Growth through activity, 7 social ad tips, and leveraging herd mentality.
 â â â [Demand Curve]( The Growth Newsletter #123 [Read on demandcurve.com]( A big thanks to our sponsors, who keep this newsletter free for all of you. Check them outâit's the best way to support this newsletter :)   Brought to you by [Common Room](. Marketing and growth teams at fast-growing startups and scaleups like Figma, Asana, Amplitude, Temporal and many others use Common Room to bring together social, community, product, and customer data into a single powerful platform so they can take informed action across the entire customer journey.  Check out some of their [growth playbooks]( for tapping into the dark funnelâyou know, that overlooked part of the buyerâs journey with heaps of potential. (Psst⦠theyâre offering a 15% discount on paid plans to DC members who book a demo or sign up and connect a source).   And by [Gelt](. It's time to stop overpaying on taxes. With a proactive tax strategy in place you can be maximizing your wealth and minimizing your liability.  As a DC subscriber, fill out this form to [gain priority on our waitlist]( and receive a tailor-made tax strategy, fast communication, an innovative tax management platform, and top-tier CPAs. It's time to find build a tax strategy tailored to your financial goals. Want to be featured in front of 74,600 founders and marketers? Check out our [sponsorship opportunities](. â Ahoy from Lisbon!  We're almost halfway through 2023âactually, 43% of the way if you want to get more specific. Yay?  This week we're talking about growth through activity, 7 social ad tips, and leveraging herd mentality. Let's dive in!  âNeal â 1. Grow by being the most active Insight from [Chenell Basilio]( and [Dan Go](.  Most people only use Twitter for a few minutes here and there per day, sometimes per week.  One way to ensure people see your tweets is just by tweeting A LOT.  If you haven't heard of Dan Go, he goes by "@FitFounder."  His first tweet was April 10th, 2020. More than 84k tweets later and he has 500k followers (as well as 200k on LinkedIn, 450k on Instagram, and 80k newsletter subscribers).  On average, that's ~74 tweets every day. But he peaked at ~350 tweets per day.  (Note: Twitter considers a comment/reply to be a tweet, not just original content.)  Chenell found that in the first several months, Dan's follower count was directly correlated to his total number of tweets: Sure, not every tweet crushed.  But they didn't need to. Even if each one only got 100 impressions, that'd still add up to 35k impressions per day. And of course, many of them got way more than that.  Dan grew by outworking everyone else on Twitter.  It's honestly hard to find creators with more tweets than him. Sure there are accounts with a lot more, but they're mostly companies or automated.  Even Jack Dorsey (the founder and former CEO of Twitter), has a measly 29k, and he's been tweeting since day 0.  Dan is one of the most active Twitter users of the past three years.  Sometimes you can win just by being the most active. 2. 7 ways to improve social ad performance Insights from Social Savannah.  The most important factors in ad performance: - Great brand/product.
- Kicka** creatives. It has less to do with targeting and optimization (and let's be honest, AI does most of that these days), and more to do with an intriguing product and creative and captivating ads.  Here are 7 ways to improve your ad creatives:  #1. Show the outcome  Start your ad with the desired end result of using your product; then in the second frame, introduce the product. This will increase video watch time as people will want to know how to get the result.  #2. Close-up Start your ad with a very close-up shot of the product.  Get people wondering... What is that? They'll stop because they want to figure it out.  #3. Lean into the Negativity Bias Start the ad explaining why you are NEVER using the alternative to your product again.  It triggers an "Oh sh*t, am I doing it wrong?" and they'll want to know what they should be doing instead.  #4. Good lighting, good sound The quality of the camera matters way less than a nice natural light source or a killer lighting setup.  Microphone quality and good music/sound effects are much more important than video quality.  #5. Leverage trends and seasons People like it when content feels relevant and timely. If they're in the mindset of Christmas, or setting New Year's resolutions, or planning their Valentine's Day date, leverage that in your ads and content.  #6. Don't trigger "this is an ad" Get creative to avoid setting off the alarm bells in people's heads that they're looking at an ad.  Make it look as natural as possible. Don't include music or pop-up captions for the first second or twoâonce they're hooked, you can bring them in.  For example, include a screenshare of someone texting a recommendation to their friend.  #7. Be different You'll never stand out if you do the same thing that everyone else is doing. Be completely illogical.  Instead of focusing on your features, try including a photo of a cute bunny. It might just work.  The 6 tactics above may work today, but tomorrow they may not. The brands that win are the ones that can consistently come up with interesting and novel ideas.  A single ad campaign can be talked about for years. Think Budweiser's "wazzup" or Apple's "Think Different" or "Mac vs PC."  But that won't happen if you do what everyone else is doing.  3. Leverage herd mentality to influence behavior Insight from [Brooke Tully](.  As a species, we crave belonging. Thatâs why we often look to others for cues on what to do when weâre in an unfamiliar situation. We follow the herd when it suits us.  This instinct to conform is what makes descriptive norms so powerful. They tell us how the majority of people act in that situation.  In [one experiment](, more hotel guests reused their towels after seeing a message with a descriptive norm (â75% of guests use their towels more than onceâ) than after seeing an environmental appeal (âHelp save the environment by reusing your towels during your stayâ).  Here's how to use descriptive norms in your emails, ads, landing pages, and so on: - âMost clients reserve $1,500-2,000+ for their ad budget.â (ex: ads agency)
- âOver 2 million people have a 365+ day streak!â (ex: Duolingo)
- â63% of our customers bundle [product A] with [product B].â (ex: ecomm)
- âThe majority of users complete this section in under 10 minutes.â (ex: onboarding) Important: Descriptive norms work best when they show large numbers of people doing the behavior you want them to do. Descriptive norms backfire if you highlight the behavior you don't want them to do. Consider this sign about towel use: Why it fails: It's telling you that the norm is to use multiple towels. Why would you defy the norm and only use one? It may seem unfair or that you're getting less by only using one.  But what if only a minority of people are doing the behavior you want?  Try using dynamic norms instead. These describe how a growing number of people are doing the behavior you want to increase. For an example, take a look at New York Cityâs [GreeNYC campaign]( ("more and more New Yorkers"): â  Community Spotlight  It's a big honor whenever someone gives this newsletter a shoutout without asking for anything in return. Today, we're spotlighting a few of these readersâwho are also up to incredible things: - Louise Storm, Chief of Staff at Case Impact Network, is a communications expert who shares thoughtful reflections about professional and personal development on [her LinkedIn](.Â
- PetruÈa ÈuligÄ, founder and CEO of Parentool, recently did her [very first podcast in English](! She talks about her experience building a telehealth app for new parents. Want to see your name here? We'd love to hear about your work and any of your recent growth marketing wins! [Share them here.]( â News and links News you can use: - New in AI: Googleâs AI-powered search [fails to impress]( with its slow and cluttered responses. Bing Chat now supports [30 chat turns]( in a single conversation (up from 20). And though itâs currently available only on Microsoft Edge (the successor to Internet Explorer), Microsoft plans to bring Bing Chat to [all browsers](zv?utm_campaign=Growth+Newsletter+%23123&utm_content=Growth+Newsletter+%23123&utm_medium=newsletter&utm_source=email) in the near future.
- Itâs never quiet over at Twitter. Two execs from the companyâs brand safety team left after a [dispute about content policing](. And [new CEO Linda Yaccarino]( has officially taken the helm, a surprising two weeks earlier than expected.
- Looks like TikTok is a fan of Christmas in July. The platform published its [holiday marketing playbook]( way ahead of Q4. Maybe this is because, as it says, 38% of shoppers are likely to start shopping early. Â Tool we recommend: [Segment](* Â Being a founder is hard. Â Finding product-market fit is one of the toughest challenges, and constantly has you asking questions like: - Are people using my product?
- How are they using it?
- Are they returning to get value week over week? When first starting out, the Segment co-founders didn't understand how important these questions were or how to use analytics to answer them. So they spent 1.5 years and 7 different MVPs in their pursuit of product-market-fit before finding the secret sauceâthey solved their own problem and turned it into a product.  Segment helps you collect, clean, and act on your customer data. And it handles the annoying task of integrating with different tools. So your team can focus on product, not integrations. â And Segment is now free for Startups! [Apply to their Startup Program â](  *Sponsored by Segment Top new marketing jobs  If you're looking for a top growth role, check out the opportunities below from our [job board](. [Director of Marketing
Growth Tools
Coaching that grows your business. Guaranteed.]( [Senior Growth Marketer
BeamJobs
Helping job seekers navigate the frustrating & ambiguous process of landing a new job.]( [Business Development Manager, Hospitality Platforms
Sensible Weather Company
Climate analytics & insurtech company that de-risks the weather for travel brands and their consumers.]( â Something fun From [@NealOGrady]( â What did you think of this week's newsletter?  [ð Loved it]( | [ð Great]( | [ð Good]( | [ð¤·ââï¸ Meh]( | [𤬠Bad](  If you enjoyed this, please consider sharing it with a friend. These newsletters take hours to make each week, so it really helps when you share us with fellow founders and marketers.  Who's [Demand Curve](?  Weâre on a mission to help make it easier to start, build, and grow companies.  We share high-quality, vetted, and actionable growth content as we learn it from the top 1% of marketers. We democratize senior growth knowledge.  How we can help you grow: - Read our free [playbooks](, [blog articles](, and [teardowns](âwe break down the strategies and tactics that fast-growing startups use to grow.
- Enroll in the [Growth Program](, our marketing course that has helped 1,000+ founders get traction and scale revenue.
- Check out our [Sprints](: short video courses that are laser-focused on a topic in growth. - Want to build an audience of buyers? Join the waitlist for the [Un-ignorable Challenge](. - Are you a funded startup looking to grow? Our agency, [Bell Curve](, can be your strategic growth partner.
- Get your brand in front of our audience by [sponsoring]( this newsletter. See you next week.  â Neal, Grace, Joyce, Dennis, and the DC team. [Neal]( [Neal O'Grady]( [Grace]( [Grace Parazzoli]( [Joyce]( [Joyce Chou]( [Dennis]( [Dennis Buckley]( â © 2023 Demand Curve, Inc. All rights reserved. 4460 Redwood Hwy, Suite 16-535, San Rafael, California, United States
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