in
and they're managing their event,
again, they've invested a lot in the platform.
So sort of switching costs, I think can factor in there.
So it's a function of both switching costs
and utility of the product.
So that's a question I wanted to ask
is what's your guidance on when to ask this question?
What I'm hearing is if you ask it very far along the journey when they're very invested,
you'll get a much higher score.
Is there any advice on how to the timing on the best time to ask this question of your users?
What I recommend is a random sample of people who've really used your product.
So they've gone in, they didn't just sign up, but they went in and hopefully hit that
evasion moment.
they've used it twice, you know, two plus times, and, and they've ideally used it, say, within the last week or two weeks so that it's, you know, they haven't churned yet.
So if it's a random sample of those people, that's kind of the ideal time to ask it.
Got it. So basically it's people that have activated whatever that means to you and have been using it for a couple weeks.
Not people, like, landing on your homepage, not people just signing up, not people months later.
Not people who've seen like a demo of your product, but it's people who actually have experienced the product.
But it's okay if you're hitting people who've used it months later.
But like in that lookout example that I gave, if I'm testing people's perception of the product after I made updates to the onboarding, I'm going to only want to survey people who went through the new onboarding.
Yeah.
In the experimental group.
Yeah.
Okay.
So I asked people on Twitter what to ask.
you. A lot of people had a lot of awesome questions. I'm going to sprinkle in a couple of these questions throughout the chat. One came in from Shreosha, popular guest of the podcast. One of the ones that I listened to recently. Amazing. I think it's the second most popular episode behind Brian Chesky. Okay, so he had a question of just what are the limitations of the score? When does it break down? When should you not use it if ever? Is there anything of just like, here's when it's not going to work for you? I think one-off products would probably, you know, like, how would you feel if you could no longer watch the movie you just
watch like I wouldn't care.
Even like when I run a workshop, I don't run, I don't run this as part of my survey after
I do a workshop because like, how would you feel you can no longer attend the workshop?
You just attend it.
It doesn't make sense.
So I'll ask an NPS question as my filtering questions so that I'm looking at, you know, focusing
and on feedback of people who love it.
Also then through a separate lens, looking at people maybe who would be my D.E.
tractors. So I think, I think one-off products are probably not, not good products to run the
question on. There may be other other places as well that I'm not thinking of right now, but that
But it sounds like not many. What I'm hearing is it's generally widely applicable. Yeah, I think
it is, like at least from from my perspective, like I, it's been really useful for me anyway.
Awesome. Okay. And then the follow-up question from Stras is, and I kind of ask this, but I'm
curious if there's anything more here, if just have you seen any instances of start?
startups over relying on the score prematurely declaring product market fit when in reality
they haven't reached it yet.
And just, are there any other caveats of like, cool, I got 40%.
Is there anything else you should know?
Like, okay, but maybe check this one thing.
Yeah.
I mean, I think to me it's kind of like what really is the definition of product market fit
is the definition that people who get through my crappy onboarding and actually experience
the product, love it.
And if I'm able to retain those people, that means I have product market fit.
or is fixing that crappy onboarding part of getting to product market fit as well.
I think that's up for debate.
So to me, the hardest, I wouldn't obsess on onboarding if I know those who kind of get through
the challenge of getting started with the product still don't like the product,
then it feels like it's a core product issue or, you know, wrong people using it in the wrong
way issue.
But, you know, once once you have that, then ultimately,
it doesn't mean that you're ready to grow. Like when when I focus on growth, then
customer acquisition is almost the last step. Like once I, once I validate that it's a must
have for those early users, then I'm thinking about, okay, how do I optimize speed to value?
How do I make sure that people have the right prompts to come back and use the product at the
right time? So it's kind of more of that engagement loop. How do I, how do I get my existing users
to bring in more users if there's something that makes sense on that end?
even how do I optimize my revenue model?
And once all of those things are working well,
then I'll obsess on the customer acquisition side.
But customer acquisition is so hard
that if you're not really efficient
at converting and retaining and monetizing people,
you're going to really struggle on the customer acquisition side.
Yeah, cool.
And we'll talk about customer acquisition slash growth.
Sure.
Another question I want to ask,
and a couple listeners asked is the 40%.
So I had a JAG from Newbank on the podcast.
I think you may have worked with them,
and they use 50% as their threshold
because apparently Brazilians are very nice.
Yeah, optimistic.
He's what I said.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So I guess the question is,
do you find instances where you should increase that percentage
and slash in B2B is anything different?
Do you change the percentage in B2B?
Any advice there of just like when you adjust the threshold?
Yeah, I hadn't really thought too much on that.
But again, for me, generally I'm like, I'm trying to just figure out, is this a product that can grow?
So like when I'm using it, I'm trying to just, you know, so if I got a 37% am I going to be like, oh, no, this would be impossible.
Yeah, or if I had a 70% does I mean I guarantee like say, oh, yeah, I want to jump in and work with this company.
it's more nuanced than that.
Obviously, if it's 70%,
but I have no idea how I grow the business,
I'm going to be stuck there.
But I do think he brought up a really good point
that culturally some people are going to be more
optimistic or pessimistic.
Interestingly, when I came up with a question,
I used to just use kind of a normal satisfaction question.
I was, when I was working at Zobni, I would, I'm just like an intensely curious person anyway,
so I'm just trying to dig in and understand the customers.
And so I've always done lots of surveying.
But at Zobney, I was going to ask it as, that used my filter as a satisfaction question.
So, you know, how satisfied are you with this?
I'm very satisfied.
I'm somewhat satisfied.
And I, our main customers were actually senior management.
And so I thought, you know, senior management's never satisfied.
I'm going to get always this super lukewarm thing.
How can I change this question to be more, give me a more kind of real answer from these guys.
Well, if I flip it and say, how would you feel if you could no longer use this product,
I'll probably get a more honest answer back from them.
And of course, they're very disappointed if they can't get what they want.
And so initially it was just for the case of Zobni, but then I went to Dropbox right after Zobney.
and like, oh, I'll try the question again,
and the insights I got back were really useful.
And so each company I went to,
I kept using the question.
I'm like, this works way better than your typical satisfaction question.
But initially it was more about thinking just, you know,
senior management to get a more honest answer out of them.
So that's the origin story right there.
Yeah.
Wow.
That senior managers are just very harsh and they don't need anything.
Yeah.
And you have to flip it.
That is so interesting.
Just like that question is such a good.
reminder of how hard it is to build anything people really would be disappointed not to have.
That's why this works so well. People are like, I don't need this. And app cares. That's the core of
this. That is just that is hard. Especially when I first moved to Silicon Valley. So the first like
15 years of my career were not in Silicon Valley. And so that was in Eastern Europe and then
New York and then Boston, you move to Silicon Valley and you have, you have people who get really
excited about technology for technology's sake. And so.
So, you know, just something being cool is like, isn't it cool that we can actually do this?
You know, drives a lot of people.
And so, you know, to me, I'm very, like, practical.
If it's not something that is really bringing value to people, then the likelihood that that product's successful long term is going to be pretty low.
And so even interestingly, at Dropbox, through the six months I was there, I would ask, I'd ask one question like, like,
multiple times a month.
I broke kind of the early beta users into a bunch of different lists.
And I'd ask, which best describes you?
I like to be among the first to try cool new technology or only try things that I think
will be useful for me.
And over the six months, it flipped from 90% being people who try things that they want
to try cool new technology to six months later, it was people who only are going to try
something that they feel like is useful.
But what's kind of cool is just because what motivates you to try something is like you're an early adopter and you want to try something cool.
If you're going to keep using it, it's because it's giving you some utility.
And so I can still use those early adopters to help me figure out where is the value inside the product.
Awesome.
So actually two questions along those lines.
How durable do you find this percentage being?
Say you hit 40%.
How often does that fade and go away versus stay there or go higher?
Yeah, I haven't seen it really like fade back down, but it's, but I've seen companies fail, you know, despite having it. And I think a lot of times then it's, it's, you know, it's, it becomes like an execution challenge. Once you, once you, once you have product market fit, you know, not everyone's going to be a good executor. But before that, like, I think getting to product market fit, obviously there's, there's a lot of methodology for, for, for doing it today that that might make it a bit easier.
for people, but I still think it's fairly random and pretty dang hard. And so ultimately, like,
the risk factor of creating something that people care about is, is really difficult. So if you can get
to the point where you have 40% of the people who are using it, saying they'd be very disappointed
and you have a reasonable sample size, let's say, you know, you got 10 people and four of them said
they'd be very disappointed without it. You're still going to get something useful from those four,
but I wouldn't say that's a sample size that you can really like go to market on.
So yeah.
What's a good sample size you look for?
Just like, okay, this is actually good data.
I want to rely on.
That's really funny.
Like I, so much of this stuff I kind of like self-learned.
But I basically at one point said, I need at least 30 responses.
And I just thought I just kind of randomly made up a number.
And then I had people telling me, yeah, 30 is kind of the minimum that you want on stuff.
Like, okay.
And even when I first created this survey, I remember showing it to the to the, to the,
co-founder of SlideShare
and she was like, her PhD
was in, you know, survey
related stuff like cognitive
psychology, but she basically
said it was really about surveying and she's like,
this methodology is amazing.
How did you come up with this? And so
having some of that validation around these things
helped, but, you know, a lot of it was just
again, driven by my own
curiosity and
also just knowing that
the failure is such a likely outcome
that, you know,
trying to
reverse engine
that failure
and the number one
reason for failure
would be that
people don't
actually care about
the product
and so
when I find that
that's a
that's a really good sign
that it's,
we're now down
to an execution challenge.
And there's this obvious
element of
you may have
product market fit
with people
but that group
might end up being
very small
and the business
you build around
it could actually
be cool
but it's not going
to be a massive business.
Is there anything
there you can share
just like, it's hard to know the size of opportunity, even though you know some people really,
really like it. Yeah, I talked about I go to a multiple choice after I initially use open-ended
to open-ended questions to sort of crowdsource the different use cases, but then I try to force
people in a bucket. And then I can run filters on each of those buckets. And I'll be like,
oh, people who use it this way are like 60% likely to be very disappointed without the product.
but people who use it this way are 35% likely to be very disappointed,
but way more people use it the 35% way.
And so then having to like, you know,
do you want that like intensely loyal group or the much broader,
much broader group that's maybe a bit less,
but almost there?
I think that becomes a bit of a strategic,
a strategic conversation of like, you know,
do we, do we want to have a better chance of surviving going after,
a niche that we know we can serve well, or have we raised so much money that we have to go
after like a really big market and that that's not one's not going to be long term, but maybe
maybe then you're like, okay, once I have traction in that market, I can start to try to appeal
to some other markets. But I think that's where kind of some strategic decisions come in.
Do you have a heuristic of which you often recommend or is it very dependent on the situation?
I prefer kind of a more passionate customer base and work from there just because I think your biggest competition when you're really innovating is just like being irrelevant.
And so if you're if you're like deeply relevant to anyone, I think that gives you a much better chance of long term success.
Awesome. That's a really good insight. Okay, two more questions along this line. And then I want to talk about growth strategy.
One very tactical question. Is there is there a tool you recommend for doing this sort of survey? Like do you recommend in line?
in the product, an email, something else?
I've used a lot of different tools.
I actually had a survey business that I sold a private equity years ago
and that was a on product.
It's called Qualaroo that's like kind of in-flow survey tool.
I don't think, you know, I think just like using SurveyMonkey
with emailed surveys works fine.
And for me, it's a lot more of like,
what do I what what what's like pleasant for the customer to fill out and then how what's going to give me something where I can I can work really easily with the data so at bounce for example um they had already intercom in place that had just introduced surveying but it was kind of a really crappy customer experience on on at least at that time that's that's been almost a year now or actually a little over a year and um so I'm I'm really sensitive to like is it a good survey
experience for the consumer itself.
And then, but yeah, I don't think I'm stuck to anyone platform there.
Such an important topic.
Just like, again, to remind people why this is so important.
One of the most common questions founders ask is, do I have product market fit?
Have I built something people want?
Like, that's just an endless series of, I don't know, how do I know, when do I know?
And this is telling you in a really interesting way.
So your advice is this is a leading indicator.
You don't actually know until people actually start using it.
and whether they retain and continue using it.
Is there just like advice on the shift you make from relying on the survey to actually
looking at retention cohorts?
Is it just once you have enough data, once you have a couple of cohorts, then start
looking at that, forget about the survey?
Yeah, what I would say is, but retention cohorts don't give you any of the qualitative insights
into the why.
So that's why I would continue to do the survey.
So initially, I would say if the survey comes back and it shows, you know, it shows
whatever your target number is.
If you want to be like NewBank, it would be a 50% or, you know, I spend a few years,
two of the companies I launched, we launched in Hungary.
And I would say it's kind of the opposite end of the spectrum of Brazil, maybe more pessimistic
than the average kind of culture.
And so maybe 30% is good enough there.
But that ultimately, whatever your target is that you have the signal that says,
okay, we have enough value here.
Let's start working on growing the business.
But while you're working on growing the business, I would be paying attention to those retention
cohorts. And if you're churning out all the customers who were saying that they'd be very
disappointed without the product, then, okay, let's retrench and rethink, do we really have product
market fit here? And what do we need to do to get it if we don't?
Awesome. And speaking of NewBank, if anyone wants to see how a company is actually operationalized
this in the way they operate.
There's an episode that we'll link to in the show notes where every new product at New
Bank they build before they launch it, they wait for a 50% threshold for people to say
50% of people would be disappointed if this product did not exist as they're developing it.
And only then do they launch it publicly.
Yeah, I think they even do it down to the feature level.
Wow.
So if you think about it, like, you know, how would you feel if you can no longer use this
feature, starts to give you, again, the signal is that feature a must
have feature. And if it's not, maybe we shouldn't have it. And so, yeah, I was, I was super excited when I,
when I saw how they were using the survey. And they were doing it before I engage with them.
Oh, wow. But, uh, yeah, they were doing it, I think from pretty early on in the business.
The reason they can do this is they have a lot of users. They have millions and millions of
users so they can ask some small percentage of people's question because people hearing this
might be like, oh my God, how many times am I going to be asked this question when I'm using
this feature? But they have a lot of users, so it's easier.
Yeah, yeah.
Okay, last question, I promise, along these lines, say someone is listening and they're like, okay, man, I'm getting like 10%, I'm getting 15%.
I don't know what to do to increase my product market fit.
You should just like a strategy of just dig into the people that are very disappointed and see what they have to say.
But any other advice slash what do you find often works in helping people move from, say, 10% to 40%.
Yeah, so one of the things that's kind of cool about almost like open.
and sourcing the survey approach is, again, watching like how New Bank has evolved their usage.
But one of the other companies that I think used it in an interesting way is superhuman.
And I would say that they basically ended up probably putting a lot more momentum behind the question than it had even before.
They posted something about how they did it on first round capitals blog.
and what I have always said, and again, it's me coming at it from probably initially a marketing background,
which is like I'm kind of taking the product as a fixed, as a fixed thing.
And how do I actually figure out how to how to market and grow this product?
And product changes are going to take a long time.
And so what are the variables that I can control with a marketing background?
But so one of the things I've always said is, you know, just ignore the somewhat disappointing.
the people who say they'd be somewhat disappointed,
they're telling you it's a nice to have,
like, they're as good as gone.
So just ignore those guys.
And then,
but what Superhuman did was,
and the reason that,
you know,
put one piece in the middle there
before I say what Superhuman did,
the reason that I say ignore those guys
is that if you start paying attention
to what you're somewhat disappointed users
are telling you,
and then you start tweaking,
onboarding, and product based on their feedback,
maybe you're going to dilute it for your must-have users.
and that ultimately it becomes kind of good for everyone, but not great for anyone.
And so that was my fear of like trying to,
trying to read too much into the users who say they'd be somewhat disappointed.
But the superhuman guys actually found, I think, a good way around that where they said,
okay, what is the benefit that my must have users are focused on?
And then of the users who say they'd be somewhat disappointed,
so the nice to have users, of those users who are also focused on,
that benefit, what do they need in the product for it then to become a must have for them?
And so they're staying true to that kind of core benefit, but they're trying to essentially
take those on-the-fence users and moving them up. And so I think their way of approaching that
addressed what my concern was, which is, are we going to kind of break it for the must-have users?
That's an awesome insight. By the way, did Rahul and the team there just do this on their own,
or were you involved in any way in this? No. I mean, that's the same thing.
Like I said, I wasn't initially involved with NewBank.
I wasn't involved with them.
And that's the benefit of, you know, we wrote about it in our book in 2017.
And so I think that I got it out there.
But I actually teamed up with the Kiss Metrics team in 2012 and essentially published this survey on survey.
com, where we just made it freely available for people and a really easy template to prepare and send out.
and the how to guide on it.
And it was all just, yeah, free.
I think Kissmets are just kind of using it as maybe Legion.
And for me, I just wanted a way to kind of put something out for the community.
And so it's been out there for a long time.
So it's not surprising that different companies have found different unique ways to use it.
That's awesome.
I think that post is one on most popular in first round.
Really had an impact on a lot of people.
Yeah.
So just to repeat the approach you recommend for when you're,
digging into, I wrote this down when you're talking, for how to dig into what benefit people
are finding. Your advice is it's basically a follow-up survey to the extremely disappointed people
asking them, what is the primary benefit you get? It's an open text initially. Then once you get
a collection, you do, it sounds like another survey as multiple choice. Here's like a different group
of people to be clear. A different group. Yeah. Got it. Awesome. And then it's like which of these four
or five benefits is what you're getting at this product? And then the question is, why is that
this benefit important to you. Yeah. And then you'll see we have like eventually the survey.
I.O got closed down, but the, but essentially the template that I typically used was then moved
at pmfsurvey.com. And so you'll see some other questions that I have on there as well. Like,
what would you use instead if this product were no longer available? And that's one of the interesting
things is you start to see. People who say they'd be somewhat disappointed. Usually they're focused on a
commodity use case, and they know an easy alternative to switch to. So to be a must have,
it needs to be both valuable and unique. Okay. Anything else on this topic of the Sean Ellis test,
product market fit test before we move on to growth strategy advice? No, I think that's right.
Okay. I think we did almost an hour on that one topic, which I love, because I feel like this is
such a powerful tool that I think people sort of know and have used, but I think there's a lot of opportunity
to use it more effectively and all the stuff you point out about it.
It's not just get this, you have this threshold.
Cool. Let's move. Let's grow. It's like this is just, this is how you figure out how to make
it better and better and grow faster and faster. And it's actually a good segue talking about growth.
So even though you coin the term growth hacking, you spend most of your time on the opposite,
essentially, which is helping companies figure out sustainable growth strategies, not just a bunch
of hacks to grow for a little bit and then disappear. And from what I've seen, it's all rooted in
this idea of product market fit and what helps you find product market fit.
And I imagine many of the stuff we've talked about.
Yeah, just one quick interjection there is that when I coin growth hacking, I did not think of it as a bunch of one-off hacks that what I thought of it was much more about what is the way to ultimately drive sustainable growth.
But it's over time, maybe more interpreted the way you described it, but just to jump in and say that.
That's a really good clarification.
So how did you actually initially frame it when you,
Yeah, I just said it's about, you know, looking at every single thing that you're doing and scrutinizing its impact on growth in the business.
And particularly, I think most marketers, when I first moved to Silicon Valley, most CEOs who were asking me to help their companies, they were saying, we need help with awareness building.
And I'm getting introductions from top VCs.
And so so much of, I think, the way people were pushing growth was sort of like tech,
Facebook marketing, you know, marketing textbook, how to approach it. And startups just don't have
the luxury to do all of those things. And so you got to really focused on how do I acquire
customers to an experience that's going to make them want to keep using this product. And so I,
yeah, maybe I picked the wrong term in calling it growth hacking. But I think it at least opened
the conversation to getting more people thinking about maybe we should be thinking about growth
in a different way than as it's traditionally taught in marketing courses in school.
Is there another term you think you should have used?
Do you always think back?
I should have called it this.
Is there anything that you've had in your mind?
I don't.
I think sometimes having something that's a little divisive is almost better because it's too easy to just go completely unnoticed.
And so, yeah, but I was trying to put a name on not just how I was approaching growth, but seeing, you know, Facebook obviously had a very different approach to growth than most companies, LinkedIn, Twitter.
But there was a handful of companies that were approaching it in the same way I had previously
been approaching it.
And I just thought, this thing needs a name.
And so sat down with a couple of friends, came up with a name, and it stuck.
But, but yeah, obviously, from day one, it was pretty divisive with different groups.
That's a fun story.
Thanks for sharing that.
Okay.
So talking about growth and helping companies figure out how to grow.
So say you go to a company, they're getting 40, say,
42% on the Sean Ellis test and they're like, okay, cool, let's start thinking about growth.
What's your first piece of advice to them to start when they're thinking about growth?
And then just broadly, how do you approach helping them figure out how to grow?
Ultimately, it's about trying to get as many of the right people to that same state that we just talked about with the must have users.
So trying to get as many people to experience the product in a way where they'd be very disappointed if they could no longer use the product.
And so that's not just acquisition, which is how most companies think about, you know, initially it was awareness.
Then maybe the more developed way was like, oh, let's at least focus on profitable acquisition.
But in my experience, you know, the hardest part is really sits inside the product team.
So how do you shape that first user experience?
So they actually use it in the right way.
And it's not so difficult that they give up.
and that ultimately, like, we understand what makes it a must have product, and then,
and then what we're trying to do is build a, yeah, sounds kind of theoretical here, but I can go
into the details on how, but build a flywheel around that must have values. So step one would be,
would be understand it. Step two for me is, is then figure out a metric that essentially
captures units of that value being delivered. And so,
when I think about a North Star metric, that's what I'm thinking about is, is like something that
reflects how many people are coming in and experiencing that that product market fit experience,
whatever that is. And it's not just me telling them, here's what your North Star metric should be.
It's that ultimately, ultimately the team needs to decide that together. And then, and then really just
diagramming. What are, what are all of the different ways that we can grow that, that,
North Star Metrics. So that's where you start to actually build, I call it like a value delivery
engine, but it's, you know, what is our, what does our onboarding look like? What's that,
that aha moment, that activation? What does the engagement loop look like? Is there any referral?
Like, trying to capture it as it is today. And then from there, thinking about where are the
biggest opportunities for improvements? So those high leverage opportunities and then ultimately,
you know, starting to run experiments against those opportunities.
Generally, I think I touched on it a little bit earlier, but generally the sequence that I like to do is start with activation because that's, that one's just so critical and it's easy to get lost in between, especially for an early product.
The product team is so focused on the roadmap.
We're two features away from not even needing, not even needing marketing anymore.
This thing's going to take off.
And then a marketing team so focused on bringing new people in, but how do you get those new people to a great first experience kind of falls through the cracks a lot of time?
So a lot of focus on activation and then engagement and referral and getting the revenue model right.
And then once each of those pieces are working well, then starting to really obsess on the channel side.
One thing that I'll say like when I go in and directly and involve with the company on the acquisition side,
I am thinking about my hypotheses on the acquisition pretty early.
on because if I go into it and I have no idea how we'll acquire those customers,
I'm not,
I'm not real confident I'll figure it out when I'm there.
So I want to have like two or three things that seem pretty viable as,
as ways to profitably acquire customers and knowing that once I get deep into it,
I'll probably come up with one or two more.
And I've got like five.
One of them's likely to work.
But I don't want to like just be under the pressure of having to come up with that
once I come in, if I don't at least see an angle from before I get involved with a company.
What I'm hearing is when you come into a company and they're asking, Sean, how do we figure out
how to grow this thing? You actually focus first on activation onboarding, and we're going to
talk about all these things. Then after that, like basically these are priority order for you.
Then it's flywheel engagement, referral stuff to see if there's a way to drive that.
Then revenue, how do we make money with this and how do we make sure we're doing something?
this profitably.
And only then,
just do you start to go big on acquisition top of funnel growth?
Yeah.
I may need to do some acquisition stuff before just to bring enough flow through,
but I'm not,
I'm not obsessing on like how scalable is this.
It's just like, yeah,
let's get enough people coming through.
We can start to take the slack out.
Part of it comes down to that the acquisition side is so competitive now
that if you're not really efficient at converting and retaining and monetizing
customers,
You just can't find scalable, profitable customer acquisition channels.
This is fascinating because I think a lot of people are probably do the opposite.
Start driving a bunch of growth to our product.
Then we'll fix onboarding.
Then we'll figure out how we're making money and referrals comes along there.
So I think this is really important for people to hear.
So again, the reason you invest first and focus a lot on onboarding slash getting people
activated is because that is very correlated to retention.
And this must have customer this.
I'll be very disappointed customer.
Yeah.
And they're at the highest risk of losing them at that point.
They're probably a little skeptical about a promise that you put out there,
but they're intrigued enough to want to use it.
But until you get them to that must have experience,
until you kind of get them to that aha moment,
they're at high risk of being lost.
And so a lot of people focus on it.
I better get their email address or their phone number.
But then you're essentially having to reacquire them.
at that point. So to me, you can collapse that time to value. I'd give you a couple of,
like, incredible examples of like what when we, so at Log Me In, when we initially tried to
grow the business, I was stuck at being able to spend, you know, I couldn't spend more than $10,000
per month profitably trying to grow the business. And then I dug into the data and I, and I saw that
95% of the people signing up for LogMe in.
So log me in free, at the time,
free remote access for your computer.
And so you install software and you can control it from any other computer.
So 95% of the people signing up never once did a remote control session.
And so not surprisingly then,
I had to get my kind of monetization off the 5% who did.
That was really limiting my ability to find channels that worked.
And so our, credit our CEO with this, that I shared the data with him.
And he basically told the product team, we are putting a complete freeze on the product development roadmap.
So every single person from product, engineering, design, and then also said to me, stop trying to find new channels.
The three of us on the marketing side are all going to focus on improving the sign up to usage rate.
And so in three months, we improved the sign-up to usage rate by 1,000 percent.
So we went from only 5 percent of people using the product to 50 percent.
I went back, tried the exact same channels that previously only scaled to $10,000 a month.
Now they scaled to a million dollars a month with a three-month payback on marketing dollars invested.
80 percent of new users were coming in through word of mouth.
So there was this major inflection point by just focusing on activation.
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What do you find often works in helping increase activation?
I know there's a million things that people do, but I guess what are like three or four
things that you think people should definitely try to help improve activation and
their onboarding conversion?
One of my favorite quotes is a quote from a guy Kettering that was early like 100 years ago at GM running innovation.
And he says a problem well stated is a problem half solved.
And so I think a lot of it comes down to not the things you try, but how you deeply understand the problem that's preventing someone from getting using your product effectively.
And so, yeah, I'll just give you one example.
we had one channel, like kind of after we made a lot of these changes and had already driven a ton of improvement in the Log Me In onboarding, we found a demand generation channel that was really cheap and the economics looked great.
But at just the download step, we had a 90% drop off rate.
And so we AB tested a bunch of different things there to try to try to improve that conversion rate.
And then finally, you know, 10 plus tests not able to improve it.
Finally, someone said, well, these people are registering.
Why don't we just ask them why they signed up and didn't download the software?
And so we didn't want to do it into kind of a creepy way.
So we just said, you know, made it look like a note coming from customer service.
We had this channel was sending 200,000 people a day.
So 20,000 people were converting to registering.
So we had essentially, yeah, 20,000 people.
could email and then 18,000 of them who didn't download.
And so we just asked, hey, knows you haven't had a chance to use the product yet.
It looked like it was coming from customer support.
What happened?
And the answer we got back and not a formal survey was, oh, I just, this seemed too good to
be true.
I didn't believe this was free.
I mentioned to you, we were one of the first freemium SaaS products out there.
And so people were skeptical when, especially in a demand gen channel where they
They hadn't sort of seen a radio or a TV advertisement from our competitor who was a premium only product.
These are people who were discovering the category for the first time.
They were getting there.
And so our next test, once we articulated what the problem was, our next test gave us a 300% improvement in the download rate, which was a, we gave them a choice.
Download a trial of the paid version or download the free version.
Put big graphical checkmark next to the free version.
But when they saw we had a business model and a trial of a paid version, the free version was credible.
And so that essentially made that channel work for us.
So I think, again, it's a combination of qualitative research.
Looking at how others did it, we had this theory.
Our previous company had been a game company that didn't require a download.
So initially we had this theory that maybe just downloadable software can't be in the millions of new customers a month.
And so we're being unrealistic here.
But then we're like, are there any counter examples to that?
And like, no, the instant messengers are downloadable.
And they have hundreds of millions of customers.
So let's study there, download and install process and see if we have any ideas that we
could borrow from that.
So again, some inspiration, tried some of those things.
It was a combination of just trying a bunch of different stuff that ultimately led to.
I wouldn't say there was one big gain.
it was a bunch of small gains.
Awesome. Okay.
So a few things for people to try if they're like,
hey, how do I improve my activation rate?
How do I improve my conversion rate?
Just like drill further into what is stopping people from progressing?
Like, ask them, why did you bounce here?
Why did what did you think this was going to be?
Why didn't you end up using this?
Look for inspiration from other products.
I think people probably already know that.
You talked about earlier this idea of the positioning,
having a big impact of just like figuring out they want an anti-vier software.
let's make that very clear.
Hey, we've got the best antivirus software.
That's what we're here for.
So there's probably just like messaging that you find works a lot of times, right?
I mean, your two big levers on driving a conversion are increased desire, reduce friction.
And so, yeah, you definitely want to increase the right desire.
And then sometimes it can also just be reminding people along the way of what benefits you're going to get.
In the case of Log Me In, it was probably the most complicated funnel.
I've ever seen because you couldn't even get to the aha moment while you're sitting in front of the computer.
You had to actually go to a different computer and to use the service to remote control the computer you're in front of.
So it's not surprising that there was like so many steps where we could lose people,
but we just weren't that intentional about designing each of those steps initially.
And it wasn't until we kind of thought through why would we lose someone at this step and studying the data.
which steps where we're losing the most people at, then deeply trying to contextualize,
why are we losing them there, coming up with a set of tests that we want to run,
and then having a good way of deciding which one to test first, and ultimately focusing the
tests on the areas where we're losing the most people.
The other element of this is coming up with an activation metric and aligning on, like,
here's what we consider someone activated.
I know this is very dependent on the product, but any advice or heuristic for how to help people
decide this is our activated user? I tend to start qualitatively. So just like when do I think
they've had a good enough experience with the product to really like know it? And so like in the
case of LaMian, it was pretty easy. If they didn't do a remote control session, they didn't use
the product. There was no value along the way there. And so and then at least try to see if there's a
correlation to long-term retention of doing that. Causation is you need to do some experimentation to
to prove causation. At the very least, I want to see that correlation. But if I start with,
you know, two or three ideas of what it might be and then, and then go and study the data,
that can help you focus. But again, I don't think there's like necessarily one exact right answer
of what is, what is that aha moment? There might be two or three different things. I think it's
that intentionality about picking something that's experience based and saying, what is a likely
experienced that someone's going to get a good enough taste of this product. And then I do see some
companies that are like, well, the activation moment should be, they've used it 100 times.
That's going to correlate to long-term retention, but it's just not very actionable. It's so far
down the user experience. So ideally, if there's a way that I could get them there in the
first session, in the first day, that's great. And so it's sort of something that's very,
value that can be experienced super early.
But I actually give you an example from the first company I worked on was a game company
where I actually flipped it.
And basically instead of making a traditional funnel where they could play our games after they signed up,
I made our games the advertisements.
So basically we syndicated our games to 40,000 websites.
They started gameplay experience on the other website.
Then they would get a message that,
they now have a qualifying score.
And if they, if they register, they'll be in the drawing for the weekly cash prize.
And then, and then we could pull them into multiplayer games on the site.
And so it was kind of the strategy that YouTube used to grow, but it was like two years before
YouTube introduced the approach.
Yeah.
It feels like you basically created Zinga.
That's what I'm hearing there.
Okay.
So let's move further down the funnel.
So we've talked about activation onboarding.
the next phase that you focus on is basically some people call this growth loops growth engines
flywheels basically it's like the thing that helps your business grow and something i am curious if
this resonates i found there's basically four ways to grow and usually one of these engines is
responsible for almost all of your growth so what i've seen is basically it's you're going to go
through sales you're going to go through SEO you're going to go through virality word of mouth
or paid growth does that resonate does that feel right
And I wouldn't say it's necessarily one or the other.
Like I think I think Bounce is a really interesting example where SEO was super important for for Bounce and is super important for Bounce.
So people who are essentially saying luggage storage Paris luggage store, you know, most people when they're trying to find a place to store their luggage, they're starting with Google.
But at the same time, a huge percentage of the people who use Bounce are.
are dragging their bag down a, down a street over, you know, over cobblestones in Paris.
And then they pass a sign that says, store your bag here for $5 a day.
And it's like, oh, no brainer.
And so 10,000 partners around the world means that there's, there's a lot of people kind
of in the right situation on the demand gen side.
So yeah, one would be, I actually think of kind of like, I'm not sure how it would map
to this, but like demand generation versus demand harvesting.
And so, you know, one of those examples would be a demand generation example.
Like when you see the signs, when you're passing, it's like high context, right place.
And then obviously the demand harvesting would be anyone who's Googling.
And so they do paid search and organic search there.
Interesting.
I don't see that like that sign approach work often, but I definitely have seen it work like Yelp.
I think grew in a lot of ways of just like little Yelp stickers on all the restaurants, DoorDash, I think probably grew through that.
Yeah, I think every business could be a little bit different, but for bounce, it makes sense that that would be a really good opportunity for them.
How do you help a business figure out which area to bet on, like whether they should go paid, whether they should go SEO, whether they should hire sales.
That's sales is probably an easier one of like probably B2B, you're probably going to have to do a sales team.
I guess just to help them pick like here's where you have a big opportunity.
Again, it kind of comes down like as I'm going into it, I'm thinking,
what are the realistic customer acquisition angles for this business?
And I want to have, you know,
ideally two or three that I'm coming into it with.
But it's going to, you know, obviously like,
like Dropbox is a classic one of like,
oh man, this product.
User get user is going to be just like a classic.
There's, you know,
file share built into it,
folder collaboration.
There's so many pieces of it that cross from one user to the next.
But interestingly,
it was fairly similar to Log Me In in some senses as kind of solving two businesses that are
solving similar problems in in different ways where Log Me In, we grew almost entirely off
of paid search. And part of it again is that for us, we had a competitor that was spending
tens of millions of dollars a month creating the category with a premium only product through
radio and TV advertising, go to my PC, they were just, they're creating all this latent
demand. And so it just made sense for us to disrupt them with a freemium service and to
insert ourselves in the flow of someone like, what was that thing that I heard about on the TV
commercial? And now they go and they Google it. And yeah, same thing about free. So we weren't really
pushing for differentiation, but just really, you know, trying to harvest that. So I couldn't do that at
Dropbox.
Like, no one was looking for Dropbox when I went there.
And so, you know, we, we tried a little bit with search to see, can we, can we make
it work on, you know, cloud storage or backup or kind of going to some of these, like,
traditional category.
And cloud storage wasn't even a traditional category at that point, but backup was.
And it was just like, it was fairly expensive to be, and there was just not that much
demand there that way.
And so it just made more sense to focus on the user get user.
loops at at Dropbox.
So I think I think basically for for each business,
it's just thinking about what's,
what's unique for that,
that business that is,
is going to open up channel opportunities.
And everyone's going to be a little bit,
I think, jaded from whatever the last thing that worked really well,
they're going to think they can,
they can apply it in the next business.
But after enough times myself,
I've just,
you know,
I tend to get the most inspiration by just talking to,
to customers and finding out how did they find it?
How do they typically find something like that?
And that starts to give me some ideas as well.
I think that last point is really powerful.
And I'm just writing it down and you said,
so essentially one of your tactics is talking to users,
asking them how did you find this product and how do you normally find products like this?
Was that the second question?
I think that's like such a,
it's like similar to your start-in-lis test.
It's such a simple question,
but it's so powerful because how else will people find your product?
It's they go to a place to find stuff like this.
Yeah.
And like they, I Google search Google for folder sharing.
Like, there's so much there that I think is easy to skip over.
I think the reason that you don't actually kind of hear people taking the obvious route there a lot of times is because.
And I used to be in the same thing that people tend to be either over index on qualitative or over index.
on quantitative.
So kind of like, you know, analytics.
I'm going to get all my answers from testing and analytics.
I'm going to get all my answers from traditional customer research.
And I was very much in that initial camp for the first five years of my career.
I'm just going to measure everything and test the heck out of things and find stuff that works.
But I had a VC who was our lead VC at Log Me In who just said, when was the last time you
talked to a customer, just like pushed me to survey and talk to customer?
all the time. And at first I was like, yeah, gave the smart ass answer. I don't care what they say. I care what they do. And that's, that's what, you know, he's like, no, you got to talk to them. Then just to appease him, I would, I would try to have a conversation every day because he was in our office a lot. And so I could say, hey, yeah, I talked to a customer today when he would ask me. And then I started finding that my experiments were so much better, the more I talked to customers. And, you know, eventually I became very much like the blend of, of, of
qualitative and quantitative research leads to much better tests.
That is another amazing story and insight.
It's so interesting that people sometimes think of you as a growth hacker guy, experimented data,
when most of the advice you've been sharing so far is very qualitative driven,
very survey driven, target-to-customer-driven.
Yeah, and it's just really hard to run good experiments when you can't deeply contextualize what's going on.
I love this.
By the way, I don't know if I knew this.
So you helped develop the Dropbox referral program.
I was there at the time.
I basically, even when I first started talking with Drew before I came in, I was like,
I think the way we're going to grow this business is by leveraging the really passionate
customer base.
And that's what we need to double down on.
And we had tried a similar kind of referral program at Zobni.
And my friend who actually started, who started Ring, Jamie Simonoff, had previous
had a company called phone tag, like way before Ring.
And he had actually done a lot of the testing on kind of double-sided referral programs
and having incentive on both sides.
And he found that that worked the best.
And so between what we had tested at Zobni and those conversations with him,
I hadn't actually seen PayPal yet at that point what they were doing.
But yeah, that was kind of like, yeah, it seems like a referral.
program where we have incentives on both sides is the best way to go.
Interestingly, you know, six months before I was at Dropbox, I was at Log Me In, and I really thought
about having incentivized referrals that logged me in, but 80% of our new users were coming in
through word of mouth. And, you know, I had 100 million devices connected in on our system.
And I was just so afraid of breaking this growth engine by adding an incentive that I didn't
want to risk it. But at Dropbox, it was so early that, yeah, I would still say, like,
no experiment as one person. It happened to be when I was there. I had some insights that I
brought in, but ultimately, the guy who built it was actually an intern in Albert Ney.
And he ended up dropping out of MIT to stay with Dropbox for a few years after that. But,
yeah, he was kind of my right-hand guy to collaborating on growth day-to-day.
Wow. I would say Dropbox is a referral program and the PayPal referral program, as you mentioned, are the two most legendary studied copied referral programs out there.
And unfortunately, like, I think that what they don't realize is that before the referral program, Dropbox had amazing referral rate.
You know, like, they're kind of companies that are trying to copy it are like, why isn't anyone talking about a product?
Let's add a referral program with incentives. Like, to me, I think it's a great accelerant when it's already worked.
but it can't, it can't fix it if people don't want to talk about your product.
That's an awesome point and something I was just going to ask about.
And just kind of coming back to this topic of growing engagement, growing referrals as a growth
mechanism, what do you look for to tell you that there's an opportunity there?
And I'll just answer it partly as I've seen exactly what you just said, which is you need to
already have strong word of mouth growth because referrals kind of sits on that and gives you a little
more incentive to share. So maybe you agree with that, not agreeing that? Any other advice on
helping figure out, is there some kind of loop here that we can build? Well, one thing I will say
is like, freemium, when we first started with it, as I said, we were like, we were one of the
first with it. So it took me a while to figure out exactly how freemium worked. But to me,
freemium to having a free and a premium version of your product, to really work in any
business, it needs to be that your free product is so good that people naturally have word
of mouth around that product. And then to be economically viable, you have to have a premium
product that's better enough and differentiated enough that people are going to upgrade to the
premium product. But I think a lot of times people are so worried about the second part that they
make the free version not very good. And then they're surprised when word of mouth isn't very strong
there. So I think you have to essentially have two distinct products that are great on their own. So that would be
the one piece. But then obviously companies that have any kind of collaborative layer to them are going to
benefit from or are going to be more likely to work well with referral. And then I think on the
engagement side, a lot of it comes down to just the nature of the product. Like, you know, Airbnb,
you're not going to use it every day, unless you're, unless you're, you know, like a vagrant or something maybe, but then you wouldn't have money to pay for it.
But the, so, so there's kind of a natural usage cycle to products and you want to be able to to maximize against that cycle.
And I think that's where I was saying, coming back to the, the hooked model, I think is, is a really good way to help to have a framework to think about how do I improve engagement.
One good counter example to that though of the kind of natural the natural frequency of using a product is Facebook when they changed their North Star metric from monthly active users to daily active users.
I think again, just having what gets measured gets managed.
Once Facebook was on a daily active user goal, the team suddenly had a lot more incentive to think about how do I bring people?
back every day and use this product where when it was monthly active users, they kind of only
got credit for that person for using once in that month. And even if they used 10 times, they didn't
get 10 times of credit. It was just like a, oh, that's cool too, but they weren't sort of measured on
that. And so I think it was sort of a random decision for Mark Zuckerberg to move from a monthly active
to a daily active because they hit one billion monthly active users. And they're like, okay, let's go for
1 billion daily active users,
but it had a really big impact on making that product way more addictive
to the point where obviously they ended up in Congress for,
you know,
or get a lot of pushback.
I'm not sure they got went to Congress for that,
but they got a lot of pushback for having a product that's maybe too addictive
and the same thing carrying into Instagram and some of the other meta products
or basically anything that is highly engaging.
So I do think, you know, the right incentives can actually help a team to focus on it.
And then, but there's going to be sort of a natural usage cycle to any product as well.
I'm glad you mentioned North Star Metrics.
I actually have a post-will-link to in the show notes where I collected the North Star metrics of 30 different companies to give you some inspiration.
I know this is a deep topic of its own, but just when someone is trying to pick their own North Star metric, which I 1,000 percent agree, informs so much about,
how your company operates, it basically focuses everyone's incentives to let's drive this thing,
and that changes so much of what you're building. Any just like bulletpoint piece of advice
for helping you pick your North Star metric? I start with the value that's uncovered through the
Sean Ellis test. So with a company, I'll say, okay, this is what the must have value is according to
our most passionate customers. And we want to think about a metric that reflects us delivering that
value and then I'll then I'll give them kind of a framework of ways to think about a north star metric but
I think it's really important for it to be a time capped group conversation and if you give a team 30 days
they'll take 30 days if you give them six months they'll take six months but so I think generally
a team can come up with a pretty good north star metric after 30 minutes if uh if they have like the
right kind of raw ingredients and a checklist of what's important in a north star metric like something that
It's not a ratio.
It's something that can be up and to the right over time.
So you can keep managing it and feeling good.
It should correlate to revenue growth,
but not necessarily like revenue shouldn't be the North Star metric.
But as you grow value across your customer base,
you should be able to grow revenue at the same rate.
And so there's some other things,
but I think that would be the most important is that it's something
that could be up and to the right over time.
and reflects value that you're delivering to customers.
Awesome.
And I was going to ask about revenue in your opinion there.
And so your advice is don't make revenue or North Star metric.
No, even Amazon, and again, like this is just what I know of Amazon's as being,
but monthly purchases.
But, yeah, someone else might say Amazon, no, Amazon's is GMV or something.
But like I think monthly purchases is great because it like maps to value that people
getting from Amazon. And so, you know, even if I spend, say, $1,000 on a TV set with,
with Amazon versus, you know, $3 on a, you know, $10 on an electric toothbrush,
Amazon from the consumer's perspective, delivered the same value. I needed something. Amazon helped
me find that thing. And so units of value from the customer perspective, I think, is more
important than overall revenue, but clearly, clearly, you know, with Amazon focusing on driving
more monthly purchases, at least on their store side of the business, that has helped them
become one most valuable companies in the world. So I think focusing on value is,
revenue should be a byproduct of doing things, right? It shouldn't kind of guide your day-to-day
actions. To make this even more concrete for people, are there some North Star metric examples?
You could share that you've seen that are good, like, say, for Ventbright or Dropbox or any companies you've worked with.
And I'll share one real quick as you're thinking about it.
At Airbnb, our star metric, was Knight's Book.
And so it's similar as Amazon, it's not like the money Airbnb made from bookings, but it's like nights booked.
And it was really, and basically every experiment around is like, is this increasing nights booked or is this decreasing nights?
And so that's like a really good marketplace one.
Uber, obviously, you know, weekly rides.
I'm always surprised with the with the Airbnb that it's there's not a kind of time piece on it like like the weekly rides that you have with Uber.
But maybe maybe it's because it's such an infrequent use case on travel that it doesn't make sense to to focus on.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Why is the timeframe important to you?
Why do you encourage that?
I just, you know, daily active users.
You saw the difference between monthly active users and daily active users could could change behavior a lot of
Facebook. It gives you like a quantifiable way. If you're just kind of taking an aggregate number
over time, it always looks like it's going up. So it's an engagement element. How often are
engaging? Yeah. Any others? Any others real quick? Yeah. I mean, I didn't really think about
North Star metrics when I was at Dropbox in Eventbrite, you know, like the term itself. But I was thinking
about what is, what is a valuable experience with Dropbox and how do I get people to have that more time? But
I don't even know what they go with today, but maybe like, you know, files, files and drop-off, files access might be better than just files, you know, hosted.
And then probably for Eventbrite again, I would say like weekly tickets or something like you could say weekly events, but then you have events that don't sell any tickets where weekly tickets would be more likely to reflect.
Events are going to be happy if they're selling tickets.
and yeah.
Okay.
Sean,
we've gone through
so much stuff.
I'm trying to limit
how many more questions
we get through
just so that we don't.
We're going long.
We're going long,
which is amazing.
I think there's so much
value here that we're
collecting for folks.
So let me just ask
maybe a couple more
quick questions.
One is actually
from Andrew Chen,
who is currently
partnered at A16Z.
He wrote about growth
for the longest time.
He think he helped
popularize growth hacking
for better or worse
with his article
and it being the
future of VPO, what is it? Growth hacking is the new VP of marketing, right? Is that the title?
So he actually had a question for you that he showed with me. His question is, growth strategies have
changed a lot over the past decade. What is the biggest difference now versus when you first started
working on growth? When I first started just being data driven on customer acquisition was enough
to win. And being test and data driven on customer acquisition, all the other companies were like
CPM focused and and you know so like we we could we could do really well just just with lots of
testing and some creativity and how it all worked but um that over time as as now I would say most
marketers are very most online marketers very like data and test driven they they know they needed
lots of testing and so to be competitive today you actually have to be able to be super efficient at
all parts of the business. So, you know, again, like how you convert, retain, monetize,
and that's when it gets hard. Getting, getting a marketing team to be, to be data and test
driven is pretty easy. Once you start getting into activation and referral and engagement and
retention, now you're talking about the overlap between marketing, product, if it's B2B,
bringing sales in there, customer success. And those teams are not used to working together. And so it's,
it's really hard to drive the collaboration that's needed to have an effective testing program
across the entire growth engine. And that's pretty much any business that's been successful
with it, implemented it super early in the business. And so very, very few later stage companies
have been able to make much progress in replicating that type of approach.
It's just gotten harder, basically.
Things are just getting harder.
That's gotten harder, but I think it's possible.
So it's what I obsess about all the time is how do you get cross-functional teams working together on growth now?
And it's still a huge advantage when you can pull it off.
Okay.
Totally unrelated question going in completely different direction as we close out.
Or chat.
So you came up with ICE, the very popular way of prioritizing work, which is crazy.
I did not know that until I started prepping for this conversation.
What's your thoughts on Rice, the intercom version of ICE, where RR stands for Reach, I believe, thoughts?
So I think it's an unnecessary addition, but maybe it's I'm just being protective of my original idea that the I in ICE is impact.
And it's essentially saying, best case scenario, how much impact could we get from this?
and reach is a super important part of impact.
And so I think it's already factored in the eye in ice.
And so I think if there's anything that I would be accused of,
it would be being oversimplifying things.
And there's, I'm not saying them,
but there's a lot of people who approach things with,
there's got to be a more complex way to approach this.
And that's just not me.
And so, yeah, more testing is better.
Like that's, no, it doesn't just work like that.
I mean, better tests are better than bad tests, but just if you have to hold yourself accountable to anything, more testing would be better.
And so I think I just one quick note on ICE is that, you know, in order to be able to effectively run a high velocity testing program, you need to be able to source ideas from across the company.
And that's why it came up with ICE, that if you, if you're having people,
people submit ideas and you can't tell them why their idea was not chosen, they're just going to get upset and you're going to waste a lot of time. But if you have a systematic way of being able to compare ideas, it's more likely that people would be able to get it and they'll be able to come up with better ideas.
I love the way you think, Sean. I have a post on prioritization where I basically just make the same argument that there's all these fancy complicated ways to prioritize. In the end, it's just impact confidence and effort. And it really works. And rarely is more work necessarily.
On the other hand, I do also have a guest post called Drice by these two guys called Detailed Rice,
which actually I think is a really good point where sometimes it's worth spending like 30 minutes per idea
to just really estimate how long will it take to avoid doing things that are just going to not work
and very unlikely to work, basically doing this reach piece and spending the time to do right.
And I think there's a lot of good value there.
Yeah.
And that's what I think is going to be really interesting is that over time, I think AI is going to actually change our ability to model out potential outcomes on experiments and start to, whether it's a more informed way of doing ICE or replaces ICE that ultimately, you know, probability of outcomes is something that AI will be pretty good at.
Well, amazing segue.
So the final question.
Actually, final question is, I wanted to ask you about any ways you've been using AI or ways
you think AI will impact the work you're doing or other folks you're doing and maybe
you just answered it.
But you tell me.
No, I'll touch on a couple.
One is that probably the funnest way that I'm using it today.
Like, obviously, I've done it for coming up with experiment ideas.
But the funnest way I personally use it is I get a lot of people asking me.
me for advice and I don't have very much time to answer, you know, with thoughtful answers to people.
And so almost every question that I get, I go to chat GPT and say, how would Sean Ellis answer this?
And it gives me an initial draft to like make a couple of tweaks and definitely that allows me to
answer a lot more. So it helps to have a book that's indexed in there and lots of writing.
That is so funny. And is that the question? That's as simple as simple as the prompt is how it
Sean Ellis answers. Yeah, because I know a lot of times that'll say Sean Ellis, author of hacking
growth, the, the, the, the, believes that, you know, and then, and then it'll like help
obviously pull that part out in the answer. Oh my God. It's like, you're just one step away from
a Chrome extension or something that just automatically plugs that into your. Yeah, exactly.
I can even start to have my, you know, personal system maybe start to answer some of those
questions as me. But I, I'm a little bit afraid to send something without, without reviewing
it first because sometimes there's, sometimes there's stuff that's pretty different from how
would answer it. But longer term, I actually think, you know, as I said, I think the cross-functional
challenge to growth is a thing that holds a lot of companies back from being able to implement
this a bit later. Mostly like, you know, product teams don't want to be a direction from marketing
teams. They don't want to get direction from product teams. And, you know, maybe a growth layer
can help to do these things. But I find that, you know, like if AI is essentially saying
you're underperforming in this area of your business.
You should drive some experiments in this area.
It's a lot harder to kind of let ego get in the way
when it's kind of dispassionate recommendations from a system.
And so I actually think the ability to come up with great experiments
is going to keep growing with AI and identifying opportunities.
And then obviously like the analytical AI side of things is going to be really exciting
in terms of being it.
I do find with most companies, once we get a real high velocity of experiments going,
the bottleneck ends up happening more on the analysis side.
And I think AI will help a lot with that as well.
Super cool.
These are awesome examples.
Okay, Sean, is there anything else you wanted to share our leave listeners with
before we get to our very exciting light and ran,
which will go through real fast because we've gone very long and I want to let you go?
Yeah, as I've gone through and done a lot of workshops and programs with companies,
is I keep coming back to this advice that I heard from a guy Oleg Yucumunkov, which is,
it often comes down to asking the right question at the right time in how you figure things out.
And he's a former data scientist from meta.
And so, you know, where he basically boils data science down to learning how to ask the right questions.
And so I actually have a course with him called go practice.io where that's really the big benefit of the course.
is to learn how to ask the right questions.
And yeah, you learn how to query them in amplitude,
but more importantly, being able to ask the right question.
And I think it's kind of cool to hear that from a data scientist from meta,
the importance of that.
But every time I'm going through exercises in my workshops,
it almost always comes down to people who aren't able to come up with the right,
or a good answer for a challenging in a business.
It's because they're not asking the obvious questions.
And as soon as they add, like, why aren't users downloading the software?
Let's let's just ask them that question.
Like that would be one example from my workshop.
You know, who considers the product that must have?
That part of getting, you know, to figuring out the must have kind of benefit that then allows you to hone in on product market fit.
And so, yeah, right questions, right time, I think is a really important way to
think about growth and even getting to product market fit.
I love this advice because I think it gives us a glimpse into how your brain has developed
these really simple, seemingly simple ideas that end up being really powerful.
And it feels like the advice is just think a lot about the question you need to ask because
that'll get you just something that a lot of people just kind of under think or don't.
It's like maybe it's too simple.
Yeah, or they just jump right into the solution side of things where they're not really
trying to understand what's going on. Yeah, amazing. Okay, well, with that, Sean, we've reached
our very exciting lightning round. Are you ready? I am. All right. Our first question is,
what are two or three books you've recommended most to other people? Increasingly, I'm
recommending a book called Presenting to Win that's been around forever, but it really helped me
with my presenting. And so, of course, when I'm out traveling, I'm often sharing the stage
with other speakers and yeah, I'd like to recommend that one to them.
I've already talked about Neri Al's hooked.
I recommend that always.
And well, we'll stick with two.
That's a good too.
Within presenting to win, is there one tip that you sticks with you of like,
here's something that really helped me be a better presenter?
Ultimately, like confidence in presenting comes down to having very well-organized
information that you're going to present.
And when you organize it correctly, you are much more likely.
to deliver it with confidence.
And so he basically says, if I had a presentation to do and I had an hour to present,
I'd spend 55 minutes creating the right presentation and then five minutes practicing it.
But yeah, there's a lot more to it.
Wow.
Yeah.
Amazing.
Okay.
We'll link to that book in the show notes.
Do you have a favorite, recent movie or TV show you've really enjoyed?
Yeah.
So I've been binging the Olympics.
I love that.
Just watching people who like worked their ass off for years and then maybe have 30
seconds to do the thing that they worked hard for. So Olympics have been awesome. And then
the movie, I actually just saw Blackberry. I don't know if you've seen that. Oh, the story
of the BlackBerry. Yeah. I mean, obviously, like, we all kind of know the story, but it was,
so really, I mean, it's a classic example of like product market fit and then not. Actually,
it's probably even a counter example to the dangers of the, how would you feel we could no
longer use this product. Pretty sure most people would have said on BlackBerry, it's the keyboard.
And, you know, until, until iPhone came along, you know, the keyboard was super important.
And then suddenly it wasn't. But yeah, it's also, also interesting on like egos and
and other things that like everybody's good and friendly in the beginning. And then,
and then egos take over and things get a lot harder later on. That was actually a really good movie.
There's also an amazing movie called Tetris for some reason. I think of these two together.
about the story of Tetris
and there's like some
it's like a similar parallel
to those two movies.
Awesome.
I'll have to see that one.
Next question.
Do you have a favorite product
you've recently discovered
that you really love?
I forget the name of it,
but it's,
it's,
I think,
well,
it's got pack gear
hanging suitcase.
And I,
I basically,
like,
I've done almost 100,000 miles
in travel this year
and I have another trip
schedule for next week.
And I,
I love it because it
basically has all my clothes
folded in this like little, little insert that goes into my suitcase, and then I just pull it out
and hang it up and just makes travel way easier. It's called the pack gear suitcase?
Pack gear hanging suitcase organizer. So cool. I'm going to check that out. Two more questions.
Do you have a favorite life motto that you often come back to that you find useful in
work or in life, maybe share with friends and family sometimes? Focus on reputation and learning
over earnings has just served me super well.
And I'll give you an example.
I had two companies when I was doing a lot of this early interim stuff,
you know, 10 plus years ago.
And I had two of them where I talked to the founders afterwards and I could tell
they weren't like that stoked on my contributions.
And I offered a full refund to both of them with a thought that like,
I have this reputation that's, I guess.
I randomly pulled the number.
I said my reputation were $5 million.
Why would I possibly, you know,
mortgage that reputation for $20,000?
And so, you know, one of them,
I gave the check back to them.
And he was happy to take it.
And then, but he had said,
oh, you can make it up to me.
You could, you know, like,
I don't have to give me the check.
Just make it up to me by continuing to help me
for an unlimited amount of time going forward.
I was like, oh, take the check.
And then the other one said, no, no,
I'm actually really happy with what you did.
We're fine.
But the two VCs who had made those introductions were the first two to give me term sheets
when I went out to raise money for my company and the pre-money ultimately ended up
being valued at more than double what I had put my personal reputation at.
So I, yeah, I think the, yeah, unfortunately the company didn't do that well itself
because of the elusive product market fit challenges.
But yeah, the learning there of, yeah, just.
focus on learning and reputation.
Reputation opened the door to more and more learning.
And as I got more learning, the reputation grew.
And so, yeah.
There's a really good corollary there with customer support.
Like if someone just hates your product and wants a refund,
just give them a refund and let them move on versus being upset.
Yeah, absolutely.
I love that.
Final question.
You mentioned to me before we started recording that you were maybe indirectly
responsible for TikTok's success.
maybe share that story.
Yeah, I mean, I don't want to overstate it,
but I, yeah, my trip around the world that I did three months ago,
I think I wrapped it up.
I met with the original founding growth team at TikTok.
They're based in Singapore.
And they had, I can't remember what the previous product was called,
but they started with the previous product.
And then when TikTok came, they were in place to be the initial growth team
for TikTok and they basically said all the early stuff we did to grow TikTok was based on your
writing. So that was that was before the book came out. So it's a lot of just blogging that I had
done, but it was really really cool to get that feedback that yeah, I've always said I have
some really good wins. I've said a lot of unicorns that I helped, but none of the really, really
big guys. And then to hear that, it felt really good to know that I played some kind of role in
TikTok. Of course, almost the same week they told me that was Congress having TikTok band
conversations. So it was good. And at the same time, knowing that maybe if they hadn't read my
stuff, Congress wouldn't be wasting their time on TikTok bands. Oh, man, bittersweet. I hope they
don't pull you into some hearings. Sean, this was incredible. This was everything I was hoping it would be.
I feel like we collected so much wisdom here for folks to help them figure out product market fit,
find product, market fit, iterate, grow their products.
So happy we did this.
Two final questions.
Where can folks find stuff that you're up to if they want to learn more and maybe work
with you in various ways?
And how can listeners be useful to you?
Awesome.
Yeah.
So shonelis.m.e is the website where I kind of link to all the things that I'm doing.
And so that would be one place where there's contact forms on there.
If anyone wants to reach out, obviously LinkedIn, people can contact me there.
And then I did mention go practice.
So go practice.
i.o um really cool way to learn growth through a simulated environment of being able to to try to
grow products so check out uh check out go practice and uh maybe yeah go to sean ellis.
emmy when this comes out i'll put a special offer on there for lenny's listeners so you can
save some money and there's also a llm ai kind of uh i wasn't directly involved on that one but
there's yeah there's there's some other really cool stuff that oleg and the team are doing i've been
data-driven product management and the user growth programs are the ones that I helped with.
Awesome. And then for folks, if they're wondering, do you do advising, how do you help with
companies in case they're like, hey, I need Sean? Yeah, I mean, so the sweet spot for me on
companies that I go hands on with are ideally pretty early just after they get to product market
fit and now you know how to measure it. So like if you're kind of pre-scale, but you're seeing that
40% or even if you're a bit earlier than that, we can start talking earlier. But to me,
that's my favorite time to get in there. Build it right from the beginning. It's so hard to
retroactively do these things. And I'll go in for three to six months. And I'm all in full
time, one of the team trying to really help build traction in the business. I do one of those
every maybe year or maybe every year or two because I purposely burn myself out.
and have fun doing more lecturing and workshops and stuff.
Awesome. Well, you might get a flood of requests after this comes out.
Hope you're ready. Sean, thank you so much for being here.
Awesome. Thank you, Lenny. I really appreciate you having me on.
Bye, everyone.
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