But we know Instagram. Well, it turns out that Burbn is Instagram's predecessor. Burbn offered a lot of great social features, but for some reason the secondary photo editing and sharing service attracted far more users than the founders anticipated. Previously considering that the photography app market was too saturated, the founders finally took a closer look at user feedback. What they discovered was that while many photo-sharing apps existed, they either offered too few editing options or weren't social enough. They then decided to create the first social network based on photos, with good but simple filtering and editing options. And that's what they did.
They scrapped everything except the original app's photo sharing, commenting, and likes options. The brilliant result was an app that allowed its users to upload, edit and share photos in three simple steps. The result? saw 25,000 installs on day one and one million in two months. The moral of the story is don't be afraid to tweak your product...you just Color Correction Service might strike gold! The Growth Hacking Process So how exactly do you execute the growth hacking approach? First of all, it's important to understand that growth hacking is a lot of experimenting. So much so that, according to Sean Ellis himself, companies should aim to do more than 10 growth experiments per week. It sounds scary, we know.