Glossary
Strategy

What is Growth Hacking? Definition & How It Works

Quick definition

Growth hacking is rapid, data-driven experimentation across marketing, product, and content to find scalable growth levers — measured in days, not quarters.

Strategy

Growth Hacking, explained

Part of the SocialKit social media glossary — browse every term.

What growth hacking is

Growth hacking — a term coined by startup marketer Sean Ellis in 2010 — is a working method, not a bag of tricks: form a hypothesis about what could drive growth, run the smallest experiment that can test it, measure, keep what works, kill what doesn’t, repeat. It deliberately ignores the boundary between marketing and product — a referral mechanic inside the product counts just as much as a clever campaign. The celebrated classic examples are growth loops, where each new user’s activity recruits the next.

Why it matters for social media

Social platforms are a near-perfect laboratory: experiments are cheap, feedback arrives within days, and the variables — hooks, formats, posting times, calls-to-action — are easy to isolate. A growth-minded social schedule treats some of its slots as test slots rather than filling every one with “proven” content. The same mindset has a failure mode worth naming: tactics that hack the metric but burn the audience — engagement bait, follow/unfollow churn, bought followers — produce numbers that look like growth and behave like decay.

A concrete example

Your baseline posts average 20 saves. You run a four-week test: two hook styles (question vs. bold claim) crossed with two time slots (midday vs. evening) — four variants, three posts each, twelve posts in total. The question-hook evening variant averages 44 saves; the others cluster near baseline. Twelve posts and one month bought you a repeatable doubling — that variant becomes the new default, and the next experiment starts.

How to apply it

Keep a simple experiment log: hypothesis, variant, sample size, result, decision. Change one variable at a time, give each test enough posts that a single fluke can’t decide it, and let losers die quickly. Prioritize ideas by expected impact and ease, ship the easy high-impact ones first, and hold an ethical line — growth that depends on spam or bought followers shows up later as cratered engagement rates and an audience that ignores you.

Where SocialKit fits

Experiments need controlled conditions — SocialKit’s scheduling keeps timing consistent across variants, and analytics on every plan show each post’s results in one place, so you can read a test without spreadsheet archaeology.

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FAQ

Growth Hacking: common questions

Quick answers to the questions people ask most about this term.

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