How to find hidden growth opportunities in your product | Albert Cheng (Duolingo, Grammarly, Chess.com)
How to find hidden growth opportunities in your product | Albert Cheng (Duolingo, Grammarly, Chess.com)
How to find hidden growth opportunities in your product | Albert Cheng (Duolingo, Grammarly, Chess.com)
Shownote
Shownote
Albert Cheng has led growth at three of the world’s most successful consumer subscription companies: Duolingo, Grammarly, and Chess.com. A former Google product manager (and serious pianist!), Albert developed a unique approach to finding and scaling growt...
Highlights
Highlights
Albert Cheng, a growth leader at Duolingo, Grammarly, and Chess.com, shares how his background in music and product management converges on the principles of deliberate practice, experimentation, and psychological insight. His approach to scaling consumer apps centers on empowering teams to rapidly test ideas, learn from failure, and double down on what truly moves user behavior—revealing a mindset shaped as much by piano rehearsals as product metrics.
Chapters
Chapters
How a piano prodigy learned the rhythm of product growth
00:00What happens when 80% of game reviews come after wins?
10:50Why showing paid features to free users drives upgrades
21:25What does great retention look like—and where does growth really come from?
29:03Can AI make people love chess more than ever?
44:16How AI is supercharging the experiment engine
51:52What it takes to run 1,000 experiments a year
57:14Why initiative beats experience in high-speed teams
1:07:49When is a company the right size to drive change?
1:10:26What a failed shuttle service taught about solving real problems
1:15:17Transcript
Transcript
Albert Cheng: Growth is the job is to connect users to the value of your product. Growth sometimes gets this reputation that it's just pure metrics hacking.
Lenny Rachitsky: You've worked at three of the most successful consumer subscription products in t...
