ESSAY № 021·4 MINUTES·OCTOBER 2025

Building a Growth Culture

Growth isn't just a team — it's a mindset. Here's how to infuse experimentation and growth thinking across your entire organization.

The best growth teams don't hoard growth. They spread it. A growth culture means everyone — product, engineering, design, marketing, sales — thinks like a growth person. Here's how to build it.

What Growth Culture Looks Like

In a growth culture:

  • Decisions are driven by data, not opinions
  • Experimentation is celebrated, even when experiments fail
  • Learning is shared broadly
  • Speed of iteration is valued
  • Customer understanding is universal
  • Metrics are visible and understood

The Building Blocks

1. Shared Metrics

Everyone should know the North Star metric and how their work affects it. Display metrics publicly. Celebrate when they move.

2. Experimentation Mindset

Make experimentation normal, not exceptional. "Let's test it" should be the default response to debates.

Reduce barriers to running experiments. If only growth can experiment, it's not a culture — it's a team.

3. Learning Over Winning

Experiments that lose still teach. Create rituals for sharing learnings:

  • Weekly experiment reviews
  • Monthly all-hands learning shares
  • Searchable experiment archive

4. Customer Closeness

Everyone should hear from customers. Rotate team members through support. Share user research broadly. Make customer voice present in every meeting.

5. Psychological Safety

People need to feel safe proposing bold ideas and running experiments that fail. If failure is punished, experimentation stops.

Tactics for Spreading Growth Thinking

Embed Growth in Rituals

Weekly: Cross-functional experiment review Monthly: Growth metrics all-hands Quarterly: Cross-team growth hackathon

Train the Org

Run workshops on:

  • How to form hypotheses
  • Reading experiment results
  • Basic statistics
  • Customer research methods

Create Champions

Identify growth-minded people in non-growth teams. Empower them as ambassadors who bring growth practices to their teams.

Make Data Accessible

Self-serve dashboards. Simple analytics tools. Training on how to answer questions with data.

If data requires a request, culture stays siloed.

Celebrate Publicly

Recognize experiments — wins and losses. Highlight learning moments. Make growth heroes visible.

Leadership's Role

Culture starts at the top. Leaders must:

  • Model data-driven decision making
  • Share their own experiments and learnings
  • Ask "did we test it?" in reviews
  • Allocate time for experimentation
  • Reward learning, not just results

Measuring Culture

How do you know if it's working?

  • Experiment velocity: Are non-growth teams running experiments?
  • Metric literacy: Can anyone explain key metrics?
  • Idea submission: Are ideas coming from across the org?
  • Decision quality: Are debates resolved by data or hierarchy?
  • Learning sharing: Is knowledge flowing or stuck?

Common Culture Killers

HiPPO: Highest-Paid Person's Opinion overrides data.

Perfection over progress: Waiting for perfect data instead of iterating.

Siloed knowledge: Growth team hoards learnings.

Blame for failure: Experiments that lose are punished.

Inaccessible data: Insights are locked in dashboards only analysts can use.

The Long Game

Culture change takes years, not months. But the compound effect is massive. An organization where everyone thinks about growth — where experiments are everywhere, data is universal, and learning is shared — is an organization that accelerates over time.


You can't hire your way to growth. You need a culture that multiplies the impact of every growth person and spreads growth thinking across every team. That's the real growth engine.

Cite as · Magnuson 2025 · Omega Point Writing № 021Culture · Team Building · Leadership