Content, paid, or product — which demand-gen lever should each type of product lean on?
Paid performance is the default lever in every archetype Lazyweb tags, ranging from 30.4% of Collaborative products to 82.1% of 2-sided Marketplaces (n=140).[1] Product-led self-serve only rivals paid in one archetype — Prosumer, where PLG (38.2%) nearly matches paid (41.8%) across 110 companies.[1] Content-led SEO is the steady 13–28% undercurrent everywhere.
82.1% of 2-sided marketplaces lean on paid performance, vs 12.9% product-led — the widest paid-over-product gap of any archetype — Lazyweb Research, 757 companies, July 2026.
| Item | Content-led % |
|---|---|
| 2-sided Marketplace | 13.6 |
| Consumer | 28.3 |
| Social | 27.8 |
| Prosumer | 18.2 |
| Enterprise | 15.0 |
| Collaborative | 21.7 |
The finding
Across the three demand-gen levers a founder actually chooses between — content-led SEO, paid performance, and product-led self-serve — paid is the modal default in all six archetypes (30.4%–82.1%).[1] It peaks for 2-sided Marketplaces at 82.1%, where you're literally buying both sides into liquidity, and PLG there is the weakest of any archetype (12.9%).[1] The only place product-led genuinely competes is Prosumer: 38.2% PLG against 41.8% paid — a near tie, and the highest PLG share in the corpus.[1]
The three levers by archetype
Content-led, paid, and PLG share within each product archetype (multi-select, so rows don't sum to 100%).[1]
| Archetype | n | Content-led % | Paid % | PLG % |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2-sided Marketplace | 140 | 13.6 | 82.1 | 12.9 |
| Consumer | 427 | 28.3 | 54.1 | 29.0 |
| Social | 237 | 27.8 | 54.0 | 23.2 |
| Prosumer | 110 | 18.2 | 41.8 | 38.2 |
| Enterprise | 60 | 15.0 | 35.0 | 20.0 |
| Collaborative | 46 | 21.7 | 30.4 | 17.4 |
Paid dependence by archetype
Ranked purely on paid-performance reliance, the spread is 52 points.[1]
| Archetype | Paid share |
|---|---|
| 2-sided Marketplace | 82.1% |
| Consumer | 54.1% |
| Social | 54.0% |
| Prosumer | 41.8% |
| Enterprise | 35.0% |
| Collaborative | 30.4% |
How to apply it
Start from your archetype's default and justify any deviation. If you're a marketplace, budget for paid as a core cost of liquidity — 4 in 5 peers do, and product-led alone rarely bootstraps a two-sided network.[1] If you're prosumer, product-led self-serve is a genuine primary engine, not a nice-to-have — it's the one archetype where PLG nearly ties paid, so invest in activation and in-product virality before scaling ad spend.[1] For enterprise and collaborative products, paid is the weakest lever (30–35%); demand there is worked through sales and product-led sales, not performance channels (see the up-market sales gradient). Content-led SEO is worth a steady bet everywhere (13–28%) but is rarely the single dominant lever.
Caveats
These are Lazyweb's hand-tagged product_archetype and growth_engine fields on 757 curated companies, not the full 62,376-row table.[1] Both are multi-select, so the three levers are independent shares, not a 100% split — a Consumer app can be 54% paid and 29% PLG at once. Enterprise (n=60) and Collaborative (n=46) rest on a few dozen companies; read them as directional. The framing isolates three levers; real demand-gen also runs on PR, word of mouth, and network effects not shown here.
The numbers
| Stat | Computed from |
|---|---|
| 2-sided Marketplace (n=140): 82.1% paid, 13.6% content, 12.9% PLG | contentVsPaidVsPlgByArchetype |
| Prosumer (n=110): 38.2% PLG, 41.8% paid, 18.2% content | contentVsPaidVsPlgByArchetype |
| Paid share by archetype: Marketplace 82.1, Consumer 54.1, Social 54.0, Prosumer 41.8, Enterprise 35.0, Collaborative 30.4 | contentVsPaidVsPlgByArchetype |
| 757 companies carry a tagged product_archetype | productArchetypeDistribution |
Sources & citations
- [1] Lazyweb Research analysis of 757 companies, July 2026. Lazyweb companies table (project zlfyzdmohcskkucuunmk); contentVsPaidVsPlgByArchetype: content-led / paid / PLG share within each product_archetype, among archetype companies with a growth_engine. Both fields multi-select; per-row n = archetype companies with a growth_engine. ↩
Source: Lazyweb Research — proprietary analysis of real, in-market app screens. Cite as Lazyweb Research, 2026-07-09.