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K-Factor

A metric that measures how many new users each existing user generates, determining whether a product can grow without paid acquisition.

The K-factor (borrowed from epidemiology, where it measures disease transmission) quantifies a product’s viral spread. The question it answers: on average, how many new users does each current user bring in?

The formula

K = i × c

  • i = invitations sent per user (how often users share or invite)
  • c = conversion rate (what percentage of those invitations result in a new signup)

If 100 users each send 3 invites and 20% convert, K = 3 × 0.20 = 0.6.

What the number means

K-factor Implication
K > 1 Superlinear growth. The product spreads faster than users churn.
K = 1 Replacement-level growth. Every lost user is replaced by a new one.
K < 1 Sub-viral. The loop helps but can’t sustain growth alone.

Most consumer apps operate with K < 1 and use paid acquisition or content marketing to supplement. A K > 1 is rare and usually temporary. Products with high K tend to see it decay as the addressable audience saturates.

Why it matters for social media growth

On TikTok or Instagram, content has its own K-factor. A shared post generates views from non-followers, some of whom follow the creator, who then produces more shareable content. The loop is content-driven.

Limits of K-factor

K-factor is a snapshot. It shifts as:

  • The product’s core loop changes
  • The addressable audience shrinks (market saturation)
  • Platform algorithms redistribute reach
  • Seasonality and trending topics affect share rates

Tracking K over time is more useful than any single reading.