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The Growth Newsletter #072

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demandcurve.com

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team@e.demandcurve.com

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Tue, Jun 14, 2022 07:48 PM

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"about" pages, product exit points, and onboarding tips.  ‌ ‌ ‌ .   Intr

"about" pages, product exit points, and onboarding tips.  ‌ ‌ ‌ [Demand Curve] The Growth Newsletter #072 Welcome to the 505 new marketers and founders who joined last week!  This week we're covering "about" pages, product exit points, and onboarding tips.  If you don’t find this valuable, you can permanently unsubscribe at the bottom of this email. If you like it, tell your friends to [subscribe here](.   Introduce your product to 500k+ marketers  Marketing to marketers is hard.  Marketers and founders are two of the most difficult segments to authentically connect with.  But for quality-driven companies with valuable products, we’re opening up a shortcut: You can sponsor this newsletter, our playbooks and articles, and our upcoming Growth Summit.  Wondering how much it'll cost to partner with us?  Use our new [sponsorship price estimation tool]( to get a feel for cost based on your goals. (It'll take you less than 4 minutes.)  1. Add a signup form to your “about” page to add more subscribers Insight from [Brian Dean](.  About pages are one of the most-visited, yet under-utilized pages on websites.  People who visit this page are often primed to take action because they're already interested in your business—they’re actively seeking to learn more.  To capitalize on this qualified traffic, consider adding an email signup form on your about page. Make sure the CTA and value you’re offering are consistent with the themes you talk about on the page.  For example: - James Clear offers a free habit-building email course that nurtures new subscribers to buy his book, Atomic Habits. - Perfect Keto invites visitors to join their keto newsletter and access subscriber-only discounts and resources. - Exploding Topics asks their about page readers to subscribe to their newsletter where they share emerging trends every Tuesday. This tactic might sound obvious, but look around. Most companies don’t take advantage of it.  2. Build product exit points to enhance satisfaction and retention Insight from [Designing Mindfulness]( and [Growth.Design](.  Some companies purposely make it hard for users to disengage from their products.  For instance, with autoplay turned on, YouTube and Netflix automatically show more content after the user’s video has finished. And publishers like BuzzFeed and Bustle use infinite scroll so that more content automatically populates as users move down their sites.  Companies do this to engage users for longer. But this kind of product experience may actually do more harm than good.  Why? Users feel trapped. Although they voluntarily continue to use your product, they may feel negative about it once they break away. They might even be more likely to perceive it as a mindless or addictive waste of time.  To avoid trapping users, consider building natural exit points into your product. That is, give users clear signals that a product experience has ended. Make it easy for them to leave.  A few examples: - Instagram shows users a “You’re All Caught Up” message once they’ve seen all the posts in their feed from the last two days. - The dating app Coffee Meets Bagel closes chatrooms after seven days—an exit point that encourages users to swap contact info with their matches or chat with new ones. - Many mobile games show a post-game screen with options to return to the home screen or play again. Exit points create a sense of completion and make it easier for users to leave with satisfaction. Users are less likely to feel bad about using your product for a prolonged amount of time.  Here are a few ideas for how to create exit points: - Instead of enabling autoplay or infinite scroll, use “Next” or “Load More” buttons. - Celebrate the end of a product experience by framing it as a big win. For instance, after completing a workout, a fitness app could show a message like “You crushed it—now it’s time to relax!” - For a more transparent approach, show users how long they’ve been using your product and invite them to take a break. Example: ”You’ve watched 97 videos in the last hour. Want to rest your eyes for a bit?” Unlike attention-trapping features that take advantage of users, exit points treat your customers more kindly and ethically. And since they help deliver a more satisfying experience, users may stick around for longer over time.  3. Tips to improve your onboarding Insight from [Andy Matuschak]( and [Demand Curve](.  Books don’t work.  Think back to your favorite book from ~2015. How much of it do you remember?  And that was your favorite.  Humans just aren’t wired to retain information well after a single read. That’s not how we learn. We need activities, feedback loops, and metacognition (thinking about thinking about what we’re reading). We need to spread out learning over time.  Of course, retention isn’t just a memory problem. It’s a startup problem too. User retention is what drives sustainable, scalable growth. During onboarding, here are a few ways to boost business retention through cognitive retention: - Do > show > explain. The more action-driven your user's education is, the more effective it will be. For instance, instead of starting users off with a bunch of tool tips and videos, Grammarly guides them to fix a dummy page’s grammar. - Don’t show your user every feature. Over-educating a new user will overwhelm them. Spread out learnings—and new feature introductions—to avoid info overload. - Connect through personalization. In general, personalization reduces friction and time to activation. Some ways to increase learning during onboarding, and make it more personalized in the process: 1) For B2B, offer a one-on-one webinar or demo. 2) Try a “choose your own adventure” approach to onboarding, with users picking their path.   Image: [IBM](  Following these steps increases the chance that users will reach their "aha moment"—the moment they realize real value from your product. And they need to do that to stick around.   News and links News you can use:  Quite a few LinkedIn updates for you this week: - Company pages can now add [product listings]( and [lead gen forms](. You can customize the text and choose from a variety of CTAs. - Pages can also add @mentions and hashtags in articles and newsletters to help increase reach, engagement and discoverability. - LinkedIn also announced several [new features]( to help creators build their personal brand. - Finally, LinkedIn announced [Business Manager](. This dashboard feature will make it much easier to manage multiple pages and ad accounts. If you operate in B2B, try experimenting with these new features to support your LinkedIn marketing goals. Check out our LinkedIn Organic [playbook]( for more insights.   Plus, we’ve completely updated our blog article on [Facebook Ads targeting](. It factors in the latest privacy and algorithm updates and answers the question, Does Facebook targeting still work?  Links: - Demand Curve Growth Summit 2022: Join us for the most advanced virtual summit for marketers and founders. What can you expect? Some of the best marketers in the world will share how they're growing their companies, and how you can grow yours. We'll be announcing details in the next few weeks. In the meantime, secure a spot on the list by signing up [here](. - Read*: [How to build you first-party data strategy](. In our recent community poll, we learned that only 30% of you reported using tracking tools like Mixpanel and Heap, and only 12% reported using a Customer Data Platform like mParticle (62% are are using third-party tracking from ad platforms like Facebook). The truth is, it’s getting harder to collect third-party data. As third-party data collection becomes more restricted, first-party data will be more important than ever. And marketers will need to find ways to use that first-party data to deliver better personalization, loyalty experiences, and retention campaigns. Learn more about how you can get started with your first-party data strategy [here](. *Sponsored by [mParticle]( Top new marketing jobs  If you're looking for a top growth role, check out the opportunities below from our [job board](. [Growth Marketing Manager Early Medical (Peter Attia)]([Growth Lead MyWellbeing]([Affiliate Partnerships Marketing Manager Jasper](   Something fun: From [@TheJackForge](   Want more growth tactics? We're giving away our entire back catalog of tactics to folks who refer two friends to this newsletter. Here's your referral link to share: [(. You can track your referrals [here](. We'll automatically email you the password-protected tactics page once you've referred two people.    What did you think of this week's newsletter?  [Loved it]( | [Great]( | [Good]( | [Meh]( | [Bad](  If you enjoyed this, please consider sharing with a friend. If a friend sent you this, get the next newsletter by signing up [here](.  Who's [Demand Curve](? We’re who marketers and founders rely on to solve real marketing problems. We skip trends and fluffy stories and only share high-quality, vetted, and actionable growth content from the top 1% of marketers.  How we can help you grow: - Read our free [playbooks](, [blog articles](, and [teardowns](—we break down the strategies and tactics that fast-growing startups use to grow. - Enroll in the [Growth Program](, our professional course that will help you get traction and scale revenue. - Hire our agency, [Bell Curve](, and we'll grow your startup for you. - Engage with our audience by [sponsoring]( Demand Curve. See you next week.  — Nick, Grace, Joyce, Dennis, and the DC team. [Nick] Nick Costelloe [Grace] Grace Parazzoli [Joyce] Joyce Chou [Dennis] Dennis Buckley   © 2022 Demand Curve, Inc. All rights reserved. 4460 Redwood Hwy, Suite 16-535, San Rafael, California, United States [Unsubscribe](=) from all emails, including the newsletter.

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