Install
openclaw skills install bookforge-acquisition-channel-selection-scorerUse this skill to choose acquisition channels for a post-PMF product using the Balfour 6-factor scoring matrix (Cost, Targeting, Control, Input Time, Output Time, Scale — each rated 1–10). First runs two diagnostic prerequisites: language/market fit (does your copy resonate?) and channel/product fit (do your channels match how your audience discovers products?). Then classifies candidate channels into viral/word-of-mouth, organic, and paid categories; scores each on the 6 factors; and recommends 2–3 channels for a Discovery phase with explicit graduation criteria to an Optimization phase. Triggers when a growth PM asks 'which acquisition channels should I test?', 'should I do Facebook ads or SEO?', 'help me pick growth channels', 'acquisition channel prioritization', 'channel/market fit', 'Balfour channel framework', 'our paid ads aren't working', 'which channels for B2B SaaS', 'which channels for e-commerce', 'which channels for consumer app', 'acquisition strategy', or 'how do I pick channels'. Also activates for 'we're spreading too thin across channels', 'single channel focus', 'channel diversification', 'Peter Thiel one channel', 'discovery phase channels', 'channel scoring matrix', or 'six factor channel framework'.
openclaw skills install bookforge-acquisition-channel-selection-scorerStructured acquisition channel selection using the Balfour 6-factor matrix. Runs two prerequisite fit diagnostics, applies a business-model first-cut to filter the channel space, scores each candidate on six dimensions (Cost, Targeting, Control, Input Time, Output Time, Scale), and recommends 2–3 channels for a time-boxed Discovery phase with explicit graduation criteria to Optimization.
Use this skill when:
Prerequisites:
north-star-metric-selector for North Star setup.Before scoring, collect:
If the product brief is missing any of these, surface the gaps as questions before proceeding. Scoring a channel without knowing the business model is guessing.
Read product-brief.md (and current-acquisition-data.csv and channel-candidates.md
if provided).
Extract and confirm:
Why: The 6-factor scores are not universal — they are product-specific. A channel that scores 9 on Targeting for a B2B developer tool may score 4 for a mass-market consumer app. Grounding in the brief before scoring prevents generic recommendations that don't survive contact with the team's real constraints.
Definition: Language/market fit is how well the language used to describe and market the product resonates with potential users and motivates them to try it. The term was coined by growth practitioner James Currier. It covers all marketing copy: landing page taglines, ad headlines, email subject lines, in-app feature descriptions, value propositions — every string of text a prospective user encounters.
Why diagnose this before scoring channels: With average online attention spans of roughly 8 seconds, if your copy doesn't immediately connect with a felt need, every channel will look broken. Low CTR on ads, low landing page conversion, and high bounce rates are often misdiagnosed as channel failures — they are language failures. Scoring channels on top of bad copy wastes the scoring effort.
Diagnosis questions:
Output: Flag as GREEN (language fit established — proceed), YELLOW (partial fit — note gaps that may skew channel test results), or RED (copy untested or clearly misaligned — recommend a messaging sprint before scaling any channel).
Definition: Channel/product fit is how well the selected distribution channels match how the target audience actually discovers products like yours. It is distinct from language/market fit: you can have perfectly resonant copy delivered through channels your audience never uses, and see zero results. Both fits must hold.
Why diagnose this separately: Teams often default to channels they are familiar with (Facebook ads, Google Search) regardless of whether their audience uses them. A B2B developer tool team running Instagram ads is structurally misaligned, regardless of copy quality. Channel/product fit diagnosis prevents structural errors before scoring.
Diagnosis questions:
Output: Flag as GREEN (clear channel behaviors visible for audience), YELLOW (partial data — proceed with caution), or RED (no behavioral data — recommend audience research before committing to channels).
Before running the full 6-factor scoring, eliminate channels that are structurally incompatible with the business model. Scoring a structurally wrong channel wastes time and pollutes the ranked list.
Why: Different business models have fundamentally different acquisition economics. E-commerce runs on volume; B2B enterprise runs on relationship and trust; consumer apps run on network effects and virality. A channel that is structurally optimal for one model can be structurally wrong for another — no amount of optimization fixes a structural mismatch.
Apply the following first-cut by model type:
| Business Model | Priority Channel Space | Rationale |
|---|---|---|
| B2B / Enterprise | Outbound sales, trade shows, content marketing (thought leadership), LinkedIn | Buyers require relationship-building, trust signals, and expertise validation before purchase |
| E-commerce | Paid search (SEM), SEO, retargeting, email/loyalty programs | Model depends on high-volume shopper traffic; search intent is the highest-signal entry point |
| Consumer app (viral potential) | Referral programs, social sharing, word-of-mouth, community | Network effects and instrumented virality lower CAC as user base grows |
| Marketplace (two-sided) | Split strategy: supply-side vs. demand-side channels; treat as two separate channel selection problems | Supply and demand have different acquisition needs |
| Media / ad-revenue | SEO, social content distribution, syndication, email newsletters | Revenue depends on attention volume; organic scale compounds better than paid |
After the first cut, you should have 5–8 candidate channels. If the team provided
channel-candidates.md, reconcile the list against this heuristic — add any that were
missed, and flag any that are structurally incompatible.
Classify each candidate into one of three mutually exclusive categories. This matters because the categories have different cost structures, feedback loops, and time horizons — you want at least one candidate from each category if possible, to avoid a portfolio that is monolithic in risk profile.
Why classify before scoring: Classification reveals structural imbalances. A list of seven candidates that are all paid channels will score well on Control and Output Time but will have correlated CAC risk. One viral channel in the mix provides diversification within the portfolio, not across the portfolio.
The three categories:
Viral / Word-of-Mouth Distribution happens through the product itself or through users sharing it without deliberate paid promotion. Examples: referral programs (Dropbox's free storage exchange, PayPal's cash referral), product sharing features (Venmo's social feed, Hotmail's email signature), community building (Slack's viral enterprise spread), instrumented virality (invite flows, "powered by" attribution links). Key property: marginal cost of an additional user approaches zero as the base grows.
Organic Distribution happens through earned media, search presence, and content that continues generating traffic long after creation. Examples: SEO, content marketing (blog posts, ebooks, case studies, infographics, podcasts, webinars, video), public relations, app store optimization (ASO), community participation (forums, Reddit, Hacker News). Key property: high upfront input time, low marginal cost at scale, compounding returns.
Paid Distribution happens through purchased placements. Examples: paid search (Google Ads, Bing Ads), social ads (Facebook, LinkedIn, Twitter, TikTok), display advertising, affiliate programs, sponsorships, TV/radio/print. Key property: immediate feedback loop, precise targeting, linear cost scaling (more spend = more reach, stops when spend stops).
For each candidate channel, assign a score of 1–10 on each of the six factors. Higher score = more favorable for your situation. Record scores in a table.
Factors and scoring summary (1 = unfavorable, 10 = highly favorable):
| Factor | What it measures | Score 10 | Score 1 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cost | Expected spend to run the experiment | Near-zero (email list, organic SEO) | High (TV, trade show, competitive SEM) |
| Targeting | Precision of audience reach | Surgical (named-account list, LinkedIn filters) | Broad (display network, national TV/radio) |
| Control | Ability to adjust or stop once live | Full real-time (paid ads, A/B test) | None after launch (print, live events) |
| Input Time | Time to launch the experiment | Same day (email, existing paid search page) | 4+ weeks (SEO content series, TV production) |
| Output Time | Time to get actionable results | 1–3 days (paid search, email click rates) | 2–6 months (SEO ranking, community growth) |
| Scale | Maximum reachable audience size | Massive (Google Search, Facebook, viral K>0.5) | Small (outbound sales reps, local community) |
For detailed rubric anchors with scored examples for each factor, see
references/balfour-six-factor-rubric.md.
Scoring table format:
| Channel | Category | Cost | Targeting | Control | Input Time | Output Time | Scale | Avg | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| [Channel A] | [Viral/Organic/Paid] | X | X | X | X | X | X | X.X | |
| [Channel B] | ... | ... | ... | ... | ... | ... | ... | ... |
Compute the average score across all 6 factors for each channel. Sort descending.
Sum the 6 factor scores for each channel and divide by 6. Sort the channel list by average score, descending.
Why average rather than weighted sum: The 6 factors are designed to collectively surface fitness, not to be optimized individually. A channel that scores 10 on Scale but 1 on Cost and 1 on Control is a high-risk bet that should surface as borderline, not as a winner. Averaging preserves this balance. If the team has specific constraints (e.g., "we have no engineering bandwidth for 8 weeks"), downweight Input Time manually and note the adjustment.
Tie-breaking rule: When two channels have equal averages, prefer the one with higher Control — it means you can learn faster and course-correct more cheaply.
Select the top 2–3 channels from the ranked list for the Discovery phase.
Why 2–3, not more: The channel diversification fallacy is a well-documented startup trap. Larry Page's framing is instructive: "more wood behind fewer arrows" — concentrated effort on fewer channels produces deeper learning faster. Peter Thiel's framing is more stark: most businesses get zero distribution channels to work; if you try several but don't nail one, you're finished. Attempting 5–7 channels simultaneously means each gets shallow testing, no channel reaches statistical confidence, and the team learns nothing actionable.
Why not just 1: A single channel creates brittle dependence. Two or three allows comparison learning: you discover not just whether a channel works, but why one works better than another — which reveals audience insights that compound across future experiments.
Composition guidance: Ideally select one channel from each category (viral, organic, paid) if the top 3 allow it. If all top 3 are paid, note the risk and consider adding the highest-scoring organic or viral channel even if its average is slightly lower.
For each recommended channel, document:
For each Discovery phase channel, define explicit, time-bounded graduation criteria. Without these, Discovery never ends — teams keep tweaking without committing to scale.
Why explicit criteria: The Discovery-to-Optimization gate is where most teams get stuck. They run one experiment, see mixed results, run another variant, see better results, run another variant — and never make the call to scale. Pre-committing to graduation criteria removes the decision bias.
For each channel, define:
Graduation call: If a channel meets CAC target AND volume threshold within the confidence window → promote to Optimization. If it misses either → either redesign the experiment (different creative, different audience, different landing page) with one more iteration, or retire the channel and replace with the next-ranked candidate.
Write two files:
channel-selection-matrix.md — Contains:
acquisition-fit-diagnosis.md — Contains:
1. Language/market fit is the prerequisite — without it, every channel looks broken. If copy doesn't resonate in 8 seconds, ads generate low CTR, landing pages fail to convert, and the team misattributes the failure to the channel. Fix the message before diagnosing the distribution.
2. Channel diversification is a fallacy for startups — depth beats spread. Two or three channels tested deeply produces actionable learning. Seven channels tested shallowly produces noise. Concentrated effort reaches statistical confidence faster and cheaper.
3. Discovery phase ≠ Optimization phase — don't optimize what you haven't validated. Running A/B tests on ad creative before confirming that the channel can hit CAC target at any meaningful volume is premature optimization. Discover first. Optimize second.
4. The 6 factors capture what is commonly mis-weighted — especially Input Time. Teams routinely underestimate Input Time, selecting channels that sound promising but take 6 weeks to launch, delaying learning. Scoring Input Time forces an honest conversation about team capacity before committing.
5. Business model dictates the first cut — don't score channels that are structurally wrong. A B2B enterprise team should not be spending scoring cycles on TikTok ads. The first-cut heuristic eliminates structural mismatches before they pollute the matrix.
6. Score channels as a team, not in isolation — calibration matters. The 6-factor scores are estimates. Different team members may score the same channel differently based on different assumptions. Run the scoring exercise together, surface disagreements explicitly, and document assumptions. A calibrated team score is more reliable than an individual PM's score.
Language/market fit: YELLOW — landing page copy uses generic "improve your workflow" framing. Interviews reveal users talk about "stopping context switching between tools." Recommendation: update copy before scaling.
Channel/product fit: GREEN — existing customers found the product through Hacker News posts, Twitter/X engineering threads, and word-of-mouth from colleagues.
First-cut: B2B → prioritize content (thought leadership in developer communities), outbound (senior engineers on LinkedIn), and paid search on specific query terms.
Scoring snapshot (illustrative):
| Channel | Category | Cost | Targeting | Control | Input | Output | Scale | Avg | |---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---| | LinkedIn outbound | Paid | 7 | 9 | 8 | 8 | 8 | 5 | 7.5 | | Hacker News Show HN | Organic | 9 | 6 | 4 | 8 | 5 | 6 | 6.3 | | Google Search (long-tail) | Paid | 6 | 8 | 9 | 6 | 9 | 5 | 7.2 | | Twitter/X engineering content | Organic | 8 | 6 | 7 | 7 | 4 | 6 | 6.3 | | Content blog (SEO) | Organic | 7 | 5 | 6 | 3 | 2 | 7 | 5.0 |
Recommended Discovery channels: LinkedIn outbound (7.5 avg), Google Search long-tail (7.2 avg), Hacker News Show HN (6.3 avg, plus organic brand signal).
Graduation criteria:
Language/market fit: RED — all ads use "meal planning made easy" which tests poorly. User interviews reveal the felt need is "stop the 5pm dinner panic." Recommend a messaging sprint before scaling any channel.
Channel/product fit: YELLOW — analytics show organic social referrals and App Store search drive 70% of current installs. Team wants to add paid Instagram. Need to confirm audience is on Instagram specifically (vs. Facebook or TikTok).
First-cut: Consumer viral potential → referral program and viral sharing first. E-commerce-adjacent → App Store search (ASO) and paid search on recipe queries.
Scoring snapshot (illustrative):
| Channel | Category | Cost | Targeting | Control | Input | Output | Scale | Avg | |---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---| | Referral program | Viral | 8 | 7 | 7 | 5 | 6 | 8 | 6.8 | | App Store Search (ASO) | Organic | 9 | 7 | 5 | 5 | 4 | 7 | 6.2 | | Facebook/Instagram ads | Paid | 5 | 7 | 9 | 8 | 9 | 8 | 7.7 | | Google Search (recipe queries) | Paid | 6 | 6 | 9 | 7 | 9 | 8 | 7.5 | | TikTok organic content | Organic | 8 | 5 | 5 | 6 | 3 | 8 | 5.8 |
Recommended Discovery channels: Facebook/Instagram ads (7.7 — but hold until language/market RED resolved), Google Search recipe queries (7.5), Referral program (6.8 — low input cost, compounding upside).
Graduation criteria:
Content derived from Hacking Growth by Sean Ellis and Morgan Brown, used under fair use for educational skill generation. This SKILL.md file is licensed under CC BY-SA 4.0.
Required dependencies (run these first):
clawhub install bookforge-north-star-metric-selector
clawhub install bookforge-growth-experiment-prioritization-scorer
Useful follow-on skills (run these after channel selection):
clawhub install bookforge-viral-loop-designer
clawhub install bookforge-activation-funnel-diagnostic
north-star-metric-selector — Define the metric that determines what "acquisition
success" means before choosing channelsgrowth-experiment-prioritization-scorer — Score and sequence experiments within the
channels you've selected (ICE scoring, growth meeting protocol)viral-loop-designer — Design the instrumented virality mechanism once viral is your
top-ranked Discovery channel (K-factor modeling, loop architecture)activation-funnel-diagnostic — Diagnose and fix activation before scaling acquisition
spend; channels that acquire well but activate poorly burn budget with no compounding