Primordial ooze

Primordial ooze

How evolving new marketing channels can guard your company against slowing growth.

I originally published this post in my weekly-ish newsletter “Drinking from the Firehose.” Sign up to get it in your inbox: tinyletter.com/ataussig

The foundation of a great consumer brand or service is organic, word-of-mouth growth. Most startups cannot afford to pay big dollars for a marginal user. Ensnared in a frustrating tautology, the successful ones are forced to rely on the inherent virality of product excellence itself as a vector to acquire users.

However, after achieving product/market fit and raising your first significant round of venture capital, you may want to consider spending some of that capital on paid channels to supplement to organic growth. Few consumer companies have the ability to maintain annual growth at scale in excess of 100% without paid marketing support. With this realization in mind, many founders pose a critical question to their board members and advisors:

How do I allocate marketing dollars across the various channels where I can advertise my product or service?

My general recommendation is that the allocation should follow a power law distribution:

A few critical assumptions inform my recommendation.

The first is that most successful consumer startups have a single channel with extreme product/channel fit, where the economics of user acquisition are disproportionality skewed in their favor. For an example, see my last post on this concept for Zola. The second is that startups have limited capital, so when presented with a channel that outperforms, the tendency is to stuff as many of those valuable marketing dollars in that channel as possible. The third is that all marketing channels eventually saturate, so it makes sense to have some necessarily small allocation to newer channels that are not yet working, but could perform well in the future. This small allocation to newer, unproven channels is the “primordial ooze” from which newer, high performing channels are born.

The “ooze” assumption requires the most explanation. I liken decisions on marketing mix to those of a portfolio manager deciding on asset allocations. The Capital Asset Pricing Model (CAPM) demonstrated mathematically that increased diversification across a set of partially uncorrelated securities results in better risk-adjusted returns for the entire portfolio. Therefore, even if an individual security presents significant risk, as long as it possesses little correlation with the remaining portfolio, an investor is better off owning some small amount of it.

A CAPM for marketing mix would likely allocate 80–90% of your marketing dollars to your highest performing channel(s) and the remainder to a mixture of channels that are not yet profitable, i.e. the “ooze.” The average return of this portfolio will necessarily be lower than an “eggs in one basket” approach, but I’d argue via metaphor with CAPM that the risk-adjusted return is higher.

What exactly is the risk that you’re mitigating through diversification? It’s the risk that your top performing channel saturates sooner than expected. When this happens, the results can be devastating. Your unit economics can quickly deteriorate, forcing a tough choice between growth and preservation of capital. The only resolution is to find a newer channel that performs well, but such a discovery does not happen overnight. Alternatively, maintaining a constantly bubbling ooze of new channels creates the possibility that new growth opportunities will evolve.

My recommendation is to create a bucket of “ooze” marketing spend on the order of 10–20% of your total budget and use it to constantly test new channels. Every couple quarters, one of these channels should evolve to the head of the distribution and scale with significant marketing dollars behind it. The rate of evolution is also an important metric. It shows how effective your marketing organization is in successfully discovering how to make new channels profitable — a critical skill for a growing consumer business.

Do you have a concept of “ooze” in your company’s marketing budget? What is your percentage allocation? Reply to me here, or on Twitter (@ataussig) and let me know.


Enjoyed this post? Follow me on Medium, and/or sign up for my newsletter at tinyletter.com/ataussig.

Where is this? Yellowstone?

Roger Gehring

Innovative Problem Solving

6 年

Nothing ever developed from "primordial ooze". I'd put your evolution theory book down and select a real occurrence to base your post on. The "theory" of life evolving from a "primordial ooze" is a big lie. Don't buy it, and certainly don't reference "ooze" as something that produces something. Just nonsense!

Jared Patterson

Owner of Patterson Wellhead LLC

6 年

Grand Prismatic in Yellowstone! It's a beautiful place, but nothing to do with the article it's attached to.

回复

要查看或添加评论,请登录

Alex Taussig的更多文章

  • Faire raises $170M to help local retailers thrive in uncertain times.

    Faire raises $170M to help local retailers thrive in uncertain times.

    Local retailers form the bedrock of their respective communities. In aggregate, local retailers sell over $1 trillion…

    3 条评论
  • 4 reasons why board reporting matters

    4 reasons why board reporting matters

    I initially published this post in my weekly(ish) newsletter "Drinking from the Firehose." Sign up here for more:…

  • Adding more fuel to the tank

    Adding more fuel to the tank

    Doubling down on Vector’s revolutionary rockets for small satellites with a $70 million Series B financing. A little…

  • Mind the gap, Part Two

    Mind the gap, Part Two

    How big is eSports, really? Last week, I discussed the gap between popularity and profitability for new media formats…

    4 条评论
  • Mind the gap

    Mind the gap

    Voice-first platforms have reached an inflection point. In digital media, there is often a gap between what is popular…

    1 条评论
  • The fight over default consumer behaviors

    The fight over default consumer behaviors

    How subscription commerce can win in the age of Amazon Subscriptions are powerful because they create a default buying…

    2 条评论
  • Natively Social TV is here to stay.

    Natively Social TV is here to stay.

    At VidCon last week, a founder I work with told me that Instagram was becoming YouTube, and that YouTube was becoming…

    31 条评论
  • Bells are ringing for Zola

    Bells are ringing for Zola

    Welcoming Comcast Ventures, NBCUniversal, Goldman Sachs Investment Partners, and more to the Zola family with a $100…

  • Four promises a brand makes to its customers

    Four promises a brand makes to its customers

    Silicon Valley often talks about “brand” in a confusing way. I tweeted as much in response to CircleUp CEO Ryan…

  • Predicting the future of retail

    Predicting the future of retail

    Excerpts from a panel discussion at the National Retail Federation “Big Show” I originally published this post in my…

    13 条评论

社区洞察

其他会员也浏览了