Community-Led Growth: Users Who Teach, Support, and Sell for You
Community-led growth is a PLG pattern where user communities drive acquisition, support, and retention. Forums, Discord servers, subreddits, and events become your most effective growth channels. Notion’s subreddit, Figma’s plugin community, and dbt’s Slack workspace show what’s possible.
- 1Users get value Product genuinely helps them
- 2Users gather in community spaces Forums, Discord, Reddit, events
- 3Users help users Support costs decrease
- 4Users create content Tutorials, templates, reviews
- 5Content attracts new users Acquisition increases organically
- 6New users join community Growth compounds
What makes community-led growth different from influencer marketing (paid promotion) or content marketing (company-created) is authenticity. Community members advocate because they genuinely love the product, and that authenticity converts better than any marketing:
| PLG Pattern | Who Drives Growth | Trust Level | Scalability |
|---|---|---|---|
| Community-Led | Users helping users | Very high | Compounds over time |
| Content Marketing | Company content team | Medium | Linear with effort |
| Influencer Marketing | Paid promoters | Medium-low | Linear with spend |
| Referral Programs | Incentivized users | Medium | Can plateau |
Community reduces costs (support) while increasing value (advocacy). It’s a growth loop that compounds over time.
Community-led growth requires specific conditions to flourish. Here’s when it works.
When community-led growth works
| Condition | Works | Fails |
|---|---|---|
| Identity | Users identify with the skill/interest | Nothing to connect users |
| Peer learning | Users can help each other | No learning value |
| Creation | Product enables shareable creations | Commodity tools |
| Engagement | Users spend significant time | Quick-use products |
| Advocacy | Users proud to be associated | Forced “join our community” |
Best Fit Products
| Category | Examples |
|---|---|
| Design tools | Figma, Webflow |
| Workspace tools | Coda, ClickUp |
| Communication | Discord, Front |
| Developer tools | Supabase, Postman |
| Learning platforms | Duolingo, Replit |
Community-Led Growth Examples
Notion: 95% Organic Through Community
1M to 100M users between 2020-2024. 95% organic traffic from community efforts. Notion’s subreddit has 280K+ members sharing templates.1
How It Works
- 1Notion's flexible product enables infinite use cases
- 2Users create templates for every workflow imaginable
- 3Users share templates in subreddit, Twitter, galleries
- 4Template creators become Notion evangelists
- 5New users discover Notion through templates
- 6New users create their own templates Cycle repeats
Lessons
- Build a flexible product that enables infinite use cases. Notion’s template culture exists because creating and sharing is natural when the product lets users build anything, and each template attracts more users.
- Recognize top contributors to make them more invested advocates. Featured creators get visibility, which creates a “power user identity” where being “good at Notion” becomes a flex.
- Build community around use cases, not just the product. A “productivity” community is more compelling than a “Notion” community, and content compounds as each piece attracts more users who create more content.
Figma: Community Resources Drive Discovery
150,000+ community templates. 4M to 20M+ users (2019-2024). Figma’s community got so valuable that Adobe tried to buy them for $20B.2
How It Works
- 1Figma Community hosts plugins, templates, design systems
- 2Designers share work, get discovered, build reputation
- 3New designers find resources, use them, join Figma
- 4Community resources make learning Figma easier
- 5Easier learning = faster adoption = more community members
Lessons
- Create economic incentives by making community benefit creators’ careers. Figma profiles function as professional portfolios, and being known in the Figma community directly helps designers’ careers.
- Host the marketplace where community happens to own the platform. Plugin ecosystems let community extend product capabilities, while template libraries accelerate time-to-value for new users.
- Make contribution visible through public profiles, stats, and recognition. Pre-built resources accelerate value for consumers while giving creators reputation and discovery.
Discord: Servers as Acquisition Channels
$0 in traditional advertising. 200M+ monthly active users. Discord grew entirely through server invite links.3 Every community built on Discord becomes a signup funnel.
How It Works
- 1Users create servers for communities (gaming, crypto, creators)
- 2Servers share invite links across internet
- 3Invite links require Discord signup
- 4New users create their own servers
- 5New servers share new invite links Growth compounds
Lessons
- Be infrastructure, not destination. Discord lets communities build ON the platform, making communities feel like theirs rather than Discord’s. User ownership drives organic promotion.
- Make every user action a distribution channel. Every invite link is a signup funnel, creating viral distribution without any marketing spend.
- Create network effects through ecosystem density. More servers means more reasons to join, which means more servers. The product becomes more valuable as it grows.
ClickUp: Discord Power Users as Acquisition Engine
Power users sharing elaborate setups. Answering each other’s questions. Support and education outsourced to champions. ClickUp ($4B valuation, 4M+ users) turned its Discord community into an acquisition engine.4
How It Works
- 1Power users build elaborate ClickUp setups
- 2Users share custom configurations in Discord community
- 3Community members answer each other's questions
- 4ClickUp outsources support and education to champions
- 5Users teach users, creating advocate network
Lessons
- Prioritize champions over content. Power users explaining your product is more credible than marketing, and customization depth gives them complex setups worth showing off.
- Track invitations, not just signups. How many users each person brings predicts retention better than registration metrics. Optimize for stickiness, not vanity metrics.
- Outsource education to community for complex use cases. Recognize top contributors with status, and they’ll handle onboarding while reducing your support load.
Replit: Education Community as Growth Wedge
ARR jumped from $2.8M to $150M in under a year. Replit ($3B valuation, 28M+ users) got there through education: 40% students, 30% professionals, 20% hobbyists. Students graduate and bring Replit to workplaces.5
How It Works
- 1NYC Department of Education adopted Replit for student coding
- 2Teachers introduced Replit; students spread usage
- 3Students on Chromebooks made Replit a lifeline (COVID)
- 4Usage on phones/tablets jumped 900%
- 5Students graduate, bring Replit to workplaces
Lessons
- Find education use cases because students become lifetime users. Replit’s lifecycle value comes from students graduating into professionals who bring the tool to enterprises.
- Remove installation barriers to enable community spread. Browser-first means no installation needed on school computers, and a generous free tier lets education adopt without budget.
- Enable sharing and remixing so community grows through collaboration. Community templates let students share and learn from each other, creating peer-to-peer education.
Serve Existing Communities, Don’t Build New Ones
“Build a community around your product” has it backwards. Community-led growth is about your product serving a community that already exists.
Notion didn’t create “productivity enthusiasts.” They existed. Notion served them better than alternatives, so they gathered around Notion. Discord didn’t create gamers. Gamers existed. Discord served them better than alternatives.
The insight: don’t build community FROM product. Build product FOR community.
| What People Think | What Actually Works |
|---|---|
| ”Create community for our users" | "Serve an existing community better" |
| "Hire community managers" | "Enable power users to lead" |
| "Launch Discord server" | "Go where community already gathers” |
Action Items
- Identify your existing community: What group of people does your product serve? Where do they already gather? Subreddits, Discord servers, Twitter circles? Go there first. Don’t build a community from scratch.
- Find your super-users: Pull your top 1% by usage. Who are they? What do they wish existed? These people will become your community leaders if you recognize them. Reach out to 10 this week.
- Enable creation: What can users build, share, or teach each other? Templates, tutorials, plugins, workflows. If users can’t create something worth sharing, community-led growth won’t work for you.
- Recognize contributors publicly: How can you make top community members famous? Featured creator programs, public shoutouts, badges. Notion’s template creators build personal brands. Recognition is free and compounds.
- Measure community ROI: Track support tickets deflected by community answers, signups attributed to community content, and NPS of community members vs. non-members. Community takes 12-18 months to show ROI. Measure early signals.
Footnotes
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Common Room, “Ultimate Guide to Community-Led Growth.” Bettermode community research. 92% trust peer recommendations, 58% of top SaaS host communities, Notion 95% organic traffic. ↩ ↩2 ↩3
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Figma S-1 Filing (2025). $20B Adobe acquisition blocked, 150,000+ community templates, 48% YoY revenue growth. ↩
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ReferralCandy, “How Word of Mouth Marketing Grew Discord to 250M Users.” Medium, “The $0 Growth Hack That Turned a Failed Game Into a $15-Billion Communication Empire.” ↩
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TechCrunch, ClickUp $4B valuation reporting, 2021. Reprise PLG analysis. Discord community strategy. ↩
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Craft Ventures, “Inside Replit’s Breakout Growth.” Sacra, “Replit Revenue, Valuation & Funding.” First Round Review, “Replit’s Path to Product-Market Fit.” Education adoption, COVID growth. ↩