Happy $100k BitcoinâŚagain! The milestone may have lost some luster compared to the first time back in December 2024, but it still brings a sense of joy and excitement. Sorta like how your favorite holiday comes around every year. AnywhoâŚ
One trend thatâs been popping up on my radar has been publicly published playbooks that share best practices from ecosystems, platforms, and apps for various audiences theyâre trying to attract.
Ronin (a gaming-focused blockchain from the team behind Axie Infinity) recently published the Ronin Growth Playbook, covering topics ranging from Pre-Product Launch all the way to Post-TGE strategy.
Naturally, this caught my eye since this is a growth-focused playbook, but there were several other elements that made it notable.
Ronin Wallet CTA
When visiting the playbook page, the CTA at the top right is âInstall Ronin Walletâ. Although thatâs not the primary goal of the Playbook itself, itâs a great entry point for curious builders to explore the Ronin ecosystem and use its products.
The playbook also serves as an initial touchpoint that leads to other common resources like documentation and grant info.
Playbook Sneak-Peeks
2 of the 15 chapters are free:
Despite being free, they go in-depth and have insights that are at minimum helpful reminders for experienced folks.
And if you want the other 13 chapters, what do you have to do? Pay a flat fee? Subscribe to a newsletter?
Nope. You gotta DM Roninâs BD team. The playbook isnât just a helpful resource, itâs a lead magnet đ
Co-created by an agency
If you scroll to the bottom of the playbook, you see a section focusing on Crescendo, the web3 growth agency that worked with Ronin to create the playbook.
Shoutout to Crescendo for negotiating with Ronin to have a big plug for their company at the bottom of the playbook. Itâs rare to see a vendor to have the opportunity to promote themselves directly on the work theyâve done for a client.
Base also recently launched their own playbook, providing resources for two types of builders: Apps and Tokens
Each track is broken out into Pre-launch, Launch, and Post-launch sections with various topics and associated links to other resources.
My immediate thought after seeing this was âthis should be an AI Agentâ. Only a matter of timeâŚ
Are playbooks helpful? If you answered yes, share this with your best friend. If you answered no, share this with worst enemy.
Last week Believe (previously Clout), a project launchpad for users to fund builders and their projects, published their Builder Playbook. Believe is more an app vs. an ecosystem, but still applies the playbook around playbooks. This is likely in response to baggage that comes with launching a token: angry degens demanding price go up.
This playbook is simpler than the previous two, but helps answer important questions and provide high-level guidance around topics such as community management, token launch best practices, and legal considerations.
Manifold launched their blog this week, and one of the tags is âCommunityâ, highlighting notable creators who have launched on their creator platform and incorporated unique mechanics and features.
Although they donât explicitly position these blog posts in this way, the community posts are effectively individual playbooks and case studies providing more insight on what the creator did, how they did it, why, and the results.
With this sample of playbooks that Iâve organically come across in the past couple months, it feels like playbooks are becoming a more popular tactic. So with that said, what are some themes on playbooks specific to this space?
No shit TPan. Ya I know lol, but itâs worth bringing this point up in the sense that playbooks arenât exactly an early-stage tactic for growth and marketing. Weâre now seeing more of these types of playbooks pop up which suggest that:
This space is maturing
Which is generally a good thing! Unless you want to buy Bitcoin at $10k whichâŚsorry, canât help with that and even if I could Iâd be ahead of you in that line.
On the other hand, weâre still early enough where we arenât using the terms âcustomer success storiesâ or âcase studiesâ like our Salesforce friends here cheesinâ so damn hard at the customer success theyâve enabled.
With the above examples Iâve shared around playbooks, we see each of them serve a different purpose. Playbooks can be a:
set of best practices, guides, and case studies (Ronin)
richer version of a resource library (Base)
richer version of doâs and donâts (Believe)
category of content under a blog as short case studies (Manifold)
There isnât a right or wrong with this, itâs more about how you want playbooks to fit into your overall strategy and what makes sense for you. If we were to compare the them again by how long it took to create the playbooks, which provides a rough idea of what the purpose each playbook is:
Months (Ronin, literally) - Valuable resource that elevates Roninâs brand perception to builders and ideally create a business relationship
Weeks (Base, maybe even days?) - Self-serve directory that leads Base ecosystem builders to the right resource
Days (Believe, maybe even hours?) - Action-oriented FAQ for builders
Evergreen with new posts periodically (Manifold) - Source of inspiration for other creators
Maybe itâs just me, but it does seems like theyâre more playbooks being shared or popping up. Why is that?
The space is maturing
As mentioned earlier, the space is maturing and as a result teams implement more boring mature tactics. However, boring â ineffective or useless. Itâs just that you wonât get the average Gen-Z growth/marketing person enthusiastically suggesting âwe should create a playbook!â
Buzzword
The term âplaybookâ are certainly an engagement bait-ish buzzword. Fortunately the oneâs Iâve come across are generally helpful and the term isnât saturated to the point of cringe (hopefully not anytime soon!).
Itâs worth noting that Manifoldâs approach of positioning their version of playbooks/case studies into community-oriented content is a great way to avoid the buzzword baggage along with the fact that itâs more aligned with their creator audience.
Other channels are prioritized
Letâs be real, we donât read anymore. And if we do, weâre probably skimming. So a playbook regardless of the form? Thatâs a lot of words, and a good number would probably throw it all into ChatGPT to extract the juiciest of details.
Combine that with the preferred marketing channels of short-form written (Discord, Twitter, Telegram), voice (Spaces), and video (Twitter Live, YouTube) which are either more engaging or require less dedicated attention, and long-form written playbooks sink to the bottom of the barrel. And because theyâre at the bottom of the barrel, they become an effort worth pursuing when all the lower hanging fruit has been picked, or if thereâs a specific use case for one.
And despite all this, there are still advantages to playbooks:
These playbooks live in owned and operated formats on your own website, so you can edit them at will
Content can be repurposed into other formats of varying lengths. Itâs easier to go long â> short vs. the other way around
Playbooks could serve as a screening mechanic helping candidates stand out, eg: bringing up specific details of Roninâs Growth Playbook to the BD team
The âshelf lifeâ of the content typically lasts longer and remains relevant over time
Because playbooks are a lower-priority tactic, they are more effective if executed well
So with all that, long live playbooks. Just the good and creative ones though đ
See you next week!
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I was drawn in from the very first sentence.
#368: Leveraging Playbooks for Growth https://paragraph.com/@tpan/368-leveraging-playbooks-for-growth