Startups and big cos should approach growth differently (Video) at andrewchen
Andrew Chen рассказывает, как стратегия роста должна различаться у стартапов и крупных компаний. Стартапам стоит искать недооценённые каналы привлечения — нишевые сообщества, рассылки, офлайн-группы, — которые слишком малы для крупных игроков, но дают асимметричное преимущество за счёт высокой целевой релевантности. По мере масштабирования компания переходит к портфелю каналов, делая ставку на product-channel fit и агрегацию трафика. Отдельно разбирается виральность: внешняя (вознаграждение за реферал) и внутренняя (продукт становится лучше с друзьями) мотивации, а также выбор платформы с учётом открытости API, возможности ссылок и доступа к социальному графу. Видео подготовлено совместно с Reforge.
I recently did a video interview on the topic of how your growth strategy changes from being a small startup versus becoming a larger company. It’s hard to compete when you’re launching a new product and you have to think asymmetrically for your growth efforts to work. I walk through each stage, step by step, and talk through some of the strategic dynamics to think about. (Thanks to the Reforge folks for setting this up!)
Video
You can watch the full video here, and check out the notes below.
Notes
New startups have to focus on underrated acquisition channels for early growth efforts [0:00]
Find underrated channels that directly match your product’s target market [1:45]
Learn with very small channels by focusing on qualitative feedback to start [2:48]
Scale up to the next, bigger channels, by starting with tests to optimize your performance [3:58]
Big companies approach acquisition by building a portfolio of channels that can scale [5:32]
The most exciting channels “right now” need to tie uniquely/directly to your product [9:02]
- What are all the other tools, apps, offline experiences that your users are also coming into contact with?
- Find out what your product is most adjacent to
- What kind of integration can you get?
- Some platforms are more conducive to virality or being used as a growth channel (instagram doesn’t give you a way to link out, so it’s less good of a channel VS youtube, which does allow cross linking and linking out)
You have to pick the right social channels for virality [11:30]
How do products spread on social channels? [16:06]
“Going viral” doesn’t mean just building something cool [21:19]
Not every platform is created equal (for virality). How do you build for the right one? [22:48]
- How easy is it for customers to communicate with one another?
- How much control do you have (via APIs or anything else) to customize the invite experience?
- Do you have the ability to add a link?
- Can you get ahold of an address book or social graph, in order to generate invites?
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About
Andrew Chen is a partner at Andreessen Horowitz, where he invests in games, AR/VR, metaverse, and consumer tech startups. He is the author of The Cold Start Problem, a book on starting and growing new startups via network effects. He resides in Venice, California (more)