How to Expand Your Business With the Network Effect

This article is an excerpt from the Shortform book guide to "The Cold Start Problem" by Andrew Chen. Shortform has the world's best summaries and analyses of books you should be reading.

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Want to know how to expand your business for rapid growth? How can you achieve “Growth Explosion?”

According to venture capitalist Andrew Chen, Growth Explosion is what happens when you build enough subnetworks to become a legitimate competitor to the current industry leader. Chen offers three methods to expand your business rapidly in his book The Cold Start Problem.

Read on to learn how to expand your business rapidly, according to Chen’s three methods.

Expanding Your Business: Chen’s 3 Methods

In The Cold Start Problem, venture capitalist Andrew Chen explains that, once you’ve successfully launched a number of subnetworks, you’ll hit the “Growth Explosion.” This is when across all your subnetworks, you have enough users for the network effect to kick in with gusto, accelerating growth to the point where you can challenge the market leader in your industry. Chen states that at this stage, you can shift your focus away from manually starting new subnetworks and instead work to refine your product in ways that amplify the network effect. This allows you to expand your business faster than you could ever imagine. In this article, we’ll explain how to expand your business using three of the methods that Chen outlines in his book The Cold Start Problem: How to Start and Scale Network Effects.

(Shortform note: Although Chen assumes that the readers of his book want to grow their company into an industry-dominating giant, you may want to keep your business intentionally small and simply stop at this step. In Anything You Want, Derek Sivers describes how he turned down weekly offers from firms who wanted to invest in his startup and help him expand. His rationale for doing so was that rapid expansion can sometimes distract you from giving the best possible product to your existing customers, which is the key to not only financial success but also fulfillment.)

To explain how to rapidly expand your business, we need to break down exactly how the network effect drives growth. Chen explains that having a bigger network makes it easier for you to 1) attract new users, 2) retain existing users, and 3) profit more from the users you have. We’ll discuss each of these aspects of the network effect in turn—it should be your goal to optimize each one.

#1: Optimize Network Growth

First, Chen asserts that the larger your user base, the easier it is to attract more new users. If you have more users, more people will share your product with their personal contacts, creating naturally accelerating growth. This word-of-mouth advertising is more effective and more economical than traditional paid marketing.

To expand your business, refine your product in ways that make users more likely to show it to others. Chen suggests implementing features in the product that naturally expand the network: For example, TikTok allows users to export and share videos outside of the app. The company places its logo in the exported video so that viewers know if they want more videos like that, they can join TikTok.

(Shortform note: To expand your business and optimize network growth, it’s not enough to simply give users the ability to expand your network by using and sharing your product—you must also give them an incentive to do so. In Contagious, Jonah Berger describes different kinds of value you can offer to users for sharing your product. By making your product interesting or cool, you can give users social currency, making them seem interesting and cool for knowing about it. Similarly, by making your product scarce or exclusive, people will feel special to be included in its user base, giving them an incentive to brag about it to their friends.)

#2: Optimize Network Preservation

Chen explains that the second positive aspect of the network effect is that the more users you have, the easier it is to make a product compelling enough for users to continue using it. This is because having more users means you have more user behavior to monitor—analyzing this data gives you the insights you need to make your product more alluring.

To optimize your network preservation and expand your business, Chen recommends identifying which customers spend the most time on your product and then experimenting to discover which aspects of your product influence them to stick around. Use this information to refine your product and make it even more compelling.

How to Expand Your Business With the Network Effect

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Like what you just read? Read the rest of the world's best book summary and analysis of Andrew Chen's "The Cold Start Problem" at Shortform.

Here's what you'll find in our full The Cold Start Problem summary:

  • How to build a billion-dollar tech company from the ground up
  • Why you need to understand the network effect if you're in the tech industry
  • How to overcome the negative effects of rapid growth

Emily Kitazawa

Emily found her love of reading and writing at a young age, learning to enjoy these activities thanks to being taught them by her mom—Goodnight Moon will forever be a favorite. As a young adult, Emily graduated with her English degree, specializing in Creative Writing and TEFL (Teaching English as a Foreign Language), from the University of Central Florida. She later earned her master’s degree in Higher Education from Pennsylvania State University. Emily loves reading fiction, especially modern Japanese, historical, crime, and philosophical fiction. Her personal writing is inspired by observations of people and nature.

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