Richard Fang

What's your best growth / marketing tip?

I'm putting together a list of tips from makers, marketers, and growth people. I'm putting it together into a Notion Doc and will share it out so here's your chance to add your own (I'll tag you in it as well)
19 views

Add a comment

Replies

Best
Sheiryl Jose
Keeping up to date with the latest trends in your industry :) Continuous creation of good quality content for your clients also works, in our company we continuously provide them with tips that will help them decide with their investment. Sample content https://lessandra.com.ph/blog/20...
Rachel E. Allen
Obsess on customer happiness and retention. Let them do the marketing for you.
Richard Fang
@rachel_e_allen Very true - if your product can do this that's massive
Shashank
The most boring stuff gives the best results.
Ambika Mukherjee
I am really new to this . Please explain . Looking forward for some suggestions.
Shanee Moret
Provide 100X more value than anyone else in your space.
Richard Fang
For reference - for those that added an actual tip, you'll be added to: https://www.producthunt.com/upco... You will, of course, be part of the ProductHunt section! Let me know if you don't want to be part of the 'kit'. Thanks!
Matt
2 things: 1. Figure out the lowest hanging fruit. Attack this with all you've got and move onto the next lowest hanging task that leverages your time the most. 2. Small iterations are often better than large product/messaging changes.
Liza Cooper
Generate more positive customer reviews on Google and manage negative feedback
Jason Grills
I would say: Focus on your audience. If it’s a B2B market you cater to, then write content that matches their needs. Don’t forget to check up on your competitors regularly. And always remain active on social media. Connect with your customers or prospects. Let them know what’s cooking and what can be new for them to see. Lastly, never give up on your support quality. A complete combination of these efforts will help you improve your growth and sales.
Ruben Lozano
The more narrow the more quality. The broader the more quantity. Finding a lot of good users at a low cost doesn't exist anymore unless you work hard. And hard work is time, and time is money. Focus on those users that love your product, they use your product, they come up with the use cases, they provide you good feedback. Increase signup-usage rate, as Sean Ellis did. :)