PostHog Handbook Library / Company

537 words. Estimated reading time: 3 min.

Do more weird

For some (all?) at PostHog, do more weird isn't just a benign corporate value - it's a way of life. A craft, to be honed. This page will help you navigate do more weird at PostHog so that you too may do... weird things.

What do more weird is

PostHog's competition for attention is not with other boring B2B SaaS companies - it's with the internet as a whole. Memes. TikTok. HackerNews. We bring a consumer mindset to a B2B context.

Things to bear in mind:

Weird ideas are fragile, so the most important feedback you can give if you see a weird idea is 'do I think this is a good idea' not 'can we do it'.

What do more weird isn’t

Weirdness isn't _purely_ vibes based - it has to be good and vaguely relevant to our users.

Some of the pitfalls we've learned to avoid:

Weirdness is relative

Sometimes the thing just isn't _that_ weird, but that may still be ok depending on the context. For example, transparent pricing is weird in the context of how we bill customers, but it wouldn't make sense to do something truly weird like bartering grain for PostHog credit or something.

On the other hand, the bar for weirdness in a marketing campaign is extremely high, because the world is full of marketing teams trying to do the same thing. A wry smile in response to the idea will not cut it.

Got a weird idea?

Depending on the idea, you have a couple of options:

Making bigger weird happen

Sometimes weird ideas take a lot of money and/or people's time. We have a monthly do more weird marketing budget that we can put towards such things. Lottie and Charles, together with the Council of Weird, meet monthly to pull from the frozen locker of weird things to see what we want to invest in next.

Canonical URL: https://posthog.com/handbook/company/do-more-weird

GitHub source: contents/handbook/company/do-more-weird.md

Content hash: f9a49733f3e3b519