Product-Led Growth Checklist: A Practical Guide
                                Product-Led Growth Checklist: A Practical Guide
If you’ve ever wondered how some SaaS products grow almost by themselves, there’s a good chance they’re following a product-led growth (PLG) strategy. In this post, I’ll walk you through a practical product-led growth checklist you can use to prioritize experiments, measure what matters, and align your teams around product-driven user activation and retention.
Why a product-led growth checklist matters
Think of PLG as letting your product do the selling. Instead of depending solely on a big sales team or expensive advertising, you rely on the product experience to drive adoption. But that doesn’t happen by accident — it requires a clear plan. A checklist keeps you focused on the core loops that turn visitors into active users and then paying customers.
How to use this checklist
Use this list as a living document. Run weekly or bi-weekly reviews with product, marketing, and customer success to track progress. You don’t need every item perfect day one — prioritize what’s most likely to move your metrics.
Core sections of the product-led growth checklist
1. Understand the core product value
- Define the primary user job-to-be-done (JTBD). What problem does the product solve in one sentence?
 - Create a one-minute demo that highlights that JTBD — record it and use it across channels.
 - Map the simplest path to value: what’s the fewest steps a user needs to see the product’s core value?
 
2. Onboarding & activation
Activation is the moment a user first experiences meaningful value. Nail this, and adoption skyrockets.
- Design an onboarding flow focused on completing the key activation milestone.
 - Use progressive disclosure: hide advanced features until users are ready.
 - Measure time-to-first-value (TTFV) and reduce it iteratively.
 
3. Product analytics and instrumentation
Data lets you know whether changes actually work.
- Instrument events for sign-ups, key feature usage, activation, retention, and churn triggers.
 - Set up funnels to measure conversion at each step of the journey.
 - Track cohort retention and activation rate by acquisition source.
 
4. Virality and sharing mechanics
- Identify natural invite points where users benefit from bringing others (collaboration, shareables, referrals).
 - Make invites frictionless: pre-populate messages, one-click invites, calendar integrations.
 - Test referral rewards carefully — they should encourage long-term value, not just sign-ups.
 
5. Pricing and monetization
- Align pricing to value metrics (e.g., seats, projects, usage) so upgrades are intuitive.
 - Offer a clear free tier or trial that showcases the core value without blocking growth.
 - Run experiments on packaging, not just price — sometimes adding a premium feature works better than dropping the price.
 
6. Retention loops and product stickiness
Retention is the lifeblood of PLG. Work on making your product indispensable.
- Build habit-forming features: notifications, recurring value, saved states.
 - Proactively address churn signals: survey churned users, automate win-back flows.
 - Use product analytics to identify features correlated with long-term retention.
 
7. Cross-functional alignment
PLG isn’t just product’s job — it’s about alignment across teams.
- Hold regular GTM syncs: product, marketing, sales, and CS.
 - Define shared KPIs (activation rate, MRR per user, NPS) so teams move in the same direction.
 - Document experiments and outcomes so knowledge is accessible to everyone.
 
8. Experimentation and growth loops
- Run hypothesis-driven experiments with clear metrics and stop/go criteria.
 - Prioritize changes with the highest impact and lowest effort first.
 - Keep an experiment backlog and review learnings regularly.
 
Sample weekly PLG checklist (practical)
- Review activation funnel and identify the biggest drop-off.
 - Launch one micro-experiment to reduce TTFV (e.g., inline tips, pre-filled sample data).
 - Check cohort retention for last three months and flag anomalies.
 - Confirm analytics events fired correctly for new releases.
 - Gather qualitative feedback from 3–5 users experiencing activation issues.
 
Tools that help
There are lots of tools for PLG — analytics, user feedback, and onboarding builders. Pick ones that integrate with your stack and don’t over-instrument. Start with product analytics, session replay, and an in-app messaging tool.
Personal tip
I once worked on a product where adding a single, in-product template increased activation by 18% in two weeks. It was low effort but solved a real friction point: users didn’t know what to do after sign-up. That taught me to prioritize real user problems over flashy features.
Wrapping up
Use this product-led growth checklist as a framework, not a rulebook. Test, learn, and iterate. If you keep focusing on time-to-first-value, retention loops, and cross-functional alignment, you’ll be surprised how often the product itself becomes your best growth channel.
If you want a one-page version of this checklist to print and share in meetings, drop a comment or message me — I’m happy to help customize it to your product.
        


