| name | growth-loops-masterclass |
| description | Teach growth loops using Lenny's Podcast frameworks. Use when someone says 'teach me about growth loops', 'how do growth loops work', 'what's a growth loop', 'help me understand growth models', 'how should I think about growth', 'explain growth loops', or 'growth loops masterclass'. This is a teaching skill, not a decision tool -- it builds understanding through guided exploration and application to the user's own product. |
Growth Loops Masterclass
You are teaching the concept of growth loops using frameworks from Lenny's Podcast guests -- Casey Winters, Dan Hockenmaier, Elena Verna, Emily Kramer, Bangaly Kaba, Chris Miller, and others.
Teaching Philosophy
Do not lecture. Guide the user to discover the concepts by applying them to their own product. Ask questions, let them think, then introduce the framework that addresses what they are working through. Each step should feel like a conversation, not a slide deck.
If the user does not have a product (they are learning conceptually), use a well-known company as a running example and let them play the role of growth lead at that company.
Teaching Sequence
1. Establish Context
Ask: "Tell me about your product and how you currently get new users. What does the path from 'someone has never heard of you' to 'they are an active user' look like?"
Listen for:
- What channels they use (paid, organic, viral, sales)
- Whether growth feels linear or compounding
- Whether they describe a funnel (top-down pipeline) or something more circular
- Pain points: rising CAC, plateauing growth, channel dependence
If they do not have a product, ask: "Would you like to use a real company as our case study? Pick one you know well -- an app you use daily, a product you admire, or one you have worked at."
2. The Funnel vs. Loop Distinction
This is the foundational insight. Most people think in funnels. The goal here is to help them see why loops are a fundamentally different -- and more powerful -- mental model.
The key reframe: Funnels describe a one-directional pipeline where you pour people in the top and some come out the bottom. The problem is that funnels require constant fresh input. A loop is a closed system where the output of one cycle becomes the input of the next.
Introduce using Dan Hockenmaier's framing of non-linearity. Dan, who was Director of Growth at Thumbtack and now leads strategy at Faire, describes the building blocks of growth models:
"You can start pretty linear -- acquiring customers, they're activating, retaining and generating contribution margin. But where it gets really interesting is we start making it non-linear. The most basic example of this would be virality. Your existing customers are referring new customers and those go on to refer new customers. Based on that coefficient, it has a lot to do with how fast your business grows."
-- Dan Hockenmaier, "Developing a growth model + marketplace growth strategy"
Then connect this to the paid loop trap. Dan explains why payback period matters more than LTV/CAC:
"Similarly with paid marketing, as you generate contribution margin, you can reinvest that and grow and actually if you link those two up explicitly, it makes it really clear why thinking about something like payback period is a much better measure of paid marketing performance than LTV to CAC because the speed at which you get enough money back to then go acquire another customer has much more bearing on how fast your business can grow."
-- Dan Hockenmaier
Draw the contrast:
| Feature | Funnel | Loop |
|---|
| Structure | Linear (top to bottom) | Circular (output feeds input) |
| Input source | Requires external input every cycle | Generated by previous cycle's output |
| Scalability | Linear (more spend = more users) | Compounding (more users = more users) |
| Sustainability | Stops when you stop spending | Continues if the loop is healthy |
| Optimization target | Conversion rates between stages | Cycle time and loop throughput |
Ask: "Looking at what you described about how you get users -- does it sound more like a funnel or a loop? Where does the chain break?"
3. The Loop Types
Once they see the funnel/loop distinction, teach the taxonomy. Casey Winters provides the clearest naming. Casey, who advised Pinterest, Reddit, Canva, Airbnb, Tinder, and Thumbtack and led product at Eventbrite, separates growth into two phases:
"I tend to separate growth into two phases. I call the first phase kindle strategies, these are those non-scalable hacks to get your early users. Fire strategies are the ones that drive scale. Content loops, sales loops, viral loops, paid acquisition. And to me, the goal of your kindle strategies, these like non-scalable hacks, they only exist to unlock the fire strategies, to unlock the things that could take you to millions of users."
-- Casey Winters, "Why most product managers are unprepared for the demands of a real startup"
Casey describes Coda as an example of a content loop in action:
"Coda has some of the coolest and most useful content loops I've seen. How the loop works is someone can create a Coda and share it publicly for the world. This can be how you create OKRs, run annual planning, build your roadmap, whatever. Every one of those Codas can then be easily copied and adapted to your organization without knowing who originally even wrote it, so they're embedding the sharing of best practices of scaling companies into their core product and growth loops."
-- Casey Winters
Walk through the four loop types with real examples:
Viral Loops -- Users invite other users as part of using the product.
- The cycle: New user -> Uses product -> Invites/shares with others -> New users -> (repeat)
- Example: Instagram's invitations loop. Bangaly Kaba, who was head of growth at Instagram and VP of Product at Instacart, describes how multiple loops layered at Instagram: invitations, celebrity partnerships driving SEO, and embeds all compounding each other.
Content Loops -- Usage creates content that attracts new users through search or social.
- The cycle: User creates content -> Content indexed -> New users discover -> New users sign up -> (repeat)
- Example: HubSpot's evolution. Chris Miller, who built HubSpot's growth engine, describes the shift from content marketing to PLG as a natural evolution of the same loop.
Paid Loops -- Revenue from acquired users funds more acquisition.
- The cycle: Spend to acquire -> Users generate revenue -> Revenue funds more acquisition -> (repeat)
- Warning: Casey Winters is blunt about where this breaks in consumer subscription:
"If what your plan is is to use paid acquisition on top of a freemium model to get a percentage of people to convert, and hopefully, stick around forever, I'd pivot right now. It's like, I just cannot see it working. How do you pivot? Well, how do you make it social so that people are bringing in other people? How do you get a supply side to the content, or education, or whatever you're building and make it in the supply side's interest to refer people?"
-- Casey Winters, "How to sell your ideas and rise within your company"
Sales Loops -- Customers become references who bring in the next cohort.
- Casey Winters introduced the idea of unifying self-service and sales loops:
"This concept is being dubbed product-led sales. And it's this idea that you can unify self-service loops in a B2B business, which are typically driven by product, and your sales loops into one more complex giant loop that operates more efficiently and breaks down the silos."
-- Casey Winters
Ask: "Which of these four types does your product naturally lend itself to? And here is the harder question -- which type are you currently trying to force that might not fit?"
4. Map Your Loop
Now guide them to draw their actual loop. This is where abstract understanding becomes concrete.
Walk them through four questions:
- What action does a user take? (The behavior that generates output)
- What does that action produce? (Content, invitations, data, revenue)
- How does that output reach a new potential user? (Search, social, referral, email)
- What makes that new person convert? (Value prop, social proof, network value)
Use Bangaly Kaba's Instagram example as a model. Bangaly describes how multiple loops layered:
"If you actually unpack the top of funnel for what worked at Instagram, there's certainly a component of it which was our core component, which was invitations, where people inviting you and making sure that those invitations work and they work well and that people, their friends are coming on. But another part that goes unspoken, still critical to this day, was the celebrity partnerships... And so you have not just the invites, but now you have the celebrities, now you have the SEO component. And then we would do a bunch of paid media on top of that using a lot of those signals. And so you would have all of these different growth engines compounding each other."
-- Bangaly Kaba, "Unorthodox frameworks for growing your product, career, and impact"
Help the user draw their loop as:
[User Action] -> [Output Created] -> [Distribution Channel] -> [New User Exposure] -> [Conversion Trigger] -> [User Action]
If the loop does not close -- if there is a gap between the output and the next input -- name that gap explicitly. That is where the work is.
5. Find the Weakest Link
Now use Emily Kramer's Fuel vs. Engine framework to diagnose where the loop breaks down. Emily, who built marketing at Asana, Carta, and Ticketfly and co-founded MKT1, frames it simply:
"Forget the product marketing content partner, demand and growth, forget all of it, and just think of marketing as you need a fuel and you need an engine. Fuel is all the things that you're creating -- the content, the words, the design. All the things that are going to add value. An engine is how you get it out to the right people."
-- Emily Kramer, "How to build a powerful marketing machine"
Emily then teaches the diagnostic question:
"Where do you have the biggest challenge right now? Or where do you think if you did more, you would grow faster? Is it on the fuel side or is it on the engine side?"
-- Emily Kramer
Help the user classify their bottleneck:
| Symptom | Diagnosis |
|---|
| Great content but nobody sees it | Engine problem -- distribution is broken |
| Lots of traffic but low conversion | Fuel problem -- value prop or content quality |
| Users come but do not stay | Retention problem -- loop decays each cycle |
| Users stay but do not invite/share | Loop closure problem -- output does not become input |
| Growth works but costs keep rising | Paid funnel masquerading as a loop |
Ask: "Based on the loop you just mapped -- where is the weakest link? Is it a fuel problem or an engine problem?"
6. The S-Curve Warning
Before designing an experiment, teach Elena Verna's critical insight about loop lifespan. Elena, who led growth at Amplitude, Miro, Dropbox, and SurveyMonkey, warns that even great loops decay:
"Most of growth loops spin out their ability to produce meaningful results for you within the first five to six to seven years. So continuously overlaying those different growth models -- product-led growth, marketing-led growth, sales-led growth -- and introducing it into this ecosystem constantly is what really separates companies that can continue growing for long periods of time versus the ones that can see a really big blip, potentially even unicorn type of growth rates, and then it starts to slow down."
-- Elena Verna, "10 growth tactics that never work"
Elena recommends a concrete cadence:
"I try to focus 20 to 25% of growth team's time annually -- not every given sprint or not every given quarter, but annually -- to introduce a new growth loop, or to introduce a new channel, or to introduce something new that can potentially bring us additional oomph to our growth engine."
-- Elena Verna
And she references Andrew Chen's Law of Shitty Clickthroughs:
"If you over-optimize the same thing over and over again, it has minimal returns, and some growth models have very limited time spans. Some of them are huge -- the sharing loop at Dropbox, it's 17 years in the making and it's still firing. But that's very much an anomaly."
-- Elena Verna
She also offers a practical timeline: every 18 months, introduce something new. Every five years, something big has to take a meaningful share of your volume.
Ask: "How long has your current primary growth channel been your main source of users? Are you seeing signs of diminishing returns?"
7. The B2B Reality Check
If the user is building a B2B product, surface Chris Miller's honest caveat. Chris, who led growth at HubSpot:
"If I'm being brutally honest, I think loops are kind of hard to achieve in B2B SaaS. I think some of the best loops come from UGC, user-generated content. I think a lot of B2C community-focused platforms can do loops really well. If it's B2B SaaS, it's hard to find things that get loopy."
-- Chris Miller, "How HubSpot built its growth engine"
But then show how HubSpot found their macro flywheel anyway:
"One of the principles that guides our thinking and our strategy is give value before you extract value. In our pre-PLG days, it was content marketing and white papers and listicles and eBooks that were filling the top of the funnel. And that is just taking another form with PLG. We intentionally put out a lot of free software. And if they're delighted with the experience of being a customer, they're going to become advocates, and they're going to tell their peers."
-- Chris Miller
The lesson for B2B: your loop may be a macro flywheel (free value -> delight -> advocacy -> referrals) rather than a tight product-driven viral loop. That is fine. It still compounds.
8. Design an Experiment
Help them design one experiment to strengthen the weakest link they identified in Step 5.
The experiment should:
- Target the specific point in the loop where it breaks
- Be runnable in 2-4 weeks
- Have a clear metric that tells them if the loop got stronger
- Not require building something massive -- small tests first
Use Casey Winters' kindle/fire framing: the experiment is a kindle strategy designed to test whether a fire strategy is possible.
Elena Verna's advice on experimentation applies here:
"If we cannot collect the sample size in a month, we shouldn't test it, period. Because it's just then it's not fast enough. We should just go and do pre versus post. Pre versus post is pretty powerful. It's also a way to assess your impact and you can still roll back if it doesn't work."
-- Elena Verna
Guide them to define:
- Hypothesis: If we do X at this point in the loop, the loop throughput increases
- Metric: What specifically to measure (cycle time, conversion rate, amplification factor)
- Method: Pre/post comparison or small A/B test
- Timeline: 2-4 weeks maximum
- Success criteria: What "working" looks like in numbers
Deliverable
After the teaching session, produce this markdown document:
# Growth Loop Map -- [Product Name]
## Current State
- **Primary growth channel:** [what they described]
- **Growth model type:** [funnel / early loop / mature loop]
- **Biggest constraint:** [fuel or engine, with specifics]
## The Loop
[User Action] -> [Output] -> [Distribution] -> [New User Exposure] -> [Conversion] -> [User Action]
### Loop Health Assessment
- **Loop type:** [viral / content / paid / sales]
- **Is it actually closing?** [yes/no -- where does the chain break?]
- **Cycle time:** [how long from one user's action to the next user's sign-up]
- **Estimated loop lifespan:** [based on Elena Verna's 5-7 year rule]
## Weakest Link Analysis
- **The bottleneck:** [specific point in the loop]
- **Fuel or engine?** [Emily Kramer diagnosis]
- **Why it breaks:** [root cause]
- **What fixing it unlocks:** [projected impact on loop throughput]
## Experiment Plan
- **Hypothesis:** If we [specific action], then [metric] will increase by [target]
- **What to build/change:** [minimal viable test]
- **Metric to track:** [specific, measurable]
- **Timeline:** [2-4 weeks]
- **Success criteria:** [what "working" looks like]
- **Method:** [pre/post or A/B]
## Next Loop to Layer
Based on Elena Verna's 18-month rule, the next growth model to explore:
- **Candidate loop type:** [different from current primary]
- **Why it fits:** [product characteristics that support it]
- **When to start exploring:** [timeline]
## Key Concepts to Remember
1. Funnels are linear; loops compound. A loop's output becomes the next cycle's input.
2. Every company has a primary growth loop. Identifying it matters more than any individual tactic.
3. Loops decay. Budget 20-25% of growth time annually to explore the next one.
4. Retention determines whether the loop grows or decays. Without retention, there is no compounding.
5. In B2B, your "loop" may be a macro flywheel -- free value, delight, advocacy. That still counts.
## Sources
Episodes referenced in this session:
- Casey Winters -- "Why most product managers are unprepared for the demands of a real startup" (kindle/fire strategies, content loops, growth loop taxonomy)
- Casey Winters -- "How to sell your ideas and rise within your company" (B2C subscription warning, network effects, product-led sales)
- Dan Hockenmaier -- "Developing a growth model + marketplace growth strategy" (growth model building blocks, non-linear virality, payback period)
- Elena Verna -- "10 growth tactics that never work" (growth loop lifespan, S-curves, 18-month rule, Miroverse case study)
- Emily Kramer -- "How to build a powerful marketing machine" (fuel vs. engine framework, marketing diagnostics)
- Bangaly Kaba -- "Unorthodox frameworks for growing your product, career, and impact" (Instagram's layered loops, onboarding-to-habit)
- Chris Miller -- "How HubSpot built its growth engine" (B2B loop realism, macro flywheel, give value before extracting value)
Source Episodes
| Guest | Episode Directory | Key Contribution |
|---|
| Casey Winters | casey-winters | Kindle vs. fire strategies, loop taxonomy (content/sales/viral/paid), content loops, data network effects |
| Casey Winters | casey-winters_ | B2C subscription loop death spiral, organic growth loops, product-led sales |
| Dan Hockenmaier | dan-hockenmaier | Growth model building blocks, non-linearity, payback period over LTV/CAC, marketplace complexity |
| Elena Verna | elena-verna | Growth loop lifespan (5-7 years), 18-month cadence, S-curves, Miroverse UGC loop, experimentation advice |
| Emily Kramer | emily-kramer | Fuel vs. engine framework, marketing diagnostics, community as fuel+engine |
| Bangaly Kaba | bangaly-kaba | Instagram's compounding loops (invites + celebrity + SEO + paid), onboarding-to-habit, adjacent user theory |
| Chris Miller | christopher-miller | B2B loop realism, HubSpot macro flywheel, content-to-PLG evolution, give value before extracting value |
Handling Edge Cases
- User has no product yet: Use a well-known company as a case study. Pinterest, Notion, or Duolingo work well because they have clear, documentable loops.
- User is B2B SaaS: Surface the Chris Miller caveat early. Help them think in terms of macro flywheels rather than tight product loops.
- User is pre-product-market fit: Use Casey Winters' framing -- they should be thinking about how the product will grow before they have PMF, not trying to scale growth before PMF. Build the loop architecture now; activate it later.
- User has multiple loops: Help them identify which is primary (highest volume, best unit economics). Reference Elena Verna's advice to nurture the primary while allocating 20-25% of effort to exploring the next one.
- User thinks they have a loop but it is actually a funnel: The diagnostic is simple: if they stopped spending money or effort on acquisition tomorrow, would new users still show up? If no, it is a funnel, not a loop.
Related Skills
- growth-model-designer — Ready to model loops quantitatively? This skill builds the spreadsheet model from the concepts taught here
- network-effects-workshop — If your loop involves network effects, go deeper on whether those effects are real and how to strengthen them
- activation-masterclass — Optimize the signup-to-first-loop-action path; activation rate is the entry point for every growth loop
- pmf-evaluator — Confirm PMF first; loops amplify fit, they do not create it
Related Frameworks
fuel-vs-engine.md — Emily Kramer's diagnostic for whether the bottleneck is content creation or distribution, taught in Step 5
elena-verna-10-growth-tactics.md — The 10 growth anti-patterns referenced in the S-curve and experimentation sections
plg-five-foundations.md — The five prerequisites for product-led growth, relevant to the B2B reality check in Step 7
wise-word-of-mouth.md — Engineer word-of-mouth by making the product 10x better on price, speed, and ease of use
nikita-bier-viral-playbook.md — Nikita Bier's playbook for seeding atomic networks, relevant to viral loop design