False positives and the cycle of free user acquisition platforms

Few things in business are as impactful as a growth engine which brings in users for free. The internet, by its very nature, has repeatedly seen the rise of platforms and media that enable marketers to get users for free. While some startups and brands reap a rich harvest of free organically acquired users on the internet, many are unable to crack that code.People often talk of startups that were at the right place at the right time. Quite often, the actual reason behind the success of these startups is their ability to leverage a larger change that was afoot.

One such ‘large change’ that comes around every few years is a new user acquisition engine for the web. Such engines go through a cycle of sophistication and startups that figure them out in their early days often scheme rapid traction.

User acquisition platforms go through a cycle of sophistication

The basic premise is that user acquisition platforms go through a cycle of sophistication. The cycle typically pans out in the following manner:

Email
This was probably the first user acquisition platform which end users could leverage at a global level without having to go through an editorial filter. (Yahoo and other portals, which were really efficient for acquiring users, had editorial filters ‘installed’)
Google and Search
Search is probably the single best free user acquisition method over which the marketer has reasonable control. When it launched, it was exactly what a growing web with millions of documents needed.

 

Enter Facebook and Social Media that powered user acquisition through recommendation at an entirely new scale.

 

Facebook and Social Media
Enter Facebook and Social Media that powered user acquisition through recommendation at an entirely new scale.

Here’s the important thing about user acquisition platforms. From the perspective of the publisher, the platform helps with user acquisition. But from the perspective of the consumer, the platform helps with content discovery. Hence, Relevance makes or breaks such platforms and marketers who realize this are able to use it in a sustainable manner.

Two things happen with spam: either the platform cracks down and becomes more sophisticated (as in the case of email and over time Facebook) or it brings down the platform altogether since its unchecked and leads to a very low signal-to-noise ratio (Orkut).

So let’s get back and try to figure out the next content discovery platform and try to game it while we can! 🙂

If you liked reading this post, you might want to get a free digital copy of the forthcoming book PLATFORMED.
platform-thinking-labs

How AI agents rewire the organization

The unbundling and rebundling of organizations We frequently make the mistake of thinking of AI…

1 week ago

AI won’t eat your job, but it will eat your salary

On rebundling jobs and skill premiums The AI augmentation fallacy goes something like this: “AI…

3 weeks ago

Finding the product in your platform

On the risks of over-emphasizing platform thinking In an age of platform hype, everyone scrambles…

4 weeks ago

Keyboard-as-a-platform

The untold story of the most under-used real estate on the phone screen Which players…

1 month ago

How stand-up comedy helps Amazon win at e-commerce

How stand-up comedy helps Amazon win at e-commerce On Attention Conglomerates and Internal Attention Markets…

1 month ago

Gen AI companions and the fight for the primary interface

The race for the primary interface in the age of AI Everyone (and their dog)…

3 months ago