Growth hacking
definition
Growth hacking is a fast, experiment-driven approach to finding reliable ways to grow a business. Instead of committing big budgets to a single plan, you run many small, low-risk tests—landing pages, referral nudges, onboarding tweaks—to see what moves leads, revenue or retention. Keep the winners, drop the losers, and repeat. It is less about tricks and more about systematic experimentation.
Why it matters
Service firms and SaaS providers rarely have the marketing fire-power of large enterprises. Growth hacking lets them punch above their weight by focusing on data and quick iteration rather than big campaigns. By testing ideas in days rather than quarters, teams uncover what resonates with their specific niche and avoid sinking time into initiatives that do not convert. The end result is faster learning, lower acquisition cost, and a culture that values evidence over opinion.
How to apply
Growth hacking
Growth hacking for B2B agencies and consultancies
Start with simple, resource-light tests that fit client-facing workloads.
- Turn your most popular blog post into a one-page PDF checklist and gate it for email addresses.
- Send a personal Loom video follow-up to every proposal within 24 hours.
- Add a referral line to client invoices offering a free strategy hour for introductions.
- Insert a dynamic case-study block in outreach emails that swaps based on industry tag.
- Host a quarterly live audit webinar and invite prospects to submit their site for review.
- Offer a one-week paid discovery sprint at a fixed price to lower commitment friction.
- Add a simple exit-intent pop-up on the blog asking visitors to book a fifteen-minute call.
- Re-share every LinkedIn post as a carousel with key metrics highlighted for higher engagement.
- Automate proposal follow-ups with a three-email sequence triggered when a deal is idle for five days.
- Publish a public roadmap of upcoming service add-ons to spark early interest and feedback.
Growth hacking for B2B SaaS companies
Focus on product touch-points and user referrals.
- Shorten the free-trial sign-up form to name and email only; capture extra data after activation.
- Trigger an in-app tooltip highlighting one hidden feature per day for new users.
- Offer an annual-billing discount during the first seven days of the trial.
- Add a one-click Slack invite inside the app so users can bring colleagues.
- Launch a referral banner that rewards account credits for every invited user who activates.
- Send a usage milestone email (e.g. ‘You saved 100 hours’) that includes a social share link.
- Create a public changelog with a subscribe option to keep leads warm before they buy.
- Auto-generate a personalised onboarding video using the user’s name and company logo.
- Detect inactive accounts at day ten and trigger an automated concierge call offer.
- Add a pricing-page FAQ accordion answering the top five objections gathered from support tickets.
Growth hacking for B2B e-commerce and wholesale platforms
Use on-site tweaks and post-purchase loops to drive repeat orders.
- Display real-time stock levels to create urgency on popular SKUs.
- Offer volume-based discounts that unlock automatically in the basket.
- Add a reorder button in account dashboards showing previously purchased bundles.
- Trigger a cross-sell email three days after dispatch, suggesting complementary products.
- Include a printed insert in every parcel with a QR code linking to a feedback survey for a discount.
- Run a monthly ‘buyers club’ webinar previewing new inventory for registered customers.
- Place a sticky banner for free shipping thresholds visible during the entire checkout.
- Offer Net 30 terms instantly via a credit partner to reduce friction for first-time buyers.
- Use exit-intent pop-ups on product pages to offer a PDF spec sheet in exchange for email.
- Create a points-based loyalty programme that rewards both order value and review submissions.
These straightforward hacks keep risk low while uncovering what truly accelerates growth for each business model. Test, measure, adopt what works, and move on to the next idea.
Books
Go to booksClockwork
Mike Michalowicz
A clear way to design responsibilities and handoffs. Use time maps and simple dashboards to remove bottlenecks and protect focus.

Company of One
Paul Jarvis
Lessons for keeping work simple and profitable. Focus on retention, systems and selective growth that preserves quality.

Disciplined Entrepreneurship
Bill Aulet
Step by step approach to define customers, test value and design a go to market path that leads to repeatable revenue.

E-Myth Revisited
Michael Gerber
A practical case for SOPs in growth teams. Design roles, write checklists and build a rhythm for continuous improvement.

Fix this next
Mike Michalowicz
A decision tool for prioritising growth work. Diagnose where to act, then pick a small change that unlocks progress now.

Good Strategy Bad Strategy
Richard Rumelt
A sharp test for strategy quality. Diagnose, choose guiding policies and design actions that compound over quarters.

Blog posts
Go to blogAnalyse results
Know how to read experiment results like a pro so you don’t overreact to noise or miss a real lift hiding in the data.
Better meetings
Change your approach to meetings so they stop wasting time and start driving progress.
Build LinkedIn content calendar
Stop scrambling for ideas the night before you post. This guide shows you how to set up a simple Notion calendar, balance value and sales content, and stay three weeks ahead so you never miss consistently posting.
Build a scalable experimentation process
Turn CRO into a repeatable, collaborative workflow that consistently improves your funnel.
Wiki articles
Go to wikiConstraint
Transform constraints into opportunities to drive smarter decisions and growth.
Growth drivers
Key factors or tactics that significantly impact a company's growth.
Growth engine
A repeatable and scalable system to drive consistent growth.
Growth hacking
Drive rapid growth through innovative, cost-effective strategies.
Growth lever
Identify and activate growth levers to scale your business faster.
Growth marketing
Drive rapid growth through innovative, cost-effective strategies.
Growth mindset
Stay on top of tasks with an efficient and structured issues tracker.
Growth plateau
Break through stagnation with actionable strategies to reignite business growth.
Topics
Reporting & insights
Turn data into clear priorities so you know exactly what to focus on next.
See topic
You’re not growing fast enough and it’s time to fix that.
You’ve hit a ceiling. You need a structured approach that moves the needle without overwhelming your team.