Why Every Start-UP Needs A North Star
When you're just starting out as an entrepreneur, it’s tempting to think you need to structure your company like established tech giants—with specialized teams for every function, including a dedicated growth team.
But here's the thing: for start-ups, growth shouldn’t
be isolated to one department. In fact, early-stage start-ups shouldn’t have
growth teams at all. Instead, the entire company should function as the growth
team, and the CEO should be at the helm of that initiative.
As a young entrepreneur, one of the most important
lessons I've learned is that growth isn’t just a set of tactics or a job for
someone else. It’s the heartbeat of the company and should be led by the person
who understands the vision most clearly—the CEO.
The CEO needs to set the “North Star,” which
essentially means defining the most important goal the company is working
toward. This is critical because, in the early stages, you’re often wearing
multiple hats, and so is everyone else on your team.
Without a clear north star metric, it’s easy for
people to pull in different directions, and that’s when start-ups lose focus.
I’ve seen this first-hand: if a company lacks a
unified direction, growth stalls. The CEO, with their vision, should lead by
defining that north star, ensuring the team understands the company’s
overarching goal and stays aligned with it.
Why
Defining a North Star Metric Matters?
When your team is small, every person has a
significant impact on the company’s direction. Without a clear, guiding metric,
it’s hard to ensure that everyone is working toward the same goal.
A north star metric gives your team something to rally
around. It’s a singular focus that aligns your product development, marketing,
and business operations.
It also ensures that when an engineer or designer goes
to build a new feature, they’re optimizing for growth in a way that aligns with
your start-up’s long-term vision.
For example, if your north star metric is customer
engagement, your team will prioritize building features that enhance user
interaction. If it’s revenue growth, their focus will shift to optimizing for
conversions and sales. Whatever the metric is, the key is that it should guide
every decision across the company.
Don’t
Stress About Picking the Perfect Metric
One common misconception is that picking the right
north star metric is a life-or-death decision for your start-up. It’s not. Most
growth metrics are correlated to each other, so whether you choose Daily Active
Users (DAUs) or Monthly Active Users (MAUs), the result is likely to be
similar. What’s most important is that the metric you choose aligns with your mission
and values, and is something you can commit to over time.
For instance, if you're building a social platform, you might be tempted to choose DAUs because you want to optimize for daily engagement. However, if your product is more about long-term, habitual use—like a learning app—then MAUs might make more sense. The key is to pick the metric that fits your vision and stick to it because consistency is what drives long-term growth.
Growth is
Everyone’s Responsibility
In early-stage start-ups, everyone needs to have a
growth mindset. From the designer to the developer to the marketer, each person
should understand that their work directly impacts the company’s ability to
scale. This is why growth shouldn’t be isolated to one department.
As CEO, your role is to keep growth front and center,
ensuring that every person in your company understands their impact on the
north star metric. When this happens, growth becomes a company-wide effort
rather than a responsibility of just one team.
Make Growth the Priority from the Start
The start-up world moves fast, and focusing on growth
is the only way to stay relevant. But more than that, it’s about aligning your
team around a clear north star and ensuring that every decision made in your
company supports that growth metric. As the CEO, it’s your job to define that
north star, lead your team toward it, and make sure every person is working
toward that same goal.
So, as you embark on your entrepreneurial journey,
remember: don’t silo growth into a single department. Make the whole company a
growth team, and let the CEO be the one who drives the vision. You’ll be amazed
at the results when your entire team is aligned and working together toward a
common goal.

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