Product-led — everybody’s doin’ it these days. But generally, it’s billed as a SaaS-only kind of deal.
Software being the only kind of product that can be so rapidly built, implemented, and scaled. The only kind of product where starting for free (a common product-led growth strategy) makes sense.
…OK, well, we can’t really refute that. But we’d like to add on top of it.
Because product-led growth companies are customer-led growth companies. And every growing company has customers.
So whether you’re building an app, a platform, a service, or some other product, there’s likely room to adopt and adapt the lessons of product-led growth. These are the books to help you do it.
A Guide to Pragmatic Product-Led Growth for B2B SaaS Companies by Elsewhere Partners
Product-Led Growth Strategies from Winning Consumer Brands by MoEngage
A Behind the Scene View of Hubspot’s Product-Led Onboarding by Product Led Hub
Fuel the Acquisition of Product-Qualified Leads by Victor Eduoh
Product Qualified Leads: The What, Why, and How by Sherlock
Product-led growth depends on the product itself driving customer acquisition (and thus, company growth).
You deliver a product that:
Most of the time, someone needs to sell you on a purchase.
Someone needs to make you want to go out of your way. And you ultimately agree because there’s some benefit in it for you. Maybe in the immediate future, maybe in the longer term, but the offer appeals and you can see potential value.
A product led growth approach lowers that barrier to entry.
Instead of needing to overcome mental hurdles, adopting the product should be the easiest course of action.
This is why product-led companies have no-cost options — a freemium model or trial period. Customers can give the product a try themselves or start using it right away with a friend or colleague.
As long as a need exists, and since there’s no fee, the decision should be easy. You’ll have an easier time converting an existing happy user into a paying customer as well.
When we say customers sell the product, we don’t mean in a pyramid scheme way — not even in a customer advocacy way. They “sell” your product (or at least increase awareness and usage) simply by using it as intended.
Think back to your last Zoom meeting. How did you get there?
It’s likely your meeting partner sent an invite link. You clicked through, launched the video chat, and went on your merry way.
They are a Zoom user and they’ve now made you a de facto Zoom user.
Next time you need to run your own video call, you’re already familiar with the process of launching Zoom and using their interface. Maybe you’ve set up an account and downloaded the desktop client, just to make all those other people’s Zoom meetings more tolerable.
So now you’re the dedicated Zoom user. And off you go to indoctrinate the next mark with your wordless yet incredibly persuasive endorsement.
To understand the deeper nuances, objectives, and techniques of product-led growth, nothing beats a deep dive into recommended reading.
We’ve pulled together a list of the best PLG books to get you started. These are great reading for the true beginner or anyone looking to go beyond the basics.
Now, no product-led growth book list would be complete without at least mentioning Wes Bush’s Product-Led Growth: Building a Product that Sells Itself. Bush literally wrote the book on PLG. If you’re looking for a hard copy of something for your office bookshelf, definitely pick this one up.
But if you’re simply looking to learn, there are plenty of free alternatives ready and waiting. Product-led growth eBooks that are as thorough, as well-researched, and when taken together, might offer up more angles and options than a single playbook can.
So here are nonfik’s top 8 product-led growth guides – PLG PDFs for whether you’re in the dark or doing the research to implement a product-led motion at your own company.
Developing a product-led growth strategy starts by positioning your product experience as each team’s guiding star, and this PLG ebook is a how-to guide. Your product-led sales will hinge on showing and not telling — whether through demos or free trials — and product-led growth marketing begins with virality within the product itself. Customer success takes on a new importance working on the frontline of customer interaction. They have the best ability to increase retention, and collect the feedback and user sentiment that drives new product releases.
Product-led growth advocates the importance of focusing on the end user, emphasizing that the product should be designed around making a user’s day-to-day better. The age of executives making solo software buying decisions for their teams is over. Pragmatic product-led growth focuses on both the product experience and on adding value across the organization, from individual product users all the way up to the C-Suite.
From Amazon to Netix to Tesla, major brands around the world are adopting product-led growth strategies for their business. The success stories of these brands prove that a good product does not need to be sold — it can sell itself. It just takes product managers and growth marketers who possess the combined expertise of technical know-how, marketing knowledge and awareness of the market landscape.
As Keith Rabois of Founder’s Fund said, “Building a successful product and company is like producing a movie. You have a script and a vision first, followed by filming. Then, you sell tickets.”
What should your company’s product-led growth look like? What powers it? What do you need to be looking at closely? This will be a process of trial and error when you set out, and also depends upon what resources and budget you have available. Incorporate this into your roadmap and set customer and product KPIs accordingly.
You might want to keep these goals in mind:
What does onboarding look like when it isn’t product-led? In Hubspot’s case, customers were paired with an “implementation specialist” team member, who walked them through the software with a third-party tool.
It worked because Hubspot wasn’t primarily product-driven at the time. Once they made their shift from marketing platform to customer relationship management, they saw a need for the whole thing to be better integrated and work more smoothly.
So what are the PLO basics and best practices to know?
The future of lead gen is in product-qualified leads. Because PQLs lead to more sales calls and more closes – converting at 5 or 6 times the rate of MQLs.
In this day and age, keeping tabs on leads that are only marketing-qualified is basically tracking a vanity metric. Your product-qualified leads, on the other hand, are already further along the funnel. That’s what qualifies them at all – they’ve experienced initial product value and show some form of buying intent.
OK, we’ve defined a PQL. Now what? It’s time to:
Product-qualified leads let your product do the talking—not you. But what happens when it is your turn to step in? What comes after acquisition?
Learn how to implement a PQL process from scratch with this free ebook from Sherlock Score. Harness the power of engagement metrics and turn your SaaS business into a successful, smooth-talking, lead-converting machine.
The future of PLG is product-led sales — and this is the PLS eBook to bring you into that future.
It’s the natural evolution after years of debating the merits and execution of product-led vs. sales-led — of course you want to leverage the best of both. Pocus’ playbook outlines the entire spectrum of moving between product-led and sales-led, and how to better manage your PQL situation in sales-led PLG. What’s included?
Finally, BUILD is your definitive product-led growth book.
Clocking in at over 100 pages and packed with high-level insights from product-led industry leaders, it’s a dense read but perfect to get you entirely up to speed on PLG.
There’s no shortage of product-led growth resources for SaaS companies, but few explain what product-led growth is better than Openview. This PDF is designed to help you understand PLG through all stages of growth — from user acquisition to conversion and expansion.
Plus, take a closer look at how product led growth companies(like Dropbox and Slack, Zendesk and ZipRecruiter) function, as they share their successful growth strategies in their own words:
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