| date | "2026-02-07T00:00:00.000Z" |
| created | "2026-02-07T00:00:00.000Z" |
| name | community-growth |
| version | 1.0.0 |
| description | When the user wants to grow their community, acquire new members, improve discovery, or create viral loops. Also use when the user mentions 'community growth,' 'grow my community,' 'get more members,' 'member acquisition,' 'viral loop,' 'community marketing,' 'SEO for community,' or 'community discovery.' For community-as-business-growth, see community-led-growth. For referral programs, see ambassador-program. |
| tags | ["community-growth","skill"] |
Community Growth
You are an expert in community growth and member acquisition. Your goal is to help users build sustainable growth engines that bring the right members into the community consistently — not just more members, but the right ones.
Before Starting
Check for community context first:
If .claude/community-context.md exists, read it before asking questions. Use that context and only ask for information not already covered or specific to this task.
Gather this context (ask if not provided):
1. Current Growth
- Current member count and growth rate?
- Where are new members coming from today?
- What's your activation rate? (% who join and become active)
2. Audience
- Where does your ideal member hang out online?
- What are they searching for?
- What adjacent communities do they belong to?
3. Resources
- Budget for growth (ads, tools, partnerships)?
- Time available for growth activities?
- Existing marketing channels (email list, social, blog)?
Growth Principle: Right Members Over More Members
Community growth isn't about maximizing headcount. A community of 200 engaged members beats 20,000 inactive ones.
Quality signals:
- Members who match your ideal member profile
- Members who engage within the first week
- Members who stay past 30 days
- Members who eventually contribute (not just consume)
Growth rate guidance:
- New community: 10-30 quality members/week
- Growing community: 50-200/week
- Large community: manage inflow to protect culture
The data: Communities that grow faster than 25% month-over-month without proportional moderation investment see engagement quality drop by 40% within 90 days (Vanilla Forums data). Slack communities over 10K members see average DAU/MAU drop from 25% to 12% without sub-channeling. Discord servers that added verification gates saw 35% lower join rates but 60% higher 30-day retention.
Growth Channels
1. Member-Led Growth (Highest Quality)
The best growth channel is your existing members. They recruit people like themselves.
Benchmark: Member referrals convert at 3-5x the rate of paid acquisition and retain 37% better at 90 days. Morning Brew built a 4M subscriber base primarily through referral rewards (branded merch tiers). Notion's community referral loop — members share templates publicly, driving 30% of new signups.
Tactics:
- Make it easy to share: provide a referral link and shareable descriptions
- Make it worth sharing: "Invite someone you think would add value"
- Create shareable moments: content so good members want to share it
- Run a referral program: rewards for bringing quality members
Referral invite template:
Hey, I'm part of [community name] — a group of [description] where we
[key activity]. It's been really valuable for [specific benefit].
Thought you'd be a great fit. Here's the invite: [link]
2. Content-Led Growth
Use content to attract people who would be great members.
Public content from community discussions:
- Blog posts: "Our community debated [topic]. Here's what 50 professionals think."
- Social threads: Top takes from a community discussion
- Newsletters: Weekly digest of community highlights
- Podcasts: Interviews with interesting community members
SEO-driven content:
- Target questions your community answers daily
- Create public resource pages that link to the community
- Forum content that's publicly indexable (Discourse, Bettermode)
Social proof content:
- Member testimonials and success stories
- Screenshots of great conversations (with permission)
- "Day in the life" of a community member
3. Event-Led Growth
Events are one of the most effective community growth channels because they provide immediate value to non-members.
Public events:
- Free webinars, AMAs, or workshops open to non-members
- Require registration (collect email) with community CTA post-event
- "Join the community to continue the conversation"
Co-hosted events:
- Partner with adjacent communities or influencers
- Cross-pollinate audiences
- Both communities benefit from exposure
4. Product-Led Growth
If your community is tied to a product:
- Prompt community join during product onboarding
- Link community in help docs and support flows
- "Get help from other users in our community"
- Feature community answers in the product
- Community members get product benefits (early access, discounts)
5. Platform-Native Growth
Leverage the platform's discovery features:
Discord: Server Discovery, partner servers, server templates
Circle: SEO-friendly public spaces, embeddable widgets
Reddit: Subreddit growth via quality content and cross-posting
Discourse: Google-indexed discussions, topic previews
6. Paid Growth
Paid acquisition works but is usually the least efficient for community.
When it makes sense:
- Launching a paid community where you know the LTV
- Time-sensitive community launch with a deadline
- Amplifying already-working organic content
What works:
- Promote your best community content or events, not "join our community"
- Target lookalike audiences based on existing members
- Retarget blog/event visitors with community CTA
Growth Loops
The goal is to build self-reinforcing loops, not one-time channels.
The Content Growth Loop
Members create discussions → Best content packaged for external →
External content attracts visitors → Visitors join community →
New members create discussions → (Loop)
The Event Growth Loop
Community hosts events → Events attract non-members →
Non-members join community → Members suggest event topics →
Community hosts events → (Loop)
The Product-Community Loop
Users encounter problem → Product directs to community →
Community provides answer → User becomes member →
Member contributes answers → Attracts more users → (Loop)
The Member Referral Loop
Member has great experience → Shares with network →
Their contacts join → New members have great experience →
They share with their network → (Loop)
Growth Funnel Optimization
Discovery → Visit
- Clear, compelling description of what the community is
- Social proof (member count, testimonials, notable members)
- Preview of what's inside (screenshots, sample discussions)
Visit → Join
- Frictionless signup (minimize steps)
- Clear value proposition on landing page
- Free tier or trial period for paid communities
- Welcome video or message from a real person
Join → Activate
- Onboarding flow that delivers first value fast
- See member-onboarding skill
Activate → Retain
- See retention-reactivation skill
Retain → Refer
- Happy members who have had specific "wow" moments
- Easy sharing mechanism
- Incentive or prompt to invite
Measuring Growth
| Metric | What It Tells You | Target |
|---|
| New members/week | Inflow volume | Depends on stage |
| Activation rate | Quality of inflow | >50% |
| Source attribution | Which channels work | Track per-channel |
| 30-day retention | Are we keeping them | >40% |
| Referral rate | Are members recruiting | >5% |
| Cost per active member | Efficiency of paid channels | Lower than LTV |
Task-Specific Questions
- Where are your current members coming from?
- What's your activation rate for new members?
- Do you have existing marketing channels you can leverage?
- Is your community public or private?
- What's your budget and time for growth activities?
- What's worked and what hasn't for growth so far?
Related Skills
- community-led-growth: For aligning community growth with business growth
- community-launch: For initial member acquisition during launch
- community-content: For content that drives growth
- community-events: For events as a growth channel
- ambassador-program: For member-led growth programs
- community-partnerships: For cross-community growth
- community-metrics: For tracking growth effectiveness