D2C Growth Levers & More Examples

D2C Growth Levers & More Examples

I can’t tell you what your growth levers should be - even if you ask really, really nicely. But what I can do is give you some more inspiration and guidance to get you thinking in the right direction.

If we look at the customer journey, there are various key metrics per stage:

These are all potential starting points for growth levers. Let’s walk through two examples, one around acquisition and the other around retention.


D2C examples of growth levers

First, let’s say you are struggling to acquire enough new customers. You might decide you want to focus this quarter on your Meta Ads acquisition. The starting place for this is traffic, CTR, conversions and conversion rate. 

Now if your website is converting well, you might choose traffic or conversions as the goal. The risk with traffic is quality, as we don’t want bad traffic for the sake of it. So we might focus on engaged sessions from paid, or say a certain number of conversions through paid. My preference is usually the latter: it encourages better behaviour, e.g. not driving traffic for the sake of it or through clickbait content. 

I would also get more specific:

  • Which platform do we use to measure the conversions?

  • Will you count only conversions from prospect campaigns or also retargeting? 

  • What is the max cost of acquisition?

  • What is the max discount allowed?

Does that mean traffic is a bad lever? No, maybe less ideal for paid, but for organic growth it could be a great measure, the number of engaged sessions through organic. Again, it’s important to get specific:

  • What is the definition of engaged?

  • Will you look at branded and non-branded?

  • Is it blog traffic or the whole website? 

  • Are there rules on the type of content to ensure it is relevant?

As you can see, I try to be really critical of what drives good behaviour and clarity. As much as we have the best intentions, we don’t want the pressure to tempt people to ‘game’ the metrics.

Now let’s try a second example. Let’s say we want to focus on retention, as not enough people are coming back. From our data, we’ve analysed the areas of impact and seen that we are losing the most people in the first three months of a subscription product that is bought monthly. So we define our growth lever as % retained after three months. 

Again, we need to define:

  • How do we calculate the benchmark to compare it to?

  • What is a long enough timeframe to see an impact on a lagging metric like this?

  • Do we include one-time purchases in this calculation?

  • Is there a minimum volume of sales we are striving for while improving this metric?

Smaller brands might opt to use the overarching KPIs listed above as their focus. But most of the time, it’s worth getting more specific to drive focus to the root cause of the issue and the outcome you’d like to achieve. Ask critical questions to ensure there is no way to game the metric or have a lack of clarity about what ‘better’ looks like.


Building an Impactful Growth Experimentation Process

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Welcome to Experiment Tracking

  • Welcome!
  • Create the Habit of Controlling Growth

The Warmup

  • Define Your North Star Metric1
  • What is an Experiment?
  • Experiments vs Optimisations
  • It’s Not an Experiment
  • It’s an Experiment, Let’s Do It
  • Building up the Habit of Tracking Experiments

Stage 1: Documenting Current Running Experiments

  • A Glossary of Growth Experiment Terms
  • How to Start Tracking Experiments
  • Do You Have Enough Traffic to Test?
  • Analysing Your Experiment Results
  • Growth Experiment Template Sheet

Stage 2: Start Documenting Consistently (One Growth Lever)

  • Why Do We Struggle with Documentation?
  • Defining Your First Growth Lever
  • D2C Growth Levers & More Examples
  • Defining the Themes of Experiments
  • Calculating the Impact of your Growth Levers

Stage 3: Defining Growth Per Quarter

  • What is the Goal of a Growth Process & Who Leads It?
  • The Impact of Using a Growth Process
  • What Makes a Great Growth Lead
  • Growth Meeting Agenda and Structure
  • Other Meetings in the Growth Process
  • Zoom Out Meetings

Stage 4: Start Prioritising and Maintaining a Backlog

  • How to Get New, Great Ideas
  • How to Have Better Ideation Session
  • When Do You Have Enough Ideas in Your Backlog?
  • Why Do We Need a Prioritisation System?
  • Choosing a Prioritisation Framework
  • How Many Experiments Should You Run?

Stage 5: Upgrade Your Experimentation System

  • Upgrading Your Experiment Tracking Tool
  • How Long Should You Test For?
  • Are More or Better Experiments Needed?
  • Learning More From ‘Failed’ Experiments
  • Getting More Out of Your Growth Meetings
  • Ensure Your Growth Process Is Bulletproof

Moving Forward

  • Moving Forward