More Related Content Similar to Product Manager - Growth: A New Role with a Sole Focus on Growth (20) Product Manager - Growth: A New Role with a Sole Focus on Growth1. © 2016 Jason Meresman @JasonMeresman
PRODUCT MANAGER -
GROWTH: A NEW ROLE
WITH A SOLE FOCUS ON
GROWTH
2. © 2016 Jason Meresman @JasonMeresman
VP PRODUCT AND COFOUNDER
GROWTHHACKERS.COM
JASON
MERESMAN
PRODUCTCAMP LA
JULY 16, 2016
HULU HEADQUARTERS, SANTA MONICA, CA
3. © 2016 Jason Meresman @JasonMeresman
MY BACKGROUND
• 15+ years product management experience in both B2C and B2B
• Cofounded GrowthHackers with Sean Ellis in 2014
• Prior to GrowthHackers:
• Cofounded and sold Qualaroo
• Index Ventures portfolio, Ask.com, SGI
GROWTH HIGHLIGHT: JAXTR (2007-8)
GREW USER BASE FROM 500K TO 5M
IN UNDER SIX MONTHS
4. © 2016 Jason Meresman @JasonMeresman
REGARDLESS OF WHAT THE ROLE IS CALLED, TO BUILD A
SUCCESSFUL BUSINESS GROWTH IS WHAT YOU’RE AFTER.
WHAT YOU’RE ABOUT
TO SEE IS MY OPINION
5. © 2016 Jason Meresman @JasonMeresman
WHAT WE WILL COVER IN TODAY'S SESSION
• Why the PM of Growth role has emerged
• A framework for identifying growth opportunities
• A process for evaluating and prioritizing growth initiatives
• Advice for overcoming the challenges growth teams face
TIME AT THE END FOR Q&A
6. © 2016 Jason Meresman @JasonMeresman
WHAT WE WILL NOT COVER IN TODAY'S SESSION
• Specific "growth hacks" and tactics
• User acquisition channels like SEM, SEO and content marketing
• The basics of AB testing (we'll assume you know them)
7. © 2016 Jason Meresman @JasonMeresman
WHY A PM
OF GROWTH ROLE
8. © 2016 Jason Meresman @JasonMeresman
— Andy Johns, VP Growth at Wealthfront
(formerly growth at Quora, Twitter and Facebook)
IF FINANCE OWNS THE
FLOW OF CASH IN AND
OUT OF A COMPANY.
GROWTH OWNS THE FLOW
OF CUSTOMERS IN AND
OUT OF A PRODUCT.
”
“
9. © 2016 Jason Meresman @JasonMeresman
GROWTH NEEDS TO BE MANAGED
• Internet growth has emerged as its own discipline, which
requires specific skills and experience
• Like core product management, growth requires constant focus
and attention
THERE MUST BE LEADERSHIP, VISION AND
ACCOUNTABILITY AROUND DESIGNING
TESTS TO DRIVE GROWTH
10. © 2016 Jason Meresman @JasonMeresman
UBER
EXAMPLE OF PM
GROWTH ROLE
11. © 2016 Jason Meresman @JasonMeresman
AND THE
TREND IS
GROWING
12. © 2016 Jason Meresman @JasonMeresman
PM OF GROWTH VS. CLASSIC PM
Classic PM role PM Growth role
Identifies opportunities to deliver and
expand the product’s value proposition
through features
Identifies opportunities to convert,
activate and acquire users through
product touchpoints
Ships features Ships experiments
Generally measured by ability to ship
product that satisfies the needs of the
users and market
Generally measured by achieving lift (or
reduction), in a conversion rate for a
desired goal
IN COMMON:
BOTH USE DATA TO INFORM DECISIONS AND ROADMAP
13. © 2016 Jason Meresman @JasonMeresman
HOW WELL DOES THE CLASSICAL PM SKILL SET
TRANSLATE TO THE PM OF GROWTH?
• PM of Growth must be very comfortable with analytics
• Have a good understanding of the psychology of influence (i.e. - what
motivates people to behave the way they do)
• Broad skill set and experience that spans across marketing, product and
operations
• Familiar with several tools that allow rapid execution and testing such as
email, landing page creation and surveys
• Be comfortable with taking risks and imperfection
SHORT ANSWER - IT DEPENDS
14. © 2016 Jason Meresman @JasonMeresman
A FRAMEWORK FOR
IDENTIFYING GROWTH
OPPORTUNITIES
15. © 2016 Jason Meresman @JasonMeresman
— Sean Ellis, CEO at GrowthHackers
(formerly growth at Dropbox, Eventbrite and LogMeIn)
AT LEAST 40% OF YOUR
USERS SHOULD SAY THEY
WOULD BE VERY
DISAPPOINTED IF YOUR
SERVICE OR PRODUCT
WENT AWAY OVERNIGHT
”
“
16. © 2016 Jason Meresman @JasonMeresman
FIRST: KNOW WHEN IT'S TIME TO GROW
• Must have product-market fit - don’t pour fuel on a fire that
hasn't started
• Strong retention cohorts - no sense in filling a leaky bucket
0
225
450
675
900
PROBLEM/SOLUTION FIT
(CUSTOMER DEVELOPMENT)
PROBLEM/MARKET FIT
(CUSTOMER VALIDATION)
SCALE
(CUSTOMER CREATION)
STAGES OF A STARTUP OR NEW PRODUCT
17. © 2016 Jason Meresman @JasonMeresman
WORK BACKWARDS FROM THE
ONE METRIC THAT MATTERS
• With your growth model in place, develop a single metric to measure
performance (aka OMTM; One Metric That Matters); a metric that
everyone in the business can understand
• OMTM may change depending on the stage of your business
• Different OMTMs for different businesses
• OMTMs should be aligned with where the product delivers value
• Some examples of OMTMs
• MRR for SaaS, DAUs for apps/communities, LTV for ecommerce, etc.
• Nights booked for Airbnb, Rides taken for Uber, etc.
18. © 2016 Jason Meresman @JasonMeresman
DEVELOP A GROWTH MODEL
• A growth model captures the elements and levers that influence
your OMTM (i.e. - how your product or business grows)
Three elements Five levers
• Top of funnel
• A-ha moment
• Must-have experience
• Acquisition
• Activation
• Retention
• Referral
• Revenue
‘Must Have Experience’ coined by Sean Ellis Levers courtesy of Dave McClure’s ‘Startup Metrics for Pirates’
http://www.slideshare.net/dmc500hats/startup-metrics-for-pirates-long-version
19. © 2016 Jason Meresman @JasonMeresman
GROWTH MODEL: THREE ELEMENTS
• Top of funnel
• Ability to capture traffic and convert it to taking an action
• A-ha moment
• A simple action tied to an emotional reward
• Must-have experience
• When the continuous value the product or service delivers,
transcends from being a nice-to-have to a must-have
‘Must Have Experience’ coined by Sean Ellis
20. © 2016 Jason Meresman @JasonMeresman
GROWTH MODEL: FIVE LEVERS
• Acquisition: users come to the site or app from various channels
• Activation: users enjoy experience and have an a-ha moment
• Retention: users come back repeatedly; it's a must-have experience
• Referral: users like the product enough to refer others
• Revenue: users conduct some monetization behavior
Courtesy of Dave McClure’s ‘Startup Metrics for Pirates’ with some changes
http://www.slideshare.net/dmc500hats/startup-metrics-for-pirates-long-version
21. © 2016 Jason Meresman @JasonMeresman
HOW IT ALL COMES TOGETHER
Model courtesy of Sean Ellis
ACQUISITION
ACTIVATION (A-HA MOMENT)
RETENTION (MUST HAVE EXPERIENCE)
REFERRAL
REVENUE
22. © 2016 Jason Meresman @JasonMeresman
A PROCESS FOR
EVALUATING AND
PRIORITIZING GROWTH
INITIATIVES
23. © 2016 Jason Meresman @JasonMeresman
— Brian Rothenberg, VP Growth at Eventbrite
THE ESSENCE OF STRATEGY
IS DECIDING WHAT TO SAY
‘NO’ TO, AND WHOEVER IS
MANAGING THE TEAM
SHOULD HELP TO IDENTIFY
THOSE THINGS
”
“
24. © 2016 Jason Meresman @JasonMeresman
DEVELOP A GROWTH ROADMAP
ANALYZE
& LEARN
EXPERIMENT
PRIORITIZE
FORM IDEAS
25. © 2016 Jason Meresman @JasonMeresman
ANALYZE, LEARN AND SET OBJECTIVES
• Use quantitative and qualitative methods to analyze your users and to learn
their behavior (data!)
• Quantitative sources
• Google Analytics, MixPanel, Amplitude, many more
• Qualitative sources
• Qualaroo, UserTesting, SurveyMonkey, many more
• Set Objectives and expected results
OBJECTIVES SHOULD BE AMBITIOUS, VISIBLE,
AND PAIRED WITH KEY RESULTS WHICH ARE
MEASURABLE AND TIME BOUND.
26. © 2016 Jason Meresman @JasonMeresman
FORM IDEAS (I.E. - A BACKLOG)
• Leverage your data to come up with ideas that will drive growth
• Each idea should be backed up with a hypothesis
• A good hypothesis has three parts
• A variable that can be modified
• A quantifiable result that can be measured
• A rationale that connects the outcome to the theory
Source: ‘Design a hypothesis that drives your business goals’ by Optimizely
IF [VARIABLE], THEN [RESULT] BECAUSE [RATIONALE].
27. © 2016 Jason Meresman @JasonMeresman
EXAMPLE OF A STRONG HYPOTHESIS
• Strong
• If we personalize the Call to Action to users who clicked on our poker ad
campaign, then we will see a 20% lift in click goals, because our heatmap
data shows that users who focus on poker-related copy on the page click
through our links 20% of the time.
• Weak
• If we personalize the Call to Action to users who clicked on our poker ad
and remove distracting images around the page, we’ll see an increase in
revenue on our site.
Source: ‘Design a hypothesis that drives your business goals’ by Optimizely
28. © 2016 Jason Meresman @JasonMeresman
PRIORITIZE
• Assign an ICE score to each idea (Impact, Confidence, Ease)
• Impact: The impact the idea could have on the business if the
experiment results in a win.
• Confidence: How confident the team is about the outcome.
• Ease: How easy is it to develop the experiment. Does it need
developers?
AVERAGE THE SCORE: HIGHER IS BETTER
29. © 2016 Jason Meresman @JasonMeresman
EXAMPLE OF PRIORITIZED LIST OF IDEAS
30. © 2016 Jason Meresman @JasonMeresman
EXPERIMENT
• Two types of experiments
• Experiments to learn: Understand user intent and behavior
• Google AdWords to test copy/positioning/value proposition
• 404 tests to test appeal of new product features
• Experiments to optimize: Boost funnel performance
• Testing changes to steps in the funnel
• Testing steps in a viral loop (email, CTAs to invite a friend, etc.)
31. © 2016 Jason Meresman @JasonMeresman
EXAMPLES OF TOOLS FOR EXPERIMENTATION
• Optimizely
• AB testing page elements and user journeys (web and mobile)
• Unbounce
• AB testing landing pages
• MailChimp/ESPs
• AB test email subject lines, messages, delivery day/time/etc.
• Homegrown tools
• Ideal for complex testing deep in the application
32. © 2016 Jason Meresman @JasonMeresman
REMEMBER TO TRACK YOUR EXPERIMENTS
33. © 2016 Jason Meresman @JasonMeresman
RECORD YOUR RESULTS
• What was the bottom line?
• Include both quantitative results and lessons learned
• In general, there are three conclusions:
• It worked
• It didn’t work
• It was inconclusive
• Build a knowledge base of results (“artifacts”)
• Enshrine your winners and learn from the losers
34. © 2016 Jason Meresman @JasonMeresman
EXAMPLE OF EXPERIMENT RESULTS
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EXAMPLE OF KNOWLEDGE BASE
36. © 2016 Jason Meresman @JasonMeresman
STAY ORGANIZED AND FOCUSED
• Use "Growth Sprints" to keep a cadence and commit to it
• Always be testing; no testing = no learning or optimizing
• Have a weekly growth meeting led by PM of Growth
• Use an experiment document or system of record to memorialize
your experiments and their results
37. © 2016 Jason Meresman @JasonMeresman
EXAMPLE OF WEEKLY GROWTH MEETING AGENDA
Growth Meeting Agenda courtesy of Sean Ellis
38. © 2016 Jason Meresman @JasonMeresman
EXAMPLE OF EXPERIMENT DOCUMENT
39. © 2016 Jason Meresman @JasonMeresman
ADVICE FOR
OVERCOMING THE
CHALLENGES GROWTH
TEAMS FACE
40. © 2016 Jason Meresman @JasonMeresman
— Harvard Business Review
BEFORE YOU CAN GET BUY-
IN, PEOPLE NEED TO FEEL
THE PROBLEM.
”
“
41. © 2016 Jason Meresman @JasonMeresman
GET EXECS AND STAKEHOLDERS ALIGNED
• Get executive buy-in before you try to assemble a growth team
• Executive department heads across product, marketing, engineering
• Ideally CEO (it really makes a difference)
• Make sure you have the team and resources needed
• Ideal: Cross-functional "growth team”
• PM of Growth aka “GrowthMaster” (roadmap, decisions, leadership)
• Growth Engineer (full-stack engineer; from database to CSS)
• Designer (agile; embraces the idea of results trumping great design)
• Access to copywriter and analyst as needed
42. © 2016 Jason Meresman @JasonMeresman
MAKE THE CASE FOR A DEDICATED
GROWTH ENGINEER
• Dedicated growth engineer = self-sufficiency
• Benefit: Experiments still run even when core development is delayed
• If growth initiatives are competing against core product initiatives, shipping
product will almost always win
• Examples of where a core growth engineer is crucial
• Instrumenting an AB tests for measurement
• Building light-weight features or tweaks to elements that are being tested
• Running data queries from the database if unavailable through your
analytics tool
43. © 2016 Jason Meresman @JasonMeresman
FIND A GREAT PM OF GROWTH
• Look internally or externally
• PM Growth skill set is the intersection of imagination, math and
technology
Required (Very) Nice-to-Have
• Natural leader
• Highly analytical
• Curious and creative;
a fast learner
• Technical
• Detail oriented
•
• Coding experience
• SQL
• Marketing experience
• Copywriting skills
44. © 2016 Jason Meresman @JasonMeresman
ANTICIPATE TENSION BETWEEN THE CORE
PRODUCT TEAM AND THE GROWTH TEAM
• Why tension?
• Traditionally product management is the gate keeper for any changes
to a product that impact the user experience
• Having an autonomous growth team reduces core product’s control
• How to overcome it?
INVOLVE PRODUCT LEADS
IN THE WEEKLY GROWTH MEETING
45. © 2016 Jason Meresman @JasonMeresman
MAKE SURE YOUR ANALYTICS ARE IN ORDER
• Without having your analytics in order, you can’t measure the impact
of your experiments, positive or negative
• Before beginning any growth initiatives, it is imperative that
foundational work is complete - every step of your funnel should be
instrumented
“You might as well not change it at all if you're not going to measure
the impact of that change.”
— Bing Gordon, Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers
46. © 2016 Jason Meresman @JasonMeresman
SHARE THE WINS AND INSIGHTS
• Growth efforts should be transparent and visible across the
organization
• Send an email or Slack message company-wide when an
experiment is a success and delivers material gains on a key metric
• When an experiment fails, present the results and lessons learned
47. © 2016 Jason Meresman @JasonMeresman
RECAP
• Know when it's time to grow
• Designate a PM of Growth along with the necessary supporting
resources
• Develop a growth model and roadmap
• Test, learn, apply
• Make sure you have executive buy-in and organization-wide visibility
GROWTH IS A PROCESS & CULTURE THAT IS MANAGED
48. © 2016 Jason Meresman @JasonMeresman
HELPFUL RESOURCES
• Online:
• GrowthHackers.com
• Dave McClure's Startup Metrics Presentation
http://www.slideshare.net/dmc500hats/startup-metrics-for-pirates-long-version
• Books
• Predictably Irrational - Dan Ariely
• The Four Steps to the Epiphany - Steve Blank
• Hooked: How to Build Habit-Forming Products – Nir Eyal
• Lean Analytics - Alistair Croll
• Sprint: How to Solve Big Problems and Test New Ideas in Just Five Days - Jake Knapp
49. © 2016 Jason Meresman @JasonMeresman
QUESTIONS
AND
ANSWERS