The goal
Don't hire a unicorn 11/10 on everything. Build a balanced team with no gaps in the portfolio.
The Big Idea
Onboarding: Your Only Shot at 100% Feature Reach
"Onboarding is the only part of your product experience that 100% of people are ever going to touch. Good luck getting 100% feature adoption of anything else."
100%
users touch onboarding
+20%
max retention lift seen
#1
churn risk: earliest usage
Brand = the promise you make. Product = how you deliver it. Onboarding is where they must match.
Users are most motivated at onboarding start — they knocked down doors to get here.
Friction in onboarding is actually valuable: use it to learn about your user.
Fixing onboarding shifts the whole cohort retention curve outward — it's a compounding lever.
Adam ran onboarding projects at Lyft, Patreon, Wyzant, and Imperfect Foods — every time it moved the needle.
Hiring Playbook
How to Hire (and Avoid Mis-Hiring) Growth Leaders
"They didn't have a really strong set of criteria on what it meant to hire a great growth person — that led to fewer mismatches in the hiring process."
Avoid silver-bullet hiring: founders who want a magic solution hire wrong. Growth requires strategy + a system to execute.
Reverse-interview founders: ask what competencies they value first — surface misalignment before you start.
Don't pattern-match to a person: "find me you 10 years ago" misses first-principles thinking about what the role needs.
Internal hires first: faster ramp, known track record, creates opportunity inside the org.
Archetypes: Painter · Architect · Surgeon
Painter — broad creative generalist. Architect — systems thinker who builds loops. Surgeon — precision specialist (SEO, paid). Hire surgeon only after foundational strategy is in place; these are dark arts that take years.
For junior hires: two non-negotiables
Strong Growth Execution (can get things done; hard to teach) + strong Customer Knowledge (understands users deeply). Everything else can be developed on the job.
Onboarding Tactics
Make the First Experience Unforgettable
Your brand promise and product experience must be in lockstep — mismatches destroy trust instantly
Use friction intentionally: early onboarding is where users will tolerate questions and setup steps
Focus on habit formation — onboarding drives retention by building early usage patterns
Churn is most likely in earliest product usage — getting users past the first hump is everything
Use feedback loops to learn what jobs users are hiring your product to do — then reflect that back in onboarding
Adam's punchline
"This is the first chance that a customer has to be really excited or really disappointed in what they thought they were getting. So don't mess that up."
Contrarian
Adam Fishman's Most Counterintuitive Growth Takes
✗Hire a growth unicorn who's great at everythingINSTEAD →✓ Build a balanced team that collectively covers all four competencies. No single person should be an 11/10 across the board — they don't exist.
✗Remove friction from onboarding to maximize conversionINSTEAD →✓ Add strategic friction. Users are maximally motivated at signup — they will knock down doors. Use that window to learn about them.
✗Hire externally first — you need proven growth expertiseINSTEAD →✓ Bias toward internal hires. Faster results, known track record, far lower mis-hire risk. Only go external for precision specialists (SEO, paid) once foundations are solid.
✗A growth hire needs a silver-bullet strategy to unlock scaleINSTEAD →✓ What you really need is a system: a strategy to add new growth loops plus a disciplined process to execute against it over time. Patience is a prerequisite.