Contentsquare Enters Definitive Agreement To Acquire Loris AI →
Learn More
Guide

Product-led growth marketing: definition, strategies, and examples

Visual - [Product-led growth] Marketing

Signing up is just the beginning. Whether you offer free trials or a freemium model, product-led growth (PLG) doesn’t stop at acquisition—it’s about turning sign-ups into engaged, loyal users. 

With PLG marketing, your product becomes the engine driving activation, retention, and advocacy. Every touchpoint, from onboarding to in-app experiences, is an opportunity to demonstrate value, reduce friction, and build long-term customer relationships. When done right, your product doesn’t just attract users—it keeps them coming back and turns them into champions.

In this guide, you’ll learn what product-led growth marketing is and 7 powerful PLG techniques to deliver a product experience that creates customer delight.

Less guessing, more growing

You can’t lead with your product if you don’t understand how users interact with it. Contentsquare’s tools give you the context and information you need to make product-led decisions.

What is product-led growth marketing?

Product-led growth (PLG) marketing is a go-to-market strategy that focuses on the product as the primary tool to attract, convert, and retain users, and expand into new markets. In other words, it's a strategy where the product itself is the primary driver of customer acquisition, retention, and expansion.

While traditional marketing strategies focus on creating awareness and then collecting and nurturing marketing qualified leads (MQLs) so a salesperson can sell to them, PLG marketing emphasizes the digital experience and how it impacts the product management lifecycle at every stage of the user journey. 

PLG marketing effectively removes barriers from the self-serve model of product-led growth. This enables product teams to create customer delight and shorten the sales cycle for product-qualified leads (PQLs). For example:

  1. Creating product-led marketing content that addresses user pain points encourages them to start experiencing the product with a free trial or freemium account

  2. After sign-up and while onboarding, users receive in-app or email marketing messages to help them get meaningful value out of the product right away

  3. After experiencing the product for themselves, users find value in the product, upgrade to a paid plan for more value, and share the product with colleagues

Note: check out our Contentsquare Guides index for some examples of product-led content! 😉

Sales-led marketing strategies vs. product-led growth marketing

A traditional sales-led marketing strategy focuses on collecting leads that a sales team can contact and sell to. End users can only fully experience the product after a sale is successful. Revenue is directly tied to generating more marketing and sales qualified leads (SQLs).

The job of marketing in a product-led growth model extends beyond acquisition: the focus is on guiding people to value faster—and encouraging them to purchase once they’ve experienced that value directly. In product-led growth marketing, revenue is tied to the user and product experience.

Traditional marketing strategies

  • Need marketing channels like ads, social media, content, and email to drive purchase

  • Can afford to care more about acquisition than retention, because the switching cost is high for the user

  • Create content around the product's value to add sales

Whereas product-led growth companies

  • Use in-app communication to aid adoption and prompt upgrades

  • Can focus efforts on satisfaction and retention as much as acquisition, with lower switching costs for the user

  • Create content that shows how the product solves user problems—and helps users achieve their jobs-to-be-done—to aid product adoption

Traditional Marketing

Product-led growth marketing

Awareness

Awareness

Interest

Self sign-up

Consideration

Evaluation

Intent

Purchase

Evaluation

Advocacy

Purchase

Advocacy

Comparison of the stages in the traditional marketing funnel vs. a product-led growth marketing one

7 product-led growth marketing strategies to adopt 

Get started with PLG marketing by adopting these (simple) techniques to boost sign-ups, delight customers, improve customer retention, and encourage brand advocacy for your product. 

1. Make it easy to find and understand pricing information

Hidden pricing information disrupts the self-serve model of product-led growth—if a user has to contact you to learn your prices, that introduces friction and creates an extra touchpoint in their customer journey. 

To make it easy for potential customers to find and understand your pricing, create a dedicated pricing page and make it easy to locate from your navigation menu. Slack, Dropbox, and Typeform—3 successful SaaS PLG companies—do this (and, ahem, we do too).

On the pricing page itself, use value metrics like users, features, and size to clarify what’s included in each plan. Here’s what that looks like on Contentsquare’s pricing page—each column explains the plan size and features for our Experience Analytics product (or you can build your own 😉):

Visual - pricing page

A snapshot of Contentsquare’s pricing page

2. Simplify the sign-up process to remove friction

Friction in the sign-up flow—for example, too many form fields or unclear next steps—can prevent people from trying your product.

Here are some ideas to remove friction from your sign-up process:

Limit the number of form fields

More fields mean more work for users. Where possible, limit sign-up forms to two fields, like Typeform does for their SaaS product (they just require an email address and password) to make signup less intimidating and time-consuming. If you need more information from users to help with personalization, you can collect that during product onboarding.

Visual - typeform-signup

Typeform’s signup form only uses two form fields

Use drop-downs and checkboxes

Elements like drop-downs and checkboxes reduce user effort during the sign-up process. For example, instead of hitting 17 keys to type ‘Marketing Manager’, the user can check a box with one click, or select the appropriate role in two clicks in the case of a drop-down. Here’s an example from InVision:

Visual - invision-signup

The InVision signup form comes with a drop-down field


💡Pro tip: use Contentsquare’s Form Analysis to spot friction points in your sign-up flow. 

Identify which fields cause drop-offs, where users hesitate, and what’s slowing them down. Then, streamline the process—limit required fields, replace open text with drop-downs, and remove unnecessary steps to boost conversions effortlessly.

Visual - Form Analysis

Contentsquare’s Form Analysis gives you comprehensive reports on how your users interacted with your site’s forms

Offer third-party sign-up and logins 

Where possible, allow Google or other third-party profile sign-ups and logins—also known as single sign-on, or SSO. Not only does SSO reduce user effort during sign-up, but fewer people will abandon your product because they forgot their password. (Yeah, we've all done it.) 

An added benefit of implementing SSO is fewer fake or faulty email addresses in your leads, because third-party profile signups ensure that people only sign up with valid account details.

Visual - CSQ Google SSO

The Contentsquare sign-up form has a Google SSO option

Note: supplement SSO with the option to sign up manually—like we’ve done in our Contentsquare sign-up process—so skeptical users or those without a third-party account can still enjoy your product.


💡 Pro tip: use Contentsquare’s Session Replay tool to uncover points of friction in your sign-up flow.

After a sudden drop in conversions, Golf Digest Online (GDO), a Japan-based leading provider of digital services, used Session Replay to investigate user drop-offs during the sign-up process. They discovered that users were encountering an error message stating their entry was incomplete. This led users to go back and resubmit their information, but the form structure didn’t allow for easy corrections, causing frustration and abandonment. 

[visual] clarins session recording

Contentsquare’s Session Replay tool in action


3. Add urgency to confirmation requests 

Users are most excited about your product at the time of sign-up. If you delay access (even with a confirmation email) you risk losing their attention. 

Because PLG relies on users experiencing value from your product right away—and then upgrading to a paid plan—if you lose their interest before they get a chance to try your product, that’s like losing a sale.

If your product requires user verification, perhaps to limit spam sign-ups, add urgency to your confirmation page to encourage users to take immediate action. Slack does this with a note about the code expiring soon, and a link to open Gmail or Outlook directly from the confirmation page:

Visual - slack-login

Slack creates a sense of urgency on their confirmation page

4. Tailor onboarding to boost retention and advocacy

In PLG marketing, the goal of onboarding isn't to show users every feature of your product. It’s to share marketing materials and in-app messaging to help users achieve at least one of the outcomes they signed up for (also known as their jobs-to-be-done, or JTBD).

Improving onboarding experiences can also have a positive effect on some of your most important KPIs and product-led growth metrics:

  • Optimizing customer lifetime value (CLTV): by leading to a reduced customer churn rate

  • Reducing time-to-value (TTV): by speeding up the time taken for users to upgrade and convert into a paying customer

Here are 2 ways to tailor your product onboarding to deliver quick wins, and boost retention and advocacy:

Lead users to an outcome with in-app walkthroughs, prompts, and checklists 

In-app guidance removes confusion and friction around where to start, what’s most important, and the steps users need to take to achieve a specific goal.

For example, at Contentsquare, we use an in-app prompt to guide users to their first step: adding our tag. Once users have taken that step, we guide them through the installation process with customized instructions to match their needs.

The outcome: Contentsquare users can quickly and easily begin to observe and understand their own customers' user experience (UX) with every new session their site records.

Pro tip: personalize your onboarding process for unique customer profiles. 

For example, a project planning app's onboarding experience for a working exec should differ from that of a college student. 

For working people, project planning app Todoist adds onboarding tasks like connecting a work calendar and checking emails to the onboarding process. Students get prompts to review exam dates and an education template pack.  

Visual - Snip - Document1 - Word

Identify and remove points of friction

When you’re familiar with your product, it’s easy to forget what it feels like for a new user. Use product testing or session monitoring (with a tool like Contentsquare👋) to learn how users experience your product during onboarding. 

For example, Intelliquip, a sales software provider for manufacturers watched session replays to observe onboarding users. They were "able to make a lot of corrections very quickly just by intensely watching users" to remove confusion, reduce friction, and improve the onboarding process. 

5. Prioritize a strong user experience

How users experience your website or product—also known as the user experience (UX)—is just as important as what your site or product helps them achieve. Slow loading times, broken elements, or confusing navigation can cause users to have a negative experience. Soon, they may start to doubt the value of your product, which can cause a snowball effect where they:

  1. Use the product less and get fewer results from it (if any)

  2. 'Confirm' their doubts and abandon your product

  3. Share negative feedback about your product with peers 

  4. Prevent other people from signing up

Here are some tips to achieve the best product and user experience:

List the steps users need to take to reach an outcome

Use PLG tools to support users by outlining the steps they need to take to reach specific outcomes. Tools like Beamer and Appcues help inform and lead new and existing users to meaningful value from within your products, and Iterable enables your lifecycle marketing efforts. 

It's also good practice to create guides and documentation that are easy to access for all levels of users. For example, at Contentsquare we create product-led marketing content and utilize SEO for our Contentsquare guides; and our Help Center and eBooks and Reports space are available to anyone who needs step-by-step, tool-specific guidance.

Visual - CSQ ebooks and reports page

Snapshot of Contentsquare’s eBooks and Reports page

Create a user journey map that shows touchpoints required for each step

Every interaction a user has with your site and product is considered a touchpoint in their user journey—from the moment they begin to use your product to the moment they exit—and each touchpoint introduces a possible point of friction in their journey. 

Use a customer journey mapping tool—like Contentsquare’s Journey Analysis—to help you understand and plot your user journey. Keep an eye out for blockers and pain points like rage clicks and u-turns, which will help you identify areas of friction and improve the customer experience. 

[Customer Story] [PointsBet] Journey Analysis

Contentsquare’s Journey Analysis tool helps you detect recurring bottlenecks that lead users to drop off

Keep in mind: user journey touchpoints will differ for specific steps and outcomes, so it may be helpful to plot user journey maps for different user segments, or based on a specific JTBD. 

Use a product analytics tool to identify drop-off points

Drop-off points—where the user exits your product without completing an action—signal a problem area within the customer journey.

Discover these pages using a funnel visualization tool like Contentsquare, which shows the drop-off rate of the main pages in your conversion funnel, helping you understand when and where visitors (and potentially paying customers) are leaving.

In Contentsquare, navigate to Funnel Analysis to visualize user progression through key steps on your website. By setting up a funnel with defined steps, you can identify where users drop off and analyze conversion rates at each stage. Use the Over Time view to track funnel performance trends to spot seasonal patterns or sudden shifts in user behavior.

Visual - funnel analysis

Contentsquare’s Funnel Analysis tool lets you visualize funnel performance trends over a selected time range

Use a product experience insights tool to observe those pages

Product analytics may tell you where things go wrong, but digital experience insights show you why it happens.

After you’ve identified problematic high-exit pages and roadblocks in your conversion funnel, use a product experience insights platform like Contentsquare to dig deeper into what’s happening before they leave the page.

You can take a more in-depth look at what users interact with right before they drop off by using Contentsquare tools:

  • The Heatmaps tool records and aggregates user clicks, mouse movement, and scrolls. Placing a heatmap on your high-exit pages helps you spot problematic elements, like broken links and unseen CTAs, and shows you which elements were clicked (or ignored) and how far down the page users scrolled.

  • Session Replay gives more detail to the insights you get from heatmaps. Watch how people navigate from page to page, scroll through content, and interact with buttons before they leave. Spotting issues users encounter on your high-exit pages helps you empathize with their journey, and get some of the visual data needed to design for better UX.

Visual - Heatmap WNICX

Contentsquare Heatmaps show you key engagement areas on your website and CTAs, so you know what to improve

Use surveys and feedback forms to enhance your observations

At this stage, you can begin experimenting with design changes through A/B testing, but there’s one key insight that’s still missing: feedback from your users.

When you give your visitors the power to tell you about their experience, they’ll show you exactly what is and isn’t working, right as they experience it. That's why tools like surveys and feedback widgets should be part of your product experience optimization stack.

As customers choose their preferences or use their own words to share expectations and frustrations, you’ll find hints for what changes to prioritize for a better customer experience.

Visual - in app survey

Example of an in-app survey built with Contentsquare

6. Focus your content marketing around your product

In product-led growth marketing, the goal is to build your user base with as low a Customer Acquisition Cost (CAC) as possible. Content marketing is a great way to do that.

HubSpot and Buffer are great examples of software companies with a freemium model that have built a huge user base through content that educates readers about the product while providing real value to them—even if they aren’t qualified leads yet.

Visual - growthmarketer-stages-of-awareness

Source: Growth Marketer

The goal is to turn every reader into a lead, so you need to serve them with impactful, actionable content that’s relevant to the stage of awareness they’re currently at.

Once you’ve clearly defined the stage of awareness of your users, you can weave the product into the narrative of your content, making it more valuable for your intended audience—rather than coming across as a shameless, out-of-context plug for your product.

Ahrefs and Zapier are software companies that excel at this kind of content—and we try to, too. Here are 2 content strategies SaaS companies use that you can learn and implement fast:

Set up and highlight product template galleries that solve a pain point

Zapier, an app integration and automation platform that lets users set up triggered actions and workflows between different applications, creates and uses programmatic templates to promote their product. Then, they create optimized blog posts and landing pages to promote those templates. This tactic is part of Zapier’s SEO strategy of using content marketing to increase search traffic and generate demand early in the customer journey.

The goal is to connect with people searching for more general app categories and use cases that Zapier’s own landing pages don’t rank as well for. 

Their blog and content marketing strategy focuses on exploring different app use cases and reviewing apps in different categories—content relevant for the type of top-of-the-funnel research this audience is doing. 

Create content hubs that address customer issues using your product

Product-led hub content helps you answer user questions and address pain points, while showcasing your product naturally. 

At Contentsquare, we create guides that take users through our product, highlight our product's value, and show you how it can help you achieve goals and solve pressing issues.

Along with our Help Center and eBooks and Reports space, these resources help educate customers on topics like why they should use the segmentation feature or how they can find the best insights in our Session Replay tool.

Visual - Help Center

Snapshot of a Contentsquare Help Center page on how to create combined and sequential segments

This is one of the main benefits of product-led growth marketing—the educational content is public and documented, so customers can access it themselves. They don’t have to reach out, file a support ticket, or wait on someone else’s assistance.

7. Embrace cross-functional collaboration

A great experience is crucial to building customer-centric products that keep users engaged and prevent churn. By creating a cross-functional collaboration culture, you can build products that put your users first, and bring diverse inputs and data into the product build. 

For example, your support or marketing team may have valuable website data that can provide the product team with useful insights for optimizing your product and the user experience. This is essential to the bottom-up buying experience that comes with a PLG strategy.

Marketers can play a role in cross-functional alignment across teams to understand how users interact with the product. They'll learn the signs that suggest engagement or disengagement. With that information, they'll be ready to upsell to engaged users, or re-engage churned users at the right time. 

Successful product-led growth marketing revolves around your customers 

Product-led growth marketing puts the product at the center to provide existing and new customers with a less-invasive experience that drives acquisition, activation, retention, and advocacy. Powered by collaboration and user behavior data, it can be unstoppable. 

Your objectives with PLG marketing should be to put the customer first, build an intuitive product, and create synergy between teams. They're certainly ours, here at Contentsquare. Everything we do has one goal: to drive customer success. If our customers are successful, then so are we.

Less guessing, more growing

You can’t lead with your product if you don’t understand how users interact with it. Contentsquare’s tools give you the context and information you need to make product-led decisions.

Product-led growth marketing FAQs

  • Product-led marketing is an acquisition strategy that focuses on product features and aligns them with specific user pain points. Every piece of marketing material highlights how existing or new features solve user pain points.

    Product-led growth marketing, on the other hand, is a marketing model that relies on users’ own experience with the product to influence acquisition, retention, and advocacy.

Contentsquare

We’re an international team of content experts and writers with a passion for all things customer experience (CX). From best practices to the hottest trends in digital, we’ve got it covered. Explore our guides to learn everything you need to know to create experiences that your customers will love. Happy reading!