Super Thinking: The Big Book of Mental Models
Gabriel Weinberg
Discover a systematic framework for achieving sustainable startup growth. This guide explores nineteen marketing channels and a structured testing process to help businesses acquire customers and scale effectively in competitive markets.

1 min 35 sec
Imagine a high-performance sports car sitting on a patch of slick, wet ice. The engine is roaring, the tires are top-of-the-line, and the engineering is flawless. However, as the driver slams on the gas, the wheels simply spin in place. No matter how much power is generated under the hood, the car doesn’t move an inch. This is the exact situation many startups find themselves in today. They have a fantastic product, a dedicated team, and plenty of passion, but they are stuck. What they are missing is traction.
In the world of business, traction is the literal grip that allows your company to move forward. It is the evidence that people actually want what you are selling, manifested through a growing customer base and increasing demand. Without it, even the most innovative ideas will eventually run out of fuel and stall. Many founders make the mistake of assuming that a great product will naturally find its way to users. They believe that if they build it, the customers will come. But the reality of the modern market is far more crowded and competitive.
This guide is designed to shift that perspective. We are going to look at why growth is just as important as engineering, and how you can systematically find the specific paths that will propel your business out of the mud and onto the open road. We will explore a variety of channels, from the digital world of search engines and social media to the physical world of trade shows and offline ads. By the end of this journey, you will understand how to treat growth not as a lucky accident, but as a repeatable, scientific process that can be mastered. Let’s dive into the strategies that turn struggling startups into market leaders.
1 min 47 sec
Discover why spending all your time on product development is a recipe for failure and how a balanced focus can save your startup.
1 min 55 sec
Learn how to leverage small media outlets to eventually land massive coverage in major national publications.
1 min 40 sec
Explore the mechanics of viral growth and why building a dedicated community is the ultimate defensive strategy.
2 min 10 sec
Demystify the world of search engines and social ads to reach your ideal customers with precision.
2 min 00 sec
Find out how business development and offline events can provide massive shortcuts to your target market.
1 min 51 sec
Discover why email marketing and traditional sales are still the most effective ways to close high-value deals.
1 min 57 sec
Stop guessing and start testing with a systematic five-step process for identifying your best growth engine.
1 min 58 sec
Align your daily tasks with your long-term traction targets to ensure every effort moves you closer to success.
1 min 24 sec
As we have explored, the difference between a startup that vanishes and one that changes the world rarely comes down to the product alone. It comes down to traction. You can have the most brilliant innovation in history, but if you cannot find a repeatable, scalable way to get it into the hands of users, it will never reach its potential. The key takeaway is to stop viewing growth as a secondary concern. Instead, make it a core part of your daily operations, dedicating as much energy to finding customers as you do to building features.
Remember the Bullseye Framework whenever you feel lost in the sea of marketing options. Don’t just follow the latest trends; test, measure, and focus on what actually works for your unique business. Whether it’s through the slow climb of the PR ladder, the rapid fire of viral loops, or the high-trust world of personal sales, there is a path to traction for every company.
If you want to put these ideas into practice immediately, start by researching the next major trade show in your industry. Don’t just go as a spectator. Go with a plan to meet three potential partners or to test a specific pitch on fifty people. Use that real-world environment to gather the feedback you need to refine your critical path. Growth is a marathon, not a sprint, but by following a systematic framework, you ensure that every step you take is moving you closer to the finish line. It’s time to stop spinning your wheels and start gaining the traction your business deserves.
Many startups fail not because they have a poor product, but because they lack a reliable way to get customers. This summary explores the core philosophy that growth—or traction—should be pursued with the same intensity as product development. It introduces the 'Bullseye Framework,' a strategic method designed to help founders identify which of the nineteen available marketing channels will actually move the needle for their specific business. From traditional public relations and search engine marketing to more modern viral loops and community building, the promise of this guide is to move beyond guesswork. By treating growth as a series of experiments, entrepreneurs can stop wasting money on ineffective ads and start focusing on the specific paths that lead to explosive scaling. Whether you are in the early stages of a side project or running a high-growth company, the insights provided offer a roadmap for navigating the difficult journey from a finished product to a thriving customer base.
Gabriel Weinberg is the founder and CEO of DuckDuckGo, an internet search engine that prioritizes user privacy. Justin Mares is a serial entrepreneur with a background in 3D printing and mobile health sectors. Both authors have significant experience in the startup world, having served as directors at companies that were eventually acquired for eight-figure sums.
Gabriel Weinberg
Listeners find this book to be essential for startups, offering actionable guidance through concrete examples and clear perspectives. Additionally, the material is thorough, with one listener noting it lists 19 different categories of marketing efforts, and listeners value the uncomplicated, straightforward delivery and quality writing style.
As a developer transitioning into the business side of things, I found Weinberg's approach to growth incredibly refreshing. Most marketing books feel like they are written for people selling soap, but this is clearly for the tech crowd. The 'Bullseye Framework' gives you a structured way to actually test these 19 channels without losing your mind or your budget. Truth is, I used to think the product was everything, but the '50% rule'—spending half your time on distribution—changed my entire philosophy. It's not a magic bullet, and you still have to do the hard work of testing, but it provides a clear map. Some of the case studies feel a bit dated now, yet the core principles remain solid.
Show moreWow. This is the first business book I've read that didn't make me want to roll my eyes at 'thought leadership' nonsense. Gabriel Weinberg, the founder of DuckDuckGo, and Justin Mares have put together a manual that is actually usable on Monday morning. I spent the last three hours mapping out our Bullseye framework and realized we were completely ignoring four channels that our competitors aren't even touching yet. It's easy to fall into the 'product trap' where you just keep polishing features while nobody is using the app. This book is the slap in the face most technical founders need. It isn't perfect—some of the offline advice feels a bit niche—but the mindset shift is worth ten times the cover price.
Show moreTraction is arguably the most practical guide for startups since The Lean Startup. Most people focus entirely on building a great product, but as the authors point out, that's a trap if you don't have a way to reach customers. The book offers a comprehensive list of 19 different channels, and the beauty is in its simplicity. You don't need a marketing degree to understand their testing methodology. In my experience, most founders fail because they give up on a channel too early or stick with a dead one too long. This book provides the discipline to avoid those mistakes. It's a must-read if you're serious about growth.
Show morePicked this up on a whim and ended up finishing it in two sittings because the advice is so actionable. Weinberg and Mares don't waste your time with flowery language or vague metaphors about 'brand identity.' Instead, they give you a toolkit of real-world examples and a clear methodology for finding your next growth lever. It’s the kind of book you keep highlighting until the whole page is yellow. Even if you only find one new channel that works, it pays for itself a hundred times over. To be fair, you'll need to supplement this with more technical guides for the specific channels you choose. But as a high-level roadmap for acquisition, nothing else really comes close.
Show moreFinally got around to reading this after hearing so many founders rave about it in Slack groups. It’s essentially an encyclopedia of customer acquisition strategies, ranging from SEO to viral loops and even offline ads. The writing style is simple and direct, which I appreciate because I don’t have time for fluff. While some chapters are definitely more developed than others, the breadth of the content is impressive. To be fair, if you are already an expert in one specific area like SEM, you won't find much new info in that particular section. However, the value lies in seeing the full menu of options and using their methodology to narrow down what works for your specific niche.
Show moreThis book should be mandatory reading for every startup team, even if just to get everyone on the same page regarding terminology. It covers a lot of ground quickly, listing 19 distinct categories of marketing efforts that you can systematically experiment with. Look, you aren't going to become an SEO wizard just by reading the ten pages they give you here. That's not the point of the book though. The point is to stop guessing and start measuring your acquisition costs across different platforms. It’s a fast read, very direct, and cuts through the typical marketing jargon. I do wish there were more updated examples for the B2B space, but the logic holds up regardless of your industry.
Show moreAfter hearing Weinberg on a few podcasts, I decided to pick this up to help scale my consultancy. The concept of 'Traction' is often treated as some mysterious dark art, but this book demystifies it into something manageable and scientific. I especially liked the emphasis on engineering as marketing—building tools to attract users—which is something we’ve started implementing with great success. Gotta say, the layout is very clean and the prose is punchy, making it easy to skim the parts that don't apply to your business. My only real complaint is that some of the 'interviews' feel a bit like filler to hit a page count. Still, it’s a great resource to keep on your desk for brainstorming sessions.
Show moreThe chapter on 'Targeting Blogs' alone was worth the price of admission for my small e-commerce brand. I've always been overwhelmed by the sheer number of marketing options out there, so having them categorized into 19 specific buckets was a huge relief. It’s a very tactical book, which might annoy some who want high-level theory, but for a bootstrapper, it’s exactly what’s needed. Not gonna lie, some of the sections on trade shows and offline events felt a little irrelevant for a digital-first company. However, the overarching Bullseye framework is a brilliant way to prioritize your time and energy. It keeps you focused on the one thing that actually moves the needle.
Show moreNot what I expected given the hype, though I can see why people like the checklist nature of the book. My main gripe is that it prioritizes tactics over strategy, which can lead inexperienced founders down a rabbit hole of meaningless testing. The authors give you 19 different buckets but don't always explain the nuance of why one might fail while another succeeds beyond just saying 'test it.' Personally, I found the interviews with other founders to be the most engaging part of the text. It’s a decent primer for someone who has never touched marketing before, but it lacks the depth needed for a scale-up. I'd call it a solid 'getting started' guide that you will likely outgrow quickly.
Show moreLook, I wanted to love this, but it felt like a series of blog posts stitched together into a physical book. Most of the advice is incredibly high-level and relies heavily on the 'just test it' mantra which isn't helpful when you have limited capital. It feels monotonous after the fifth channel description because the structure of every chapter is identical. Frankly, I think you could get 90% of the value by just looking up the list of 19 channels online and reading a summary of the Bullseye framework. It lacks the strategic depth I was looking for. If you're looking for a deep dive into growth hacking, this isn't it. It's more of a shallow overview for absolute beginners.
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